Skip to content

Supporting Loved Ones in Addiction | Wed. March 25th

  • Online Recovery
    • Quit Opioids
    • Including prescription pain medication and heroin
    • Suboxone
    • Insurance or self-pay
    • At-home drug screenings
    • Quit Kratom
    • Including 7-OH
    • Medication assistance
    • Insurance or self-pay
    • Whole-person care (anxiety, insomnia, etc.)
    • Quit Drinking
    • Campral
    • Naltrexone
    • Insurance or self-pay
    • 100% Online
    • Non-judgmental providers
    • Help with co-occurring disorders​
    • Recovery groups
    • Real people (No AI bots)
  • About Us
    • Our Research

    Advancing substance use treatment through rigorous, peer-reviewed research and actionable insights.

    • Our Mission

    Everyone deserves access to the gold standard of treatment, without judgment.

    • Growing Our Team

    Join us in transforming addiction treatment and improving lives through digital care.

    • Founded and operated by people in recovery since 2015
  • Resources
    • 33% of members were referred by friends or family
    Free Help Them Heal Guide
    • Articles
    • Member stories
    • Opioid addiction help
    • Suboxone Basics
    • Quit drinking
    • Naltrexone basics
    • For friends and family
    • Workit Health
    • Insurance checker
    • Locations
    • Reviews
    • Resources
    • Mental health apps
    • Helplines and support
    • Community in recovery
    • Medication resources
    • 32k+ App store reviews
    • 35k+ Members
    • 85% of Workit clinicians have supported a loved one
  • Make A Referral
    • Friends and Family

    For friends or family members supporting someone they care about.

    • Partners and Providers

    For healthcare professionals making a patient referral.

    • 33% of members were referred by friends or family
  • Partners
Book now
  • Culture, Stories Of Recovery
  • drugs, How to Quit Drinking, rock bottom

Why Rock Bottom Might Be A Pervasive Myth

  • Fact Checked and Peer Reviewed

When I started writing this article the concept was to write about the point at which seven of us reached the end of our substance use disorder, and sought help. It was to show others that while that point may have looked different to all of us, we all had mounting consequences and a dire need to seek more for our lives—a life worth living, if you will.

  • By Olivia Pennelle

Want us to reach out to your loved one?​

If your loved one is ready to make a change in their life, submit a referral. We will reach out to them with more information.

Make a referral

What's your goal?

Join the 35k+ members who treated addiction via their phone

Seen from a distance, a man walks to the edge of a jutting, rocky cliff.

What to Know About Precipitated Withdrawal from Opioids

Olivia Pennelle
A young Black man raises an eyebrow skeptically.

Take a Closer Look at Your Drinking

Alaine Sepulveda
Boston Paul is a White man with a shaved head and a goatee, holding a small dog

Boston Paul’s Story

Workit Team

In this article

Is the idea of reaching ‘rock bottom’ before seeking help for addiction outdated?

When I started writing this article, the concept was to write about the point at which seven of us reached the end of our substance use disorders and sought help. I wanted to show others that while that point may have looked different to all of us, we all had experienced mounting consequences and a dire need to seek more for our lives—a life worth living, if you will.

We often refer to that entry point as “rock bottom.” As I reached out to my recovery community, a few were quick to challenge me on the phrase rock bottom. I was keen to explore the resistance to that phrase. I spoke to a friend in long-term recovery, who said this:

“The pervasive myth that someone must hit “rock bottom” in order to initiate recovery has resulted in many people delaying their recovery and wiping out valuable recovery capital in the process. In addition, misguided friends and family have often been taught to essentially sabotage the life of a person struggling with addiction in order to create “rock bottom” conditions. Everything we know about recovery support and recovery capital contradicts this concept.” – Adam Sledd

I think Adam has a point. This idea that people need to reach the end of the line—jails or institutions—as the end point of recovery is false. Because they may die or they will waste valuable time in recovery. Of course, many of us do get to these extreme endpoints … but not all. And we don’t need to. Due to the great work of addiction advocacy groups, recovery writers, and people speaking aloud about their recovery, we are seeing that people can enter recovery at all points in their lives. Someone’s wakeup call may be a DUI, court-ordered treatment, being cut-off by a family member, realizing that their substance use is troubling and stopping there, seeing others in recovery living well, or the extreme ends of the spectrum. We are seeing more and more people enter recovery at various points and stages in the disorder.

