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6 Misconceptions About Addiction Treatment

Of all the people in the US who have a substance use disorder, only about 10 percent ever get help for it. It shouldn’t be surprising then, that a lot of people have mistaken ideas about what addiction treatment programs are like. These misconceptions, along with just not knowing what to expect at all, scare people away from treatment or at least give them plausible-sounding excuses not to go. Although treatment for addiction certainly has its challenges, it might not be what you expect. The following are some common misconceptions about treatment.

“You Have to Hit Rock Bottom for Recovery to Be Possible”

The most common myth about treatment for a substance use disorder, and the one that probably does the most damage is the idea that you have to hit rock bottom in order to recover. This idea keeps people from seeking help when they consider their own substance use only mildly problematic and it prevents family and friends from encouraging someone they are concerned about to get help. In reality, “rock bottom” is whenever you want it to be. It’s when you decide that you don’t like the direction your life is heading and you want to make a change.

It’s not even really necessary to be committed to getting sober. Pretty much everyone feels ambivalent about entering treatment but many of these people do pretty well. Some people don’t even want to get help. Consider drug courts, for example. These courts give non-violent drug and alcohol offenders the option to seek treatment rather than serve jail time, an opportunity most defendants take advantage of, even if they are far more enthusiastic about staying out of jail than about getting sober. Despite their reluctance to enter treatment, research shows that drug court participants typically have much better outcomes–less recidivism, better employment status, and so on–than people who serve jail time.

“Treatment is Too Expensive”

People see that some celebrity or other has announced they’re entering treatment and they draw the conclusion that treatment is only for the rich and famous. While there are posh treatment facilities for the upper crust, these don’t necessarily have better treatment outcomes. At luxurious facilities, your money often goes to amenities rather than treatment and so more moderately priced programs typically offer a better value.

What’s more, treatment has never been more affordable. Because of the opioid crisis, there is now more federal money available for treatment, and state and local governments are also offering more assistance as well. For most people, insurance will pay for at least some of their treatment and most quality treatment programs work with several insurers. In short, treatment is probably more affordable than you would think. Contact a few programs you’re interested in and see if they can help you pay for treatment.

“Detox Is All You Really Need”

Detox is often a major obstacle to recovery. Many people are so afraid of withdrawal symptoms that they just keep drinking or using. It might make sense then, that many people believe that if they can just get over that particular hump, then they’ll be fine. Unfortunately, that’s not usually how it works. Every stage of recovery has its own challenges. Once you get past the detox hump, you still have to deal with cravings, friends who don’t support your recovery, co-occurring mental health issues, and so on. Addiction is a complex problem and physical dependence is rarely the only factor.

“Treatment is Boring”

A lot of people imagine treatment as going to some sterile facility where they don’t know anyone, following a strict schedule, spending endless hours in classes and group therapy sessions, interrupted only by sleep and bland meals. Perhaps even worse, you may imagine having to participate in some kind of pep-rally style positivity. In reality, there is a lot of variation in treatment programs.

The best programs are designed to be challenging and engaging. There will always be challenging times, like facing your demons during therapy but much of treatment is also about finding out what brings you joy and connects you to other people. At various times, you might engage in exercise, sports, outdoor activities, art or music, and any variety of activities. Recovery works best when it’s about discovering joy and meaning rather than relying on grim determination.

“You Have to Find Religion”

It’s no secret that AA and similar groups were originally based on the idea of religious conversion. You can’t beat addiction on your own, so you rely on a higher power to help you. There are certain corners of the recovery community where people believe that a spiritual awakening is the only path to sobriety but it’s just not true. Plenty of people enjoy a strong recovery without such an “awakening.” Recovery is always an individual journey.

Many of the principles work for many people, but in the end, you have to do what works for you. Even in the 12-Step approach, more people typically benefit from the group support and the systematic process than from any religious conviction. If your faith helps you recover, then great, but it may not be for everyone and it doesn’t have to be.

