Preventing Relapse to Addictive Behavior: The Role of Lifestyle Balance

In addiction recovery, if your life is filled with non-pleasurable activities, you are more likely to relapse. The relapse will provide an intense, but only temporary, satisfaction. Let’s explore what preventing relapse and the role that lifestyle balance plays in everyday life.

rocks on san diego beachPerhaps the greatest risk for imbalance comes when we are too focused on what we “should” do and not enough on what we want to do. Of course, we need to do what we should do. But in balance! One comparison for this is someone who places too large a portion of income into retirement funds. Daily life becomes constrained. There is also the risk that a “binge” of spending may undo the savings, to experience some more immediate well being. More balanced money management could prevent the desire for a binge.

Lifestyle balance can be considered from several perspectives. Below is a list (taken from my book, Sex, Drugs, Gambling & Chocolate, page 191) that you might use to consider how balanced you are:

Work and relaxation
Activity and contemplation (self-assessment)
Duties and fun
Long-term projects and momentary pleasure
Alone time and social time
Routine household chores and new projects
“Shoulds” and “wants”
Making money and spending money
Spiritual time and secular time
Giving and receiving
Being physically distant and being physically close
Exercise and rest
Personal maintenance and productivity
Going fast and going slow
Learning from others and learning independently

The idea of balance as an ideal is at least as old as Aristotle. In his Nicomachean Ethics (written in the 4th century BCE), which might be described as the first self-help book, he describes the virtuous activity as a mean between two extremes. For instance, courage is a mean between cowardice and foolhardiness. For each item on the list above, we need to consider to what extent we have achieved a balance between the two poles listed.

Having achieved some basic balance in life, the next step can be considered more deeply what our enduring satisfactions truly are. It is this consideration that connects the fourth point of the 4-Point Program back to the first point (to “enhance and maintain motivation to abstain”). Motivation to abstain is ultimately based on the sense that there is a better life to live than an addicted one. The example of a terminal cancer patient needing morphine for pain control shows that what might be considered addictive behavior is not necessarily bad. But if you believe that there can be more to life than what addiction provides, the challenge is to achieve that.

What is most important in life has been a focus for everyone at times, but perhaps not enough of the time. Freud suggested that a combination of love (relationships) and work (a productive activity) is most important. If only this simple suggestion (“to live and work”), or other suggestions, were enough to provide clear guidance for all of us!

I propose some basic questions. What are my most important relationships? How could I pay more attention to these relationships? What activities am I good at? Given what I am good at, or could learn, what do I most like doing? What satisfactions did I have before addiction? At what moments in life did I feel a clear sense of direction (and what was that direction)? How much time do I speak with others, and think about, my direction in life?

For most of us, being out of balance is about focusing too much on short-term (momentary) concerns, and not enough on long-term (enduring) concerns. Although some individuals put too much money into retirement, the typical problem is not putting enough. I hope the above ideas help you strike a better balance.

This article is adapted from “Lifestyle Balance,” originally published in the SMART Recovery newsletter (smartrecovery.org), July 2001.