📖 Reading 4.1: The Addiction Cycle and How Destructive Patterns Begin to Break
📖 Reading 4.1: The Addiction Cycle and How Destructive Patterns Begin to Break
Introduction
Addiction often feels confusing to the person trapped inside it. A recovering person may say, “I do not understand why I keep doing this.” A family member may ask, “Why would he go back after everything he lost?” A pastor may wonder, “Why does she seem sincere one day and secretive the next?” An Addiction Recovery Chaplain must learn to recognize the addiction cycle without reducing the person to the cycle.
The cycle often includes:
Trigger
Craving
Bargaining
Use or acting out
Shame
Secrecy
Isolation
Increased vulnerability
Repeat
This pattern does not remove moral responsibility. It also does not mean the person is simply weak, rebellious, or hopeless. Addiction is a whole-person struggle involving body, soul, habits, desires, pain, memory, relationships, spiritual hunger, and repeated choices. The Topic 4 course map focuses on recognizing the addiction cycle and helping someone name the next right step without taking control.
A chaplain’s role is not to provide therapy, addiction treatment, detox supervision, medical care, or clinical counseling. The chaplain’s role is to offer Christ-centered presence, wise boundaries, prayer by permission, Scripture with consent, truth without contempt, and referral-aware support.
1. The Addiction Cycle Is a Repeating Pattern
Many destructive patterns begin long before the visible behavior. The relapse, binge, substance use, pornography use, gambling episode, angry blowup, or secret purchase may be the visible moment. But often, the cycle started earlier.
A person may have experienced:
a stressful conflict
rejection
loneliness
boredom
grief
shame
physical pain
exhaustion
payday
a familiar location
an old contact
a memory
a holiday
spiritual discouragement
resentment
hidden fear
unprocessed anger
These experiences can function as triggers. The trigger awakens desire, distress, memory, or craving. The person begins to feel pulled toward relief.
At first, the person may not say, “I want to relapse.” The thought may be subtler:
“I just need to calm down.”
“I deserve a break.”
“Nobody understands.”
“I can handle it this time.”
“I will only do a little.”
“No one will know.”
“It will not matter.”
“God is already disappointed in me anyway.”
These thoughts become bargaining. Bargaining weakens resistance. Then the person may act out or use. Afterward comes shame. Shame pushes secrecy. Secrecy leads to isolation. Isolation makes the person more vulnerable to the next trigger.
This is the cycle.
2. Triggers: The Starting Point of Many Relapse Patterns
A trigger is anything that increases vulnerability to craving or destructive behavior. Some triggers are external. Others are internal.
External Triggers
External triggers may include:
certain people
old using friends
bars, neighborhoods, websites, apps, or stores
money in hand
conflict at home
work stress
family gatherings
music, smells, or places connected to past use
anniversaries of trauma or loss
being alone at night
seeing someone else use
unstructured free time
Internal Triggers
Internal triggers may include:
anxiety
anger
resentment
shame
loneliness
fatigue
hunger
sexual frustration
fear
grief
boredom
emotional numbness
spiritual dryness
feeling misunderstood
feeling controlled
feeling abandoned
The chaplain should not assume triggers are always obvious. Sometimes a person does not recognize the trigger until later. A gentle question can help:
“What was happening before the craving became strong?”
Or:
“What were you feeling before you started thinking about using?”
These questions help the person slow down and observe the pattern.
3. Craving: When Desire Narrows the Person’s Vision
Craving is more than a casual wish. It may feel like an intense pull in the body, emotions, thoughts, or imagination. The person may feel restless, agitated, numb, desperate, angry, or strangely focused.
Craving often narrows vision. The person may stop thinking about long-term consequences and begin focusing only on immediate relief.
A person may forget:
their recovery goals
family trust
legal consequences
spiritual commitments
health risks
past pain
sponsor support
church community
God’s presence
the possibility of asking for help
The chaplain can help by slowing the moment down. The goal is not to lecture. The goal is to help the person come back into the light.
Helpful questions include:
“How strong is the craving right now, from 1 to 10?”
“Are you alone?”
“Are you in danger right now?”