With that altered concept in mind, I asked what the point of seeking recovery looked like among some of my peers:

“It will be a long time before I realize that the “end” of my life is indeed the beginning of it, my rebirth, and that the entire experience will end up being the greatest lesson and blessing of my life. But it comes. My alcoholism is a gift. Sobriety, my greatest teacher.” – Sarah Roberts

“At last, I finally realized that the only way I’d tumble dry was to escape the spin cycle.” – Pete White

“I had a moment of clarity. It was like an out of body experience. I was watching myself tearing apart the house, kids crying, ex-wife screaming at me; I suddenly realized that my life as an alcoholic and drug addict could not, should not, and would not be viable. I didn’t get sober all at once, but after that, sobriety and recovery became the goal. There was no going back after a moment like that.” – Austin Brown

“Standing in an anti-suicide smock in the basement jail cell in Williston, North Dakota, I finally realized that my story was finished. I was done. Surprisingly, it turned out that I wasn’t. My story continued, but it was wholly transformed.” – Daniel Maurer

“It wasn’t my apartment getting raided or spending my 21st birthday in rehab that made me realize I needed to change. I’m not sure any consequences would ever have been enough to stop me. At the end I was in a maintenance opiate habit, dull as rocks but all-consuming … continuously avoiding withdrawal, but never getting high. It didn’t work for me. It was the clearest sign I’d ever had that I was an addict, through and through, and that drinking and drugs never worked for me.” – Kali Lux

“I hit many low points over the years, but the point that made me decide to change was the morning of July 14, 2007. Coming out of a blackout in a foreign NYC hospital bed, I knew I couldn’t keep hurting myself and I definitely couldn’t keep hurting my family. Something clicked inside me (willingness?), and my life hasn’t been the same since.” – Laura Silverman

And mine? Well, I was sitting on my apartment floor—covered in blood and bruises and surrounded by the chaos of my latest 14-bottle wine binge. I was faced with the prospect of either dying or getting help. Even though I felt numb to any kind of emotion or reality, there was this moment that I can only describe as grace: peace washed over me and I was guided to get help. The steps forward were laid out before me and it all miraculously fell into place. Perhaps I was just finally ready. The scales finally tipped from self-harm toward self-love. I didn’t want to die. Where I wasn’t able to stop drinking countless times before, suddenly I could. I stopped on 26 March 2012. And I haven’t had a drink since. Today I live a life un-anesthetized.

Whatever your entry point, we want to show you that recovery—and a vibrant and fulfilling life—is entirely possible. You don’t need to wait until you get to the extreme end of the spectrum to get help. Just try now, it’s worth it.

Olivia Pennelle (Liv) has a masters in clinical social work from Portland State University. She is a mental health therapist, writer, and human activist. Her writing has appeared in STAT News, Insider, Filter Magazine, Ravishly, The Temper, and Shondaland. She is the founder of Liv’s Recovery Kitchen, Life After 12-Step Recovery, and Tera Collaborations. She lives near Portland, Oregon. Follow her on Instagram @Livwritesrecovery and @teracollaborations

PrevSt. Patrick’s Day Sober
Streetwise and Sober, but Still ScammedNext

Any general advice posted on our blog, website, or app is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace or substitute for any medical or other advice. Workit Health, Inc. and its affiliated professional entities make no representations or warranties and expressly disclaim any and all liability concerning any treatment, action by, or effect on any person following the general information offered or provided within or through the blog, website, or app. If you have specific concerns or a situation arises in which you require medical advice, you should consult with an appropriately trained and qualified medical services provider.

Top

Get the latest recovery news

Instagram Linkedin-in Facebook-f Youtube
    • Treatments
    • Opioids
    • Kratom
    • Alcohol

 