“Recovery Ends After Treatment”

Finally, a lot of people have this idea that you can go into a treatment program, they fix you up, and you’re no longer addicted when you leave. In reality, treatment is more like a training camp. You learn a lot of recovery skills, interpersonal skills, emotional regulation skills, and so on. You find out if you have any co-occurring mental health issues and you begin treating those.

However, you have to carry all this work through to your regular life after you leave. To that end, it’s typically a good idea to step down levels of care or at least pay special attention to making a smooth transition through therapy and regular attendance of 12-Step meetings. Treatment is really only the beginning but it can give you a good head start and a map for the road ahead.

There are somewhere around 14,000 addiction treatment centers in the US and whatever negative preconception you have about treatment is probably true of at least one of them. However, good treatment programs know that real change comes from engagement and self-discovery, not from being badgered or bored into compliance.

At Enlightened Recovery, we believe that joy and connection are the keys to a strong recovery. We offer a variety of services, including interventions, individualized treatment, and transitional care. To learn more about our program, call us today at 833-801-5483.

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Is MDMA Addictive? What You Need to Know | Enlightened Recovery

MDMA goes by a lot of names, including Molly and ecstasy. It is a party drug, feeling socially acceptable and low-risk at first. For many, it starts exactly this way. A question that often comes up is whether MDMA is actually addictive. The honest answer is more complicated than most expect. Is MDMA addictive in the traditional sense? The research says yes. Understanding how and why matters for anyone who uses regularly or watching someone they care about do the same. 

How MDMA Affects the Brain

Here is what is actually happening in the brain when someone uses MDMA. The drug triggers a simultaneous release of serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. Serotonin is behind the emotional warmth and closeness people describe. Dopamine drives the euphoria. Norepinephrine increases heart rate and alertness. Together, they produce an experience most people find genuinely hard to replicate any other way.

The catch is what comes after. Serotonin gets depleted faster than the brain can rebuild it. The crash that follows, the anxiety, irritability, and low mood, can last for days. With repeated use, the brain stops producing adequate serotonin on its own because it has gotten used to the drug doing that work. What starts as a comedown becomes a new baseline, and getting through the day without using it starts to feel increasingly difficult.

Can You Get Addicted to MDMA?

Yes, you can get addicted to MDMA, though the dependence it creates looks different from opioid or alcohol addiction. Physical withdrawal symptoms are less acute. The psychological dependence can be just as powerful and just as hard to break. Tolerance builds with repeated use. The dose that produced a strong effect six months ago starts feeling thin. So, frequency increases. 

The emotional crash between uses deepens as serotonin depletion compounds. Using again starts feeling like the only way to feel okay. According to the 2024 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2.6 million adults aged 12 and older use MDMA annually. About 603,000 maintain regular monthly consumption. Among those aged 12 or older, use of hallucinogens, including Molly, increased from 7.6 million in 2021 to 10.4 million in 2024. Those numbers reflect how normalized ecstasy has become across age groups and social settings.

Signs of MDMA Addiction

Recognizing signs of MDMA addiction can be difficult. The drug is so closely tied to social settings and specific occasions. The warning signs often appear gradually, which is part of what makes them easy to rationalize. Emotionally, dependence tends to show up as mood instability between uses, persistent anxiety or depression, and difficulty feeling pleasure. 

The serotonin depletion driving the comedown becomes a normal state rather than a temporary one. Some describe feeling flat or numb when not using. For them, the only time they feel like themselves is when the drug is involved. Behaviorally, someone might start planning when and where they can use. Running out becomes a source of genuine distress.

Downplaying how frequently they are using, to others or to themselves, is common. Memory problems, difficulty concentrating, and trouble keeping up with responsibilities are also common signs of MDMA addiction. Physical signs include weight loss, disrupted sleep, jaw tension, headaches, and a persistent fatigue that does not respond to rest. These accumulate quietly, which is part of why so many do not connect them to ecstasy use until much later. By then, the pattern is usually well established. 

