My Five-Year Recovery Planner. The Editors of Central Recovery Press

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      MY FIVE–YEAR

       RECOVERY PLANNER

      LOOKING TO THE FUTURE,

      ONE DAY AT A TIME

      CENTRAL RECOVERY PRESS

      Central Recovery Press (CRP) is committed to publishing exceptional materials addressing addiction treatment, addiction recovery, and behavioral health care, including original and quality books, audio/visual communications, and Web-based new media. Through a diverse selection of titles, it seeks to impact the behavioral health care field with a broad range of unique resources for professionals, recovering individuals, their families, and the general public.

      For more information, visit www.centralrecoverypress.com.

      Central Recovery Press, Las Vegas, NV 89129

      © 2010 by Central Recovery Press, Las Vegas, NV

      eISBN-13: 978-1936290-46-8

      eISBN-10: 1-936290-46-4

      All rights reserved. Published 2010. Printed in the United States of America.

      No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher.

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      Publisher: Central Recovery Press

       3371 N Buffalo Drive

       Las Vegas, NV 89129

       Cover design and interior by Sara Streifel, Think Creative Design

      To the clients

      and alumni

       of Las Vegas

      Recovery Center.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

       CHAPTER 4 My Mental Future

       CHAPTER 5 My Emotional Future

       CHAPTER 6 My Spiritual Future

       CHAPTER 7 My Five Year Recovery Plan

      The foundation of twelve-step recovery is not to use “just for today, one day at a time.” Members arc encouraged to stay in the now and to avoid getting caught up in making plans. We arc taught to look back at—hut not dwell on—our past in order to clean up our messes and make amends, but we ate discouraged from making detailed plans for the future.. .aren’t we? Yes and no.

      Recovery teaches us that although we are not in control of outcomes, we are in control of our actions. We have choices today; we can do the next right thing and allow our Higher Power to be in charge of the results, instead of trying to assert our will over people, places, and things that we were never in control of to begin with. So although we know today that we don’t control outcomes, we know that we control the things we do.

      Our recovery programs teach us that our Higher Power will do for us what we cannot do for ourselves, implying that there is a great deal we can and must do for ourselves. This five-year recovery planner will help you clarify and chart the steps you need to take in order to create the future you want. It will help you reach for your dreams, even if you’re not sure of what your dreams are right now.

      We hope you enjoy playing in this simple little journal and take the steps needed to start (or continue) on the journey of a lifetime—your recovery.

       The Editors of Central Recovery Press

      Recovery gives each of us the opportunity to be co-creators, along with our Higher Power, of a new and bright future for ourselves and our families.

      The exercises in this journal are intended to appeal to seekers of all types—whether you are a writer, a list-maker, a poet, a photographer, a scrapbooker, or a sketch artist. You don’t need to fill in every blank or complete every activity. This is YOUR five-year recovery planner, and the activities have been designed to appeal to your learning and growing style, no matter what it is.

       Dreams Call for Planning, Not for Controlling

      You may hear these words or a variation of them in twelve-step meetings: “If I had made a list of what I wanted from life when I first entered recovery, I’d have sold myself short.” When a person enters recovery, often all he or she wants is for the pain to stop, the obsession to quiet down, and the mess that has been made of life to be cleaned up. But once recovery has begun to take hold, and the recovering individual begins to work the steps with a sponsor, to be of service, and to attend meetings, the realization that there is more to life than just abstaining from active addiction begins to dawn. The possibility of living “a life beyond one’s wildest dreams” now seems to be more than just a distant prospect. It begins to seem more like reality.

      Think

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