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Parent Emeritus
Still detached with love, and it's great
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<blockquote data-quote="WiseChoices" data-source="post: 753238" data-attributes="member: 24254"><p>I agree with you 100%! It is really something to be proud of that your son chose to return to recovery after relapsing. So many don't make it back. Addiction is a fatal disease. It leads to 3 places only: jails, institutions, Nd death. To show the humility and courage necessary to return to recovery after a relapse is difficult. Your son seems to have grasped the importance of recovery and that it is to be found in NA/AA. That is huge. It's not the relapse that matters so much but what you do with the relapse. If he can learn from it and move forward, it will make his recovery stronger . Often long-term sobriety is at the other side of a relapse .</p><p></p><p>You do have a lot to be proud of and so does your son.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WiseChoices, post: 753238, member: 24254"] I agree with you 100%! It is really something to be proud of that your son chose to return to recovery after relapsing. So many don't make it back. Addiction is a fatal disease. It leads to 3 places only: jails, institutions, Nd death. To show the humility and courage necessary to return to recovery after a relapse is difficult. Your son seems to have grasped the importance of recovery and that it is to be found in NA/AA. That is huge. It's not the relapse that matters so much but what you do with the relapse. If he can learn from it and move forward, it will make his recovery stronger . Often long-term sobriety is at the other side of a relapse . You do have a lot to be proud of and so does your son. [/QUOTE]
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