Risk Factors for MDMA Abuse

Not everyone who uses MDMA develops a problem, but certain factors increase the likelihood. A personal or family history of addiction or mental health conditions is one of the strongest predictors. MDMA abuse is particularly common among people who were already managing anxiety, depression, or trauma before they started using. The drug offers temporary relief from those symptoms, which makes it easy to lean on.

How often someone uses and at what doses significantly affect how quickly dependence develops. Social environments where ecstasy is normalized, and regular peer use make warning signs harder to spot. A personal or family history of addiction or mental health conditions is one of the strongest risk factors. MDMA abuse is particularly common among people already managing anxiety, depression, or unresolved trauma before they started using. The drug offers temporary relief from those symptoms, which makes it easy to lean on. 

MDMA addiction also frequently co-occurs with other substance use and mental health conditions. When anxiety or depression is driving the use, those conditions rarely improve on their own while use continues. They tend to get significantly worse.

The Comedown and What It Tells You

The comedown reveals a lot about what regular MDMA use does to the brain. In the days following use, the brain is running low on serotonin and struggling to regulate mood without it. Anxiety, irritability, low mood, and fatigue are all common. For occasional users, these symptoms resolve within a few days.

For regular users, the picture is different. The comedown gets worse with each use as cumulative serotonin depletion compounds. Recovery takes longer. The emotional low between uses deepens. Some people begin using again before the previous comedown has resolved, which accelerates the cycle considerably. When the comedown starts driving the next use, the relationship with MDMA has shifted into something worth addressing.

When MDMA Use Becomes a Dual Diagnosis Concern

MDMA use and mental health conditions interact in ways worth understanding. Many people who develop dependence on ecstasy were already managing anxiety, depression, or unresolved trauma before they started using. The drug provides temporary relief from those symptoms. Over time, it worsens them.

Our dual diagnosis approach addresses both the substance use and any underlying mental health conditions simultaneously. Treating one without addressing the other leaves the underlying driver intact. For most people, that is one of the most common reasons they end up back where they started. When both conditions receive attention simultaneously, the outcomes are significantly more stable.

What Does Treatment for MDMA Dependence Look Like?

The individuals who contact us about MDMA have already been wondering for a while whether things have gone too far. Getting an honest picture of where someone is shapes everything that comes next. How long they have been using matters. So does what else is going on mentally, and what daily life actually looks like. MDMA detox is usually the starting point. Withdrawal symptoms like severe fatigue, depression, and anxiety are managed in a medically supervised setting. 

Residential treatment follows for those needing time away from daily triggers to focus fully on recovery. A partial care program provides structured full-day sessions while allowing evenings at home. An intensive outpatient program offers the same clinical depth on a schedule flexible enough to fit around work or family. Outpatient rehab supports those transitioning from higher levels of care or managing less intensive needs. Our alumni program keeps people connected to the community and supports them long after formal treatment ends.

Is MDMA Addictive Enough to Warrant Getting Help?

You do not have to be at rock bottom to ask for help. If MDMA use has started feeling like something you cannot control, that is enough of a reason to call. Maybe someone you love seems stuck in a pattern you do not recognize. At Enlightened Recovery, we talk with people every day who are unsure whether what they are dealing with is a real problem. It usually is. If you or someone you care about is struggling with MDMA use or addiction, contact us today. We will listen and help you figure out what comes next. 

 

The Fentanyl Withdrawal Timeline

Fentanyl is one of the most potent synthetic opioids available. Stopping it is not like stopping most other substances. The withdrawal process is intense and physically demanding. Fear of withdrawal is one of the biggest barriers to seeking help. Understanding the fentanyl withdrawal timeline before going through it makes a real difference. Knowing what is coming and why gives you something solid to hold onto when the hardest moments arrive.

