
How to Quit an Addiction: A Step-by-Step Recovery Guide
Quitting an addiction starts with one practical decision: do you taper or stop all at once, and do you do it alone or with medical support. The answer depends…
Quitting starts with two decisions on paper: a quit date and a list of the people, places, and habits that pull you back toward use. At Mountain View Treatment…
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Clinical Editorial Team
A quit date on the calendar and a list of triggers in your pocket—these are the first concrete moves most people make toward recovery. At Mountain View Treatment, our admissions team helps you put both in writing before you begin. The steps to overcoming an addiction are more than theory. They’re real actions you can take, update, and repeat until you find what works.
Few people stop using alcohol and drugs for good on their first try. That’s not a sign of weakness. It’s the reality of addiction recovery, confirmed by decades of clinical experience. Most people cycle forward and backward through the stages of change, and it often takes several tries before things stick. The steps below focus on what you can do this week to start moving forward.
Addiction rewires the brain’s reward system. Alcohol and drug use flood your brain with dopamine, creating a rush that normal pleasures can’t match. Over time, your brain adjusts and starts to crave more just to feel okay. That’s why willpower alone usually isn’t enough. The urge comes from real changes in brain chemistry, not a lack of character.
Substance use disorders develop from a mix of genetics, mental health, social isolation, and your environment. Drug abuse often begins as a way to handle stress or emotional pain, but dependence builds as your tolerance increases. Understanding this helps shift the focus: you’re retraining your brain and rebuilding your life, not fixing a moral failing.
Knowing where you are in the recovery process helps you pick the right next step. Clinicians use the transtheoretical model to map out these stages. Trying to skip ahead usually leads to setbacks. Matching your actions to your stage makes the process more effective.
The five stages are precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, and maintenance. At first, you might not see a problem. Then you start thinking about quitting. Preparation means setting a quit date and lining up support. Action is when you stop using and change your routines. Maintenance is about protecting the progress you’ve made over time.
It’s common to move back and forth between these stages. Needing more than one attempt is expected. Returning to an earlier stage doesn’t mean you’ve failed. It just means your plan needs some tweaks.
The transtheoretical model describes the five stages above. It shifts the focus from blame to identifying what you need at each point in recovery. Someone thinking about change needs different support than someone already taking action. Good drug treatment matches help to your stage so your effort counts.
Harvard Health and other clinical experts recommend a handful of practical steps to overcoming an addiction. We use these as the foundation for early recovery and build on them with clinical care as needed.
Before you set a quit date, look back at any previous attempts. Notice what helped, even for a short time. Identify what made things fall apart—a certain place, relationship, or period of stress. This kind of honest self-assessment helps you turn old setbacks into a stronger plan.
Withdrawal symptoms depend on the substance, but tiredness, mood swings, insomnia, cravings, and body aches are common. For alcohol and some prescription drugs like benzodiazepines, withdrawal can become dangerous quickly. In those cases, medical supervision is necessary.
At Mountain View Treatment, we manage alcohol withdrawal with medical monitoring. For opioid use disorder, we offer Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) with medications such as methadone or buprenorphine, overseen by addiction psychiatrists. Medical care during withdrawal keeps you safe and clears your mind so therapy can actually begin.
The most effective addiction treatment programs use cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), motivational interviewing, and contingency management. CBT helps you spot and change the thoughts that drive substance use. Motivational interviewing helps you find your own reasons for change. Contingency management rewards positive behavior, like verified sobriety.
We also offer therapies for trauma and co-occurring mental health conditions. EMDR and Somatic Experiencing help process trauma. Dialectical Behavior Therapy teaches skills for handling strong emotions and stress. Neurofeedback supports brain regulation. Mindfulness, acupuncture, and equine therapy support your overall well-being.
The choice depends on your needs and safety. If you need 24-hour support or have just finished detox, inpatient or residential care is usually best. If you can stay safe at home or in sober living, outpatient treatment lets you keep up with work or school. Mountain View Treatment offers several outpatient levels so you can step down as you stabilize.
Our center provides outpatient addiction recovery for adults across the Pacific Northwest, just 15 minutes from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. We run programs year-round with no seasonal breaks, and admissions are open 24/7. Insurance checks are quick—usually done within two hours. You can focus on getting help, not paperwork.
PHP is our most intensive outpatient option, meeting five or six days a week. It offers the structure of residential care while you sleep at home or in sober housing. PHP fits people coming out of detox or residential treatment, or anyone needing daily support early in recovery.
