Complacency in Recovery: When “I’m Fine” Becomes Dangerous
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概要
Complacency in recovery rarely announces itself. It creeps in quietly—disguised as comfort, routine, and “I’m fine.”
In this episode, Anthony Degasperis breaks down how complacency develops in recovery, why it’s one of the most common relapse pathways, and how to recognize the early warning signs before things spiral. Drawing from lived experience, Anthony explains why relapse is usually a process, not a moment—and why catching complacency early is far easier than rebuilding after a fall.
This conversation explores emotional sobriety, self-awareness, comparison traps, and the importance of staying intentional and connected in recovery. If your recovery feels “boring,” this episode might be exactly what you need.
Complacency doesn’t mean you’re doing recovery wrong—it means you’re human.
In this episode, Anthony Degasperis explores how complacency shows up once the chaos fades and life starts feeling manageable again. He explains how recovery can slowly slip into emotional autopilot, why comparison to others weakens vigilance, and how subtle shifts in thinking and behavior can quietly move someone closer to relapse.
You’ll learn:
Why complacency feels comfortable—but is still dangerous
The difference between boring recovery and checked-out recovery
Early emotional and behavioral warning signs
Why addiction doesn’t disappear—it goes dormant
How humility, honesty, and connection interrupt relapse cycles
This episode is a reminder that recovery isn’t about intensity—it’s about intention.