Why Fentanyl Withdrawal Hits So Hard

Fentanyl binds to opioid receptors with far greater intensity than most other opioids. It is roughly 100 times more potent than morphine. With regular use, the brain reorganizes itself around the drug’s presence. Natural dopamine production slows. The body’s ability to manage pain, mood, and basic functioning becomes dependent on fentanyl being there. When it is removed, the nervous system reacts sharply to its absence.

Fentanyl addiction develops faster than most expect, partly because of how completely it takes over the brain’s reward system. Whether someone started with a legitimate prescription or used it illicitly, the experience often sounds the same. At some point, using stopped being a choice and became a necessity. According to the 2024 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 816,000 individuals aged 12 and older misused fentanyl in the past year. An additional 668,000 used illicitly manufactured fentanyl. Experts note those figures are almost certainly an undercount. Fentanyl is often present in other substances without the user’s knowledge.

What Are the Withdrawal Symptoms of Fentanyl?

Fentanyl withdrawal symptoms overlap with other opioid withdrawals but tend to arrive faster and feel more acute. The body is thrown into a physiological crisis when the drug is no longer present. Signs of fentanyl withdrawal vary in intensity depending on the length of use, dosage, and whether other substances are involved.

Common symptoms include:

  • Intense muscle aches and cramps
  • Sweating and chills alternating rapidly
  • Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
  • Severe anxiety and restlessness
  • Insomnia not responding to standard sleep aids
  • Rapid heart rate and elevated blood pressure
  • Goosebumps and skin sensitivity
  • Powerful cravings are difficult to manage without support

The psychological symptoms are often the ones that get underestimated. Anxiety during fentanyl withdrawal can reach a level feeling genuinely unbearable. Depression, irritability, and a profound sense of dread are common. For those with underlying mental health conditions, those symptoms tend to intensify during withdrawal. Dual diagnosis care is an important part of addressing the full picture.

The Fentanyl Withdrawal Symptoms Timeline: Stage by Stage

Understanding the fentanyl withdrawal symptoms timeline helps set realistic expectations. Unlike longer-acting opioids, fentanyl clears the system relatively quickly. Withdrawal often begins much sooner, sometimes before the last dose wears off.

Early Stage: 8 to 24 Hours After Last Use

The first signs typically appear within 8 to 24 hours of the last dose. Early symptoms can include anxiety, restlessness, and a general sense something is wrong. Yawning, watery eyes, and a runny nose are also common early withdrawal symptoms. Muscle aches can begin during this stage, along with sleep disturbances. The early symptoms occur as the body starts to heal from drug use. 

Peak Stage: 24 to 72 Hours

The peak of fentanyl withdrawal typically hits between 24 and 72 hours after last use. Arguably, the most physically and psychologically demanding stretch.of the process. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea are at their worst. Muscle cramping intensifies. Sweating and chills alternate in waves. Anxiety and agitation are high, and cravings during this window are extremely powerful. Sleep is nearly impossible without medical support. Without oversight, the discomfort at this stage is one of the most common reasons someone returns to use. Medical support during this window is often what makes it possible to get through detox.

Subsiding Stage: Days 3 to 7

By day three, something usually shifts, though it is hard to notice at first. The worst of the nausea starts backing off. Sleep is still disrupted, but you can actually get some. After two days of almost none, that matters more than it sounds. Anxiety and low mood hang around longer than the physical symptoms. Cravings do not disappear just because the vomiting has stopped. Fentanyl detox with medical oversight through this stretch helps manage what is still present and sets someone up for what comes next.  

Post-Acute Withdrawal: Weeks to Months

A lot of people are surprised when symptoms keep showing up after the first week. The acute phase of the fentanyl withdrawal timeline may be over, but the brain is still finding its footing. Post-acute withdrawal syndrome, sometimes called PAWS, can stretch psychological symptoms out for weeks or even months. Sleep stays uneven. Mood shifts without much warning. Concentration takes longer to come back than most people expect. None of it means the process has stalled or gone wrong. The nervous system is readjusting itself, and it does not follow a set schedule.  

How Long Does Fentanyl Withdrawal Last?