  • About Workit Health
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Media spotlight
  • Careers
  • We Accept Insurance
  • Check insurance
  • Aetna
  • Anthem of Ohio
  • Horizon BCBSNJ
  • Humana
  • Resources
  • What is harm reduction?
  • Addiction recovery resources
  • Suboxone FAQs
  • Blog
  • Friends and Family
  • Resources for friends and family
  • Help Them Heal Guide
  • Refer a loved one
  • Members
  • Login
  • Community
  • Medical records request form
  • Medical Records Fax: 833-923-0584
  • Tech support guides
  • Call us: 855-659-7734 M-F 8am-9pm EST
    • Partners
    • Make a referral
    • For health plans
    • For providers and hospitals
    • Third-party medical records requests
Treatments
    • Opioids
    • Kratom
    • Alcohol
About Us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Media spotlight
  • Careers
Resources
  • What is harm reduction?
  • Addiction recovery resources
  • Suboxone FAQs
  • Blog
Insurance
  • Check insurance
  • Aetna
  • Anthem of Ohio
  • Horizon BCBSNJ
  • Humana
Members
  • Login
  • Community
  • Medical records request form
  • Medical Records Fax: 833-923-0584
  • Tech support guides
  • Call us: 855-659-7734
    M-F 8am-9pm EST
Resources
  • What is harm reduction?
  • Addiction recovery resources
  • Suboxone FAQs
  • Blog
Friends and Family
  • Resources for friends and family
  • Help Them Heal Guide
Partners
    • Make a referral
    • For health plans
    • For providers and hospitals
    • Third-party medical records requests
Locations
  • Arizona
  • California
  • Florida
  • Illinois
  • Michigan
  • Montana
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • Texas
  • Washington
Read more about Suboxone risks and concerns

Suboxone (buprenorphine/naloxone) is indicated for the treatment of opioid dependence in adults. Suboxone should not be taken by individuals who have been shown to be hypersensitive to buprenorphine or naloxone as serious adverse reactions, including anaphylactic shock, have been reported. Taking Suboxone (buprenorphine/naloxone) with other opioid medicines, benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other central nervous system depressants can cause breathing problems that can lead to coma and death. Other side effects may include headaches, nausea, vomiting, constipation, insomnia, pain, increased sweating, sleepiness, dizziness, coordination problems, physical dependence or abuse, and liver problems. For more information about Suboxone (buprenorphine/naloxone) see Suboxone.com, the full Prescribing Information, and Medication Guide, or talk to your healthcare provider. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

All clinical and medical services are provided by licensed physicians and clinicians who are practicing as employees or contractors of independently owned and operated professional medical practices that are owned by licensed physicians. These medical practices include Workit Health (MI), PLLC; Workit Health (CA), P.C.; Workit Health (NJ), LLC; Workit Health (OH), LLC; Virtual Physician Practice (NY), PLLC; and any other Workit Health professional entity that is established in the future.

Clinic locations

Arizona
2501 N Hayden Rd.
Ste 103
Scottsdale, AZ 85257
fax (HIPAA): (833) 664-5441

California
1460 Maria Lane
Ste 300
Walnut Creek, CA 94596
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

Florida
600 Heritage Dr.
Ste 210, #17
Jupiter, FL 33458
fax (HIPAA): (813) 200-2822

Illinois
1280 Iroquois Ave
Ste 402
Naperville, IL 60563
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

Michigan
3300 Washtenaw Ave
Ste 280
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

Montana
415 N Higgins Ave
Ste 6
Missoula, MT 59802
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

New Jersey
5 Greentree Center
Ste 117
Marlton, NJ 08053
fax (HIPAA): (609) 855-5027

New Mexico
5901 Indian School Road, NE
Ste 212
Albuquerque, NM 87110
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

North Carolina
3719 Latrobe Drive
Ste 850-M
Charlotte, NC 28211-4827
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

Ohio
6855 Spring Valley Dr
Ste 110
Holland, OH 43528
fax (HIPAA): (513) 823-3247

Oklahoma
1010 24th Ave NW
Suite 100
Norman, OK 73069
fax (HIPAA): (855) 716-4494

Texas
5373 W Alabama St
Ste 204
Houston, TX 77056
fax (HIPAA): (737) 738-5046

Washington
9116 Gravelly Lake Dr SW
Ste 107 #3, PMB 1963
Lakewood, WA 98499-3148.
fax (HIPAA): (833) 328-1407

AICPA SOC

Terms of Service

Privacy Policy

Notice of Privacy Practice

View Accessibility Statement

© 2026 Workit Health. All rights reserved.

Not ready to start? We'll send you more information:

  • Workit Health

    When I opt in, Workit Health will send information about their program and recovery resources.

    *I agree to receive marketing and member care messages by email. Messaging frequency varies. I can unsubscribe at any time.

    **I agree to receive marketing and member care messages by text (SMS). Messaging frequency varies. Message and data rates may apply. I can opt out at any time by replying STOP. I can reply HELP to receive support. If I do not consent to receive SMS, and Workit Health is unable to reach me by email, I understand that they will not be able to contact me by text.

    Carriers are not liable for delayed or undelivered messages.

    View our Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Consent to SMS and Email.

  • Should be Empty:

This site uses cookies to improve your experience. By using this site, you consent to our use of cookies.

Accept Cookies