
Guest Post: Rebuilding Trust
It takes courage, strength, and commitment to recover from the disease of addiction.
By Jerry Moe, National Director, Hazelden Betty Ford Children’s Program; Advisory Board, National Association for Children of Addiction (NACOA).
Congratulations. It takes courage, strength, and commitment to recover from the disease of addiction. Recovery is the greatest gift you can give your children. It opens the door to many possibilities, including the opportunity to rebuild trust with your children. In early recovery, it’s easy to focus on what has been lost: trust, time, relationships. This can result in a strong desire to “make everything right” immediately. Recovery takes time—slow down and take a deep breath!
Parents can begin the process of rebuilding trust with children by offering structure, consistency, and regular routines. Keep promises and when you can’t follow through, sit down and honestly explain why. Don’t try to hide your feelings. Tell your children, “I’m feeling sad, mad, scared, (or whatever), but I’m okay. I have other adults who are helping me.” Children often know more than you realize. Listen, and allow your children to express their big feelings without getting defensive or immediately trying to fix things.
While it’s important to apologize, say your words and then move forward and get involved in your children’s lives. Actions speak much louder than words, and your children want your time and attention! Read a book together, shoot hoops, or take a walk. Do a craft project, kick a soccer ball around, or cook a meal. You might try committing to weekly one-hour play dates and plan a few regular family dinners together.
You’ll have lots of opportunities to practice patience, because your children need time and space to learn to trust you again. Give them a chance to heal. Slow down your expectations. Tell them daily that you are working on your healing with the help of safe people.
Keep being the best parent you can be, one day at a time. Progress, not perfection.

Guest Post: When Plans Don’t Go As Planned
When routines and plans get interrupted, there are ways to talk with children and show them that they’re still safe and loved.

Plan and Protect
An article about planning for safe caregiving when dealing with substance use.

Routines at the Ready: Weekly Schedule
A printable tool for keeping up with routines.

Thinking Ahead: A Care Plan
A printable page to help plan for children’s care in case of unexpected challenges.

All About Karli: A Story About Reconnecting
A story about reconnecting after a parent and child’s time apart during recovery from addiction.

I Can Take Good Care of Myself
A printable page to remind children of all the ways they care for themselves.

Supporting Whole Family Recovery with Sesame Street
A heartfelt and practical discussion on what it means to reunify as a family after treatment for addiction.