Pinning down an exact timeline is harder than most people want it to be. For most, the acute phase runs about five to seven days. The first few tend to be the most physically demanding. Post-acute symptoms can linger for weeks, sometimes longer, for those who used heavily over an extended period. Health history, length of use, dosage, and other substances all factor in differently for each person. A thorough medical assessment at the start of detox tells you what to actually expect. The general timeline only goes so far.  

Why Medical Support Changes the Experience

Attempting fentanyl withdrawal without medical oversight is not only uncomfortable. It carries real risks. Dehydration from vomiting and diarrhea can become serious quickly. The psychological intensity of withdrawal can reach levels requiring clinical intervention. After a period of abstinence, tolerance drops significantly. A relapse at this point carries a much higher overdose risk.

Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) changes the experience of fentanyl withdrawal in beneficial ways, when appropriate. Buprenorphine and methadone bind to the same opioid receptors as fentanyl, which is why they work. Withdrawal symptoms ease. Cravings become manageable rather than overwhelming. There is a persistent misconception using medications during detox means trading one dependency for another. It does not. These are medical interventions with decades of research behind them, and they significantly improve the odds of getting through detox without returning to use. 

What Comes After Detox

Getting through detox is real progress. It does not address the reasons fentanyl became necessary in the first place. It also does not build the skills needed to stay well once the physical piece is handled. Residential addiction treatment after detox gives someone uninterrupted time to work through the psychological side of addiction. Daily therapy, psychiatric evaluation, and a structured routine built around healing make that work possible. For most people navigating fentanyl addiction, what happens after detox matters just as much as detox itself.  

Getting Through Fentanyl Withdrawal With the Right Help

Getting through fentanyl withdrawal takes real courage. If you or someone you love has questions or is ready to take the next step, we are here to help. At Enlightened Recovery, our team is here to help you figure out where you need to begin. We offer 24/7 medical oversight in a warm, caring environment. We tailor our care to fit your unique needs. When you are ready, contact us and let us help you figure out what comes next. 

The Correlation Between Postpartum Depression and Addiction | Enlightened Recovery

Bringing a baby into the world changes everything. Your body, your sleep, your sense of self, your daily routine. For many new mothers, those changes come with joy and exhaustion in equal measure. But for some, they come with something harder to name. Postpartum depression and addiction are more closely connected than most people realize. Understanding that connection matters for anyone navigating this season of life, whether personally or alongside someone they love.

What Is Postpartum Depression?

Postpartum depression is a mood disorder affecting mothers after childbirth. It goes beyond the typical “baby blues” that many women experience in the first week or two after delivery. PPD can develop anytime within the first year after giving birth. It tends to be more persistent and more intense than a brief emotional adjustment.

Symptoms can include persistent sadness, difficulty bonding with the baby, severe anxiety, and irritability. Trouble sleeping even when the baby is asleep is also common. Some mothers describe feeling emotionally numb or disconnected from their own lives. Others feel overwhelmed by guilt or a nagging sense they are failing at something they were supposed to find natural. For a smaller number, PPD escalates into postpartum psychosis, which includes hallucinations, confusion, and disorientation, and requires immediate medical attention.

Postpartum depression is not a character flaw or a reflection of how much someone loves their child. It is a medical condition rooted in the dramatic hormonal, neurological, and physical changes that follow childbirth. It is also treatable. But without proper support, some mothers end up managing symptoms in ways that create new problems.

The Link Between Postpartum Depression and Addiction

When emotional pain becomes unmanageable, some mothers turn to substances to cope. Professional help can feel out of reach, especially in the early weeks of parenthood. Alcohol is the most common entry point. It is legal and widely available. “Wine mom” culture has normalized drinking as a response to the stress of new parenthood. Prescription medications, cannabis, and other substances also come into the picture for some women.

