Recovery

What Recovery Actually Looks Like

Not a moment. A daily decision. Here is what it looks like when someone does the work.

The Reality of Recovery

It Is Not a Feeling. It Is a Practice.

Recovery does not look like a single breakthrough moment. It looks like showing up the next day. And the day after that. It is built out of small, consistent decisions — in work, in faith, in community, and in how you treat the people around you.

The examples below are real. These are not ideals or suggestions. They are what active recovery has looked like for the people behind FAAD — and what is available to anyone willing to start.

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

Philippians 4:13
Meetings & Treatment

Showing Up and Doing the Work

Recovery has a structure. It is not something you figure out on your own — it is something you learn in community, with accountability, over time.

AA & NA Meetings

Regular attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings. Peer accountability. Shared experience. A community of people who know exactly what you are going through.

GAP Meetings

Faith-based group support through GAP (God’s Amazing People). A place where faith and recovery intersect and where people walk through it together.

IOP Treatment

Intensive Outpatient Program — structured clinical treatment that provides professional support while allowing you to stay connected to life, work, and family.

The 12 Steps

Working the 12 steps is not a formality. It is a thorough, honest process of examining your life, making amends, and building the foundation for lasting change.

Recovery Classes

Addiction recovery classes that address the patterns, triggers, and thinking that fuel addictive behavior — and give you real tools to replace them.

Work & Stability

Building Something Real

Recovery means becoming someone who contributes. Who shows up. Who earns something and is accountable to more than just themselves.

For the people behind FAAD, that has meant union work — trades that require discipline, reliability, and physical commitment every single day. A career is not just income. It is identity, purpose, and proof that the old way of living is behind you.

Financial stability is part of recovery. When you are not chasing the next high or making decisions out of desperation, you can start building. Paying bills. Supporting your family. Giving back. These are the markers of a life that has genuinely changed.

Community & Service

Getting Out of Yourself

One of the most consistent patterns in lasting recovery is service. When you stop focusing only on yourself and start showing up for others, something shifts.

Volunteering

Volunteering at places like the Kokomo Rescue Mission — giving time, showing up with your kids, serving people who are exactly where you used to be.

Mission Work

Prison ministry, outreach programs, and faith-based mission work that carries the message of recovery and hope into places where people need it most.

Community Cleanup

Taking care of your neighborhood. Showing up for the community you are a part of. Small acts of contribution that build a different kind of reputation — the right kind.

Charitable Giving

Giving back financially when you are able. Recovery means eventually having something to give — and using it to help others rather than spending it on destruction.

“Faith without works is dead.”

James 2:26
Faith & Daily Practice

What You Do Every Day

Long-term recovery is built on daily habits. Not motivation — discipline. Not inspiration — structure. Here is what that looks like when it is working.

Church & Faith Community

Regular church attendance and connection to a faith community that holds you accountable and reminds you of what you are living for.

Prayer & Gratitude

Starting and ending the day with prayer. Practicing gratitude for what is in front of you instead of focusing on what is behind you or missing.

Bible Study

Consistent time in Scripture. Not just reading — studying, applying, and letting it shape how you make decisions and treat people.

Daily Devotionals

Morning devotionals that set the tone for the day. A practice that grounds you before the day has a chance to pull you in a different direction.

Workout Routine

Physical discipline that builds mental discipline. Exercise is not a luxury in recovery — it is part of the structure that keeps everything else in place.

Daily Planning & Routine

A structured day does not happen by accident. Recovery requires intentional planning — knowing what you are doing, when, and why — so that idle time does not become dangerous time.

There Is a Way Out

This Can Be Your Story Too

Everything on this page is real. It did not come easy, but it came. If you want to start, reach out. We will meet you where you are.

Get Help Now Our Story
Scroll to Top