Our Intensive Outpatient Program meets three to five days a week, with day and evening options for adults returning to work or school. The Outpatient Program meets one to three days a week for long-term support. Many of our staff have personal experience with addiction recovery. Support comes from people who know the process firsthand.
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A support network of family and friends increases your odds of staying sober. Isolation feeds drug addiction. Connection breaks the cycle. Tell people you trust what you’re doing and how they can help. Ask for a check-in call. Accept a ride to group. Even a quick text when cravings hit can help you get through a tough moment.
Peer support groups offer a community of people who understand. Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and SMART Recovery all run free meetings, many online. You can join without a referral. These groups don’t replace therapy, but they add support between sessions. The national SAMHSA helpline (available 24/7 in English and Spanish) connects you to treatment and support services anywhere in the country.
Trust comes back slowly, through actions more than promises. Addiction often means broken trust, so family members need to see you keep small commitments. Show up, stay sober, and follow through. Family therapy helps everyone talk about what happened and figure out how to move forward. We include family work because strong relationships support long-term recovery.
Cravings usually peak and pass within 15 to 30 minutes. The goal is to outlast them. Distraction helps. Take a walk. Call someone. Change your environment or keep your hands busy. A counselor can help you plan for triggers, like certain places, people, or stressful times.
Stress is a top reason people return to use. Managing stress isn’t optional. Meditation, yoga, exercise, regular sleep, and steady routines all lower daily tension. These same habits also distract from cravings and give your brain time to reset.
Exercise helps restore the brain’s natural dopamine system, which substance use disrupts. Even moderate activity can reduce anxiety and improve sleep. Nutrition matters, too. Alcohol and substance use can deplete your body, and stable blood sugar helps with mood swings. Our center uses local trails for therapeutic walks, making the most of Seattle’s sunny days for outdoor activities.
Relapse prevention is the main focus of the maintenance stage. It never really ends, but it gets easier over time. Keep your support network active. Attend support groups. Manage stress before it builds, and watch for warning signs like missing meetings or thinking fondly about past use.
Treat relapse as information, not a verdict. Many people experience a recurrence during recovery, and it’s not a reason to give up. Tell someone in your support network right away. Reconnect with treatment. Look at what triggered the return to use. Adjust your plan and keep moving forward.
Motivation comes and goes. Build routines that keep you on track even when motivation dips. Track your progress—days sober, relationships repaired, money saved. Stay connected to peer support and remember your reasons for quitting. The early weeks are the hardest. The brain heals and cravings fade with time.
Common missteps include quitting without a plan, keeping triggers close by, staying around people who still use, and trying to handle withdrawal alone when medical care is needed. Another mistake is focusing only on the substance and ignoring co-occurring mental health issues, like depression or anxiety disorders. Treating both at the same time makes a difference.
You’re ready when the costs of using outweigh the relief it brings. You don’t have to feel 100% certain to start. If quitting is on your mind, you’re already in the contemplation stage. A confidential consult is free and doesn’t commit you to anything.
Addiction is a treatable health condition, and people recover every day with the right combination of medical care, therapy, and ongoing support. Substance use disorder treatment works best when it’s matched to your needs and continues into long-term maintenance. That’s the approach behind our levels of care.
Mountain View Treatment helps adults with alcohol use disorder, opioid and prescription drug dependence, stimulant and marijuana use, and dual diagnosis when addiction overlaps with mental health issues. Our behavioral health services address depression, anxiety, trauma, PTSD, bipolar disorder, and personality disorders. Treating addiction and mental health together lowers the risk of setbacks and supports lasting recovery.
Substance abuse rarely happens alone. When drug abuse occurs alongside depression or eating disorders, treating both is the difference between short-term and lasting recovery.
With time, the brain’s reward system resets. Sleep and mood improve. Some physical damage from alcohol and other drug use heals. Relationships can mend. Work and school become manageable again. The anxiety that fueled substance use often fades. The discomfort of quitting leads to years of better health and well-being.
If you or someone you care about is struggling with addiction, one call can start the process. Mountain View Treatment answers admissions 24/7 at (253) 252-5875. We return free insurance verification within two hours and help with travel and arrival. We work with most major PPO plans, including Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, Tricare, and UnitedHealthcare. Choose a quit date, then call us. We’ll help you build the rest of the plan.

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