The research behind this connection is significant. According to the CDC, 48.5% of postpartum women with depressive symptoms report using substances. Among those without depression, that figure drops to 24.0%. Mothers experiencing a substance use disorder are up to 4.8 times more likely to develop postpartum depression than those without. The relationship runs in both directions: depression increases the likelihood of substance use, and substance use deepens and prolongs depression.

Drug addiction developing in the postpartum period often looks different from addiction in other contexts. It tends to be driven less by recreational use and more by desperation for relief. Sleep deprivation, social isolation, and the relentless pressure of caring for a newborn create conditions where vulnerability runs high. Substance use can feel like the only thing making any of it manageable, at least temporarily.

Why Substance Abuse and Pregnancy History Matter

A history of substance abuse and pregnancy does not end at delivery. The risks extend well into the postpartum period. Women who struggled with substance use before or during pregnancy face a significantly elevated risk of postpartum depression. Research shows PPD prevalence reaches up to 10.43% in mothers with a substance use disorder history. Among those without, the rate sits at 2.37%. The gap is significant.

For women in recovery during pregnancy, the postpartum period can feel destabilizing in ways they did not anticipate. The hormonal crash after delivery, sleep deprivation, and the emotional intensity of new motherhood can all trigger cravings. Previously effective coping strategies start feeling insufficient. Having a relapse prevention plan specifically built around the postpartum period is not optional for these women. It is essential.

Polysubstance use is also a significant concern in this population. Depressive symptoms increase the prevalence of using multiple substances simultaneously from 7.0% to 17.5%. When more than one substance is involved, the medical complexity increases considerably. Treating both conditions together rather than separately becomes essential. 

How Postpartum Depression and Addiction Reinforce Each Other

Both conditions affect the same brain systems, which is a big part of why they make each other worse. Postpartum depression disrupts dopamine and serotonin regulation at a time when the brain is already managing significant hormonal changes. Substances temporarily flood those same systems, producing relief that feels real because, neurologically, it is real, at least briefly.

Over time, the brain adjusts to having that external chemical input and pulls back on its own production. The depression deepens. More of the substance is needed to produce the same relief. What started as a coping mechanism becomes its own problem, layered on top of the original one. Postpartum depression treated in isolation from addiction rarely produces lasting stability. Addiction treated without addressing the postpartum depression leaves the emotional driver completely unattended.

What Postpartum Addiction Treatment Actually Involves

Getting help as a new mother comes with practical barriers. Who watches the baby? Will someone judge me? Will I lose custody? These fears are real, and they keep people from reaching out. Getting the right help early protects both the mother and the child far more effectively than managing alone.

Dual diagnosis treatment addresses both the mood disorder and the substance use disorder simultaneously. When a team sees the full picture from day one, the care plan reflects what is driving both conditions. Medication decisions, therapy, and discharge planning are all shaped by the complete picture, not a partial one. 

Postpartum addiction treatment for new mothers also needs to account for the unique pressures of this life stage. Postpartum addiction support that is specific to new mothers looks different from standard addiction care, and that difference matters. Therapy addressing guilt, identity shifts, and the emotional complexity of early motherhood alongside addiction and depression produces better outcomes. Standard addiction treatment alone rarely covers that ground. Building a support network and connecting with peer groups of other mothers in recovery are part of effective care. Developing practical coping tools specific to new parenthood matters just as much.

Relapse prevention planning in this context is particularly important. The postpartum period does not end at six weeks. Hormonal fluctuations, sleep deprivation, and the emotional demands of caring for an infant continue for months. A relapse prevention plan built around those realities gives a much stronger foundation than a generic one.

The Correlation Between Postpartum Depression and Addiction Is Real. So Is Recovery.

If you are a new mother struggling with depression, substance use, or both, what you are experiencing has a name. It also has real treatment. Postpartum addiction support is available, and reaching out is not a sign of failure. It is one of the most protective things you can do for yourself and your child. At Enlightened Recovery, we work with mothers navigating postpartum depression and addiction together. Our team understands what this combination feels like and builds care around what you actually need. When you are ready to talk, contact us, and we will help you figure out where to begin.