Dealing with chaos while you’re in recovery is extra hard because your nervous system and coping resources are already working overtime. The goal isn’t to make life perfectly calm, but to protect your recovery even when things are messy.
Here are some practical, recovery-friendly ways to handle chaos:
1. Shrink Your World (Temporarily)
When everything feels overwhelming, make your life smaller:
- Focus on today only
- Prioritize just:
- Staying sober / stable / on track
- Eating
- Sleeping
- One or two basic responsibilities
Everything else is optional right now.
Recovery comes before fixing the chaos.
2. Control What You Actually Can Control
Chaos feels awful because it’s unpredictable and uncontrollable. So anchor yourself in what is controllable:
- Your routines
- Your boundaries
- Your reactions
- Your next right decision
Even something small like:
- Same wake-up time
- Same walk
- Same meeting
- Same evening ritual
…gives your brain safety signals.
3. Build “Noise-Canceling” Into Your Day
Think of this as buffer time from stress:
- Walks
- Music
- Showers
- Journaling
- Breathing exercises
- Gym / stretching
- Prayer / meditation
These aren’t luxuries. They are nervous system medicine.
4. Lower Your Expectations (On Purpose)
During chaotic periods:
- You don’t have to be productive.
- You don’t have to fix everyone.
- You don’t have to perform.
- You just have to not make things worse.
Stability > optimization.
5. Protect Your Boundaries Like Your Recovery Depends on It
Because it does.
- Say no more often.
- Limit time with draining people.
- Step away from drama.
- Mute, block, or pause things if needed.
This is not avoidance. This is medical care for your brain.
6. Have a “When It Gets Bad” Plan
Decide in advance:
- Who you’ll call
- Where you’ll go
- What you’ll do instead of using / self-destructing / spiraling
When chaos hits, your brain will not think clearly. Plans beat willpower.
7. Remember: Chaos Is a Trigger
Even “normal” stress can:
- Increase cravings
- Increase emotional reactivity
- Increase impulsive thinking
That doesn’t mean you’re failing.
It means you’re human in recovery.
8. Talk It Out — Don’t Carry It Alone
Whether that’s:
- A therapist
- A sponsor
- A trusted person
- A support group
Isolation + chaos is dangerous for recovery.
No matter how loud the chaos gets, my recovery comes first—because everything I’m trying to save depends on it.


