If you had to stop work to seek out addiction treatment, you’re not alone. In 2020, 4 million Americans received substance abuse treatment and over 1 million of those were in inpatient care. Rehab can give you a break from life so that you can focus on your recovery and building the skills you need to get back to your life without drugs and alcohol. But, for many people, bridging the gap between addiction, rehab, and going back to everyday life can be incredibly difficult.
After all, how do you go back to work after leaving in potentially embarrassment? How do you pick up old routines and habits without restarting drinking or using? And how do you take what you enjoyed about your old life while cutting out the parts that led to addiction? Navigating that would be challenging for someone who was mentally and physically healthy, chances are, you’re neither, which makes it even more challenging.
Taking a slow approach, planning for everything, and ensuring you have the things you need to succeed will help.
If you’ve been getting treatment in a rehab center, you’re probably used to having people around all the time. Rehabs often have you share rooms, meals, and conversations with others all the time. Moving out and directly into an apartment or house by yourself can be a big step. When you combine that with the mental and emotional toll of going back to work, it can be significant.
For that reason, it’s a good idea to take things one step at a time. If you have to go back to work immediately when you leave rehab, consider getting help at a sober home or halfway house as you adjust to work. That will allow you to maintain the structure and company from the rehab center, so you can adjust to one thing at a time. Of course, that’s harder if you have kids or family responsibilities – but many sober homes support kids and even offer daycare opportunities.
It’s also a good idea to try adapting to life back at home if you can. However, that won’t always be possible, which can mean making sacrifices that aren’t in the best interest of your health. If you can’t afford to wait to start work or going to a halfway house, ensuring that you have support networks and people to lean on is an important alternative.
Work can be a major contributing factor to addiction. Whether that’s because you started using to improve performance, to relieve stress, or to deal with emotions doesn’t matter. If your work is demanding or stressful, it can contribute to addiction and to relapse. Walking into that understanding that your work significantly contributes to your overall mental health is important.
Eventually, work is a large part of your life, and it should contribute to your life in a positive way. If you’re stressed or unable to cope during or after work, work needs to change, not you.
Even the best workplace can result in stress. That can be because of people, things at work, or even having less time for other parts of your life. But, it will happen and that’s almost guaranteed. This means it’s important to go to work with coping mechanisms and safety nets in place. For example, if you know that you get stressed when you receive criticism or feedback, make sure you have a coping mechanism in place. That might be calling someone, using music for mood regulation, or using conversation tactics to discuss what that feedback actually means with the person. In addition, if you know you have triggers, you should discuss those with your therapist or counselor to try to work out good coping mechanisms.
In addition, it’s important that you be able to turn to professional help if you start struggling. Having the safety net of people to check up on you, the option to go back into aftercare, ongoing support, and self-help groups will help you to stay clean and sober as you move back into your career. However, even having those will still require that you pay attention to your mental health and well-being, so that you can ask for help if you start to struggle.
Recovery is an ongoing process. Leaving rehab is just one step in your journey to recovery and going back to work and building a career for yourself is another. While it can feel like a setback and it can feel like too much, it’s also an important step in getting back to your life, figuring out what you want from work, and moving your life forward in a direction you want it to go. Sometimes that will mean redefining what you do for work. In other cases, it will mean finding better coping mechanisms and ensuring you have support networks as you do. Good luck going back to work.
Asana Recovery offers detox, residential, and outpatient addiction treatment services at our center located in Orange County, California. Please contact us today to speak with one of our experienced addiction treatment team if you have any questions about our programs.
Asana Recovery is licensed and certified by the State Department of Health Care Services.
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To fulfill this, we aim to adhere as strictly as possible to the World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.1 (WCAG 2.1) at the AA level. These guidelines explain how to make web content accessible to people with a wide array of disabilities. Complying with those guidelines helps us ensure that the website is accessible to all people: blind people, people with motor impairments, visual impairment, cognitive disabilities, and more.
This website utilizes various technologies that are meant to make it as accessible as possible at all times. We utilize an accessibility interface that allows persons with specific disabilities to adjust the website’s UI (user interface) and design it to their personal needs.
Additionally, the website utilizes an AI-based application that runs in the background and optimizes its accessibility level constantly. This application remediates the website’s HTML, adapts Its functionality and behavior for screen-readers used by the blind users, and for keyboard functions used by individuals with motor impairments.
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Our website implements the ARIA attributes (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) technique, alongside various different behavioral changes, to ensure blind users visiting with screen-readers are able to read, comprehend, and enjoy the website’s functions. As soon as a user with a screen-reader enters your site, they immediately receive a prompt to enter the Screen-Reader Profile so they can browse and operate your site effectively. Here’s how our website covers some of the most important screen-reader requirements, alongside console screenshots of code examples:
Screen-reader optimization: we run a background process that learns the website’s components from top to bottom, to ensure ongoing compliance even when updating the website. In this process, we provide screen-readers with meaningful data using the ARIA set of attributes. For example, we provide accurate form labels; descriptions for actionable icons (social media icons, search icons, cart icons, etc.); validation guidance for form inputs; element roles such as buttons, menus, modal dialogues (popups), and others. Additionally, the background process scans all the website’s images and provides an accurate and meaningful image-object-recognition-based description as an ALT (alternate text) tag for images that are not described. It will also extract texts that are embedded within the image, using an OCR (optical character recognition) technology. To turn on screen-reader adjustments at any time, users need only to press the Alt+1 keyboard combination. Screen-reader users also get automatic announcements to turn the Screen-reader mode on as soon as they enter the website.
These adjustments are compatible with all popular screen readers, including JAWS and NVDA.
Keyboard navigation optimization: The background process also adjusts the website’s HTML, and adds various behaviors using JavaScript code to make the website operable by the keyboard. This includes the ability to navigate the website using the Tab and Shift+Tab keys, operate dropdowns with the arrow keys, close them with Esc, trigger buttons and links using the Enter key, navigate between radio and checkbox elements using the arrow keys, and fill them in with the Spacebar or Enter key.Additionally, keyboard users will find quick-navigation and content-skip menus, available at any time by clicking Alt+1, or as the first elements of the site while navigating with the keyboard. The background process also handles triggered popups by moving the keyboard focus towards them as soon as they appear, and not allow the focus drift outside it.
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We aim to support the widest array of browsers and assistive technologies as possible, so our users can choose the best fitting tools for them, with as few limitations as possible. Therefore, we have worked very hard to be able to support all major systems that comprise over 95% of the user market share including Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, Opera and Microsoft Edge, JAWS and NVDA (screen readers).
Despite our very best efforts to allow anybody to adjust the website to their needs. There may still be pages or sections that are not fully accessible, are in the process of becoming accessible, or are lacking an adequate technological solution to make them accessible. Still, we are continually improving our accessibility, adding, updating and improving its options and features, and developing and adopting new technologies. All this is meant to reach the optimal level of accessibility, following technological advancements. For any assistance, please reach out to