Spirituality

Wisdom Work

In his weekly seminar, Rabbi Dr. Finley discusses managing consciousness, a rational approach to the “Higher Power,” insight into the structures of interpersonal interactions, and how to develop and maintain a strong, resilient inner core, among other things.

Escape

Escape the grip of the “ego self,” the place of reactivity, and lower order emotions, feelings, images, thoughts, drives, impulses, desires, intuitions, and sensations.

Access

Access the Higher Self, observer mind, rationality, reason, truth, justice, and love, all the way to Holiness and the Divine.

Integration

How to manage the relationship of the soul to the ego self and higher self.

Education

Moral Stages

Helping clients recover Developmental Integrity (DI) and transformative potential. We use Harvard’s Developmental Model to teach clients about disintegration and about recovering DI. In this group we explore three major facets of our lives that dis-integrate as a cause and/or consequence of addiction:

Splits

The affect-logic disconnect.

Disengagement

The moral disengagement that separates us from loved ones and community.

Gaps

The integrity gap between what we say and what we do.

Fitness & Recovery

recoveryfit

RecoveryFit addresses the physical component of recovery. It’s a comprehensive group fitness program based upon the 12 Steps & 12 principles of recovery and provides the essential benefits of a structured fitness program. Each week we define and discuss the topic for that week, uncover its application to our physical lives, and perform a group workout directly related to that spiritual principle. The program is expertly scaled for all fitness levels taking age, knowledge, and ability differences into account.

 

Process

Healthy Relationships

The Healthy Sexuality and Intimacy group provides an opportunity for clients to share about how their relationships and sexuality impact their recovery and their lives. By discussing themes of communication, masculinity, gender roles, and sexuality, clients can begin to look at how they behave in intimate relationships. With an emphasis on healthy sexual boundaries and sexual expression, this group assists clients in making healthy choices to support their recovery.

Process

Boundaries and Communication

Addiction is a disease of isolation. Recovery can be found in community and fellowship. This group focuses on ways to build and maintain meaningful relationships. Newly-sober people are often confused or scared by the intimacy of being in any type of honest relationship: with family, friends or partners. In this group we explore the origin of these fears and and role-play the new behaviors that lead to finding fulfillment with others. We also work on defining the physical, emotional, and relational boundaries needed to maintain these relationships. as well as how to communicate these boundaries in a more healthy and engaging manner.

Mindfulness

Relapse Prevention

Mindfulness Based Relapse Prevention (MBRP) is designed to bring practices of mindful awareness to individuals who have suffered from addictions of any kind. MBRP practices are intended to promote increased consciousness of triggers, destructive habitual patterns, and “automatic” reactions that seem to control many of our lives. The mindfulness practices in MBRP are designed to help learn to pause, observe present experience, and bring awareness to the range of choices before each of us in every moment.  Clients will learn to respond in ways that serve them, rather than react in ways that are damaging to their health and happiness.

Process

Process groups are excellent therapeutic forums for clients to gain insights into how their relationships and coping mechanisms have been dysfunctional.  The premise is based on the concept that we “repeat or enact” in the outside world, all of the unhealthy patterns of interpersonal behavior we learned in our original group process (our families of origin). Utilizing Commitment Slips, clients make a daily commitment to a recovery-oriented activity to navigate old problems with new solutions. These commitments are shared with the group with the goal of achieving the skills of self-compassion, empathy and integrity in all their relationships.

Addiction and Psychoeducation

Psycho-education is an integral part of treatment.  Becoming knowledgeable about addiction and its related components speaks to the intellectual part of our recovery.   In this lecture/interactive group, clients are introduced to a variety of topics related to addiction including: Addiction as an Attachment Disorder, Process Addictions,  Neurobiology of Addiction, Love and Sex Addiction, Co-Dependency, Personality Traits, Family Dynamics and other topics pertinent to recovery.

Practice

Integrity

 

In this group, we use theory, research findings and group experiences to:

Identify patterns of dis-connection

Explore moral meaning of thinking

Explore moral meaning of behaving

Use day to day issues to teach

Practice resolving conflicts

Re-integrate judgment and action

Identify adaptive function

Explore moral meaning of feeling

Explore where we're trapped

Mechanisms of transformation

Re-integrate the affect and logic

Re-integrate

Practice

Goal Setting and Action Steps

 

In this experiential group, clients participate in exercises and therapeutic games for purposes of clarifying career and educational goals.

Career Interests

Professional Strengths

Professional Weaknesses

Mock Interviews

Educational Goals

Post-Treatment Goals

Job Search Goals

Whole Group Engagement

12 Step Goals

Post-Treatment Housing

Group Support

Personal Aspirations

Integrity

12 Step

 

In this group, we approach the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous from a variety of standpoints including spiritual, philosophical and cognitive behavioral techniques.   Healthy discourse is encouraged as we analyze the book and the steps, word by word, line by line, turning statements into questions for self-reflection and acceptance. In this process, we discover the physical, mental and spiritual aspects of our personal relationship to drugs and alcohol for identification, acceptance and action while fostering a sense of community and single minded purpose in order to stay sober and help other alcoholics achieve sobriety.

Fun in Recovery

Game Theory

 

At Recover Integrity we offer a weekly group where clients can experiment with a wide variety of fun activities including cooking, art projects, interactive games, outings and other recreational activities which encourage clients to have fun in recovery.

 

  • Many can’t imagine how they will keep themselves entertained without alcohol or drugs.

  • We re-discover a sense of fun and lightness of being.

  • A world of entertainment possibilities available to them.

Process

Living In Truth

In this group we work on developing transparency, authenticity and developing our individual voices to promote self-empowerment. The group creates a safe environment for individuals to freely express themselves and learn to actively listen to others. This group actively promotes an atmosphere of non-judgment, supportive participation and respect for different points of view. Teaching clients to take responsibility for meeting their needs and living up to their own authentic values and beliefs; express their individuality by developing the strength of their authentic convictions and voice; build and maintain their self-definition in the face of others; respect the individuality of others without judgment and/or condemnation; hold diverse opinions of themselves and others with respect, compassion, acceptance and love; continue to assess their inner values, beliefs and needs through a design of ongoing processing; and developing deeper and richer freedom to be who they are through courage, self-honesty and transparency.