Three months is not nothing. You rewired your brain, rebuilt routines, and navigated more discomfort than most people will acknowledge. And then it came undone.
If you’re reading this in the aftermath of a relapse, the first thing to understand is this: a relapse is data, not a verdict.
Most people treat it as proof they’re broken. They’re not. Relapse rates for substance use disorders run between 40 and 60 percent, roughly the same as hypertension, asthma, and other chronic health conditions, where returning to old patterns is expected, studied, and factored into treatment. The question isn’t whether you failed. The question is: what was missing from the plan?