“Who is the safest person to contact?”
“What would help you get through the next ten minutes?”
“Would it help to pray before you make a decision?”
“Can you move to a safer place?”
These questions are simple, but in a craving moment, simple is often best.
4. Bargaining: The Voice of Permission
Between craving and use, many people enter bargaining. Bargaining is the inner conversation that gives permission to cross a boundary.
Bargaining may sound like:
“I have been good for a long time.”
“I can control it now.”
“This time will be different.”
“I need this to sleep.”
“I need this to handle stress.”
“I will confess afterward.”
“God will forgive me anyway.”
“I already failed in my heart, so I might as well do it.”
“This is not as bad as what I used to do.”
“Nobody will find out.”
Bargaining is dangerous because it often uses partial truth. Yes, God is merciful. Yes, stress is real. Yes, recovery is hard. But bargaining twists these truths into permission for harm.
The chaplain should not respond with panic. A calm response might be:
“That sounds like the addiction is trying to give you permission. What truth do you need to remember right now?”
Or:
“Before you decide, who can you call who knows your recovery plan?”
This helps the person separate the craving voice from the truth.
5. Use or Acting Out: The Visible Moment
Use or acting out is the visible moment in the cycle. This may involve alcohol, drugs, pornography, gambling, compulsive spending, self-destructive behavior, rage, or another addictive pattern.
The chaplain must be careful not to treat this moment as the whole story. The behavior matters. Harm matters. Consequences matter. But the behavior is usually connected to a larger pattern.
After use, the chaplain should not begin with contempt. The goal is truth and safety.
Helpful first questions include:
“Are you safe right now?”
“Have you used anything that could put you in medical danger?”
“Are you alone?”
“Do you need emergency help?”
“Have you told your sponsor or recovery support?”
“Is anyone else in danger?”
“Are you thinking about harming yourself?”
If there is overdose danger, severe intoxication, suicidal intent, unsafe driving, violence risk, abuse, or danger to a minor, the chaplain must not promise secrecy. Safety comes first.
6. Shame: The Cycle’s Emotional Trap
After use, shame often floods in.
Shame says:
“You are disgusting.”
“You are fake.”
“God is done with you.”
“Your church would reject you.”
“Your family will never forgive you.”
“You might as well keep going.”
“Do not tell anyone.”
“You are only your addiction.”
Biblical conviction is different from shame. Conviction tells the truth and invites repentance. Shame attacks identity and pushes hiding.
Conviction says:
“This is wrong. Come into the light. Grace is available. Take responsibility.”
Shame says:
“You are beyond help. Hide.”
An Addiction Recovery Chaplain must speak in a way that strengthens conviction without feeding shame.
A wise phrase is:
“This matters, and hiding will make it worse. God is not finished with you. Let’s tell the truth and identify the next right step.”
This kind of response is firm and hopeful.
7. Secrecy and Isolation: Where the Cycle Gains Strength
Secrecy is one of addiction’s strongest weapons. When a person hides, the cycle gains power.
Secrecy may include:
deleting messages
lying about location
hiding money
avoiding calls
skipping meetings
pretending everything is fine
withdrawing from church
avoiding prayer
refusing accountability
minimizing relapse
blaming others
hiding emotional warning signs
Isolation then deepens the risk. The person becomes alone with craving, shame, and distorted thinking.
James 5:16 says:
“Confess your offenses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed.”
Confession does not mean reckless exposure. It means bringing truth to God and trusted people in appropriate ways.
A chaplain might say:
“Who needs to know today so you are not carrying this alone?”
Or:
“What would it look like to come back into the light before the cycle gets stronger?”
8. Breaking the Cycle Begins with Naming the Cycle
A destructive pattern often loses some power when it is named.
The chaplain can help the person map the cycle:
What was the trigger?
What did you feel in your body?
What thoughts started bargaining?
What did you do next?
What happened afterward?
Where did shame show up?
How did secrecy begin?
Who did you avoid?
What support could you contact earlier next time?
What is the next faithful step now?
This is not therapy. It is spiritual and practical reflection. The chaplain is helping the person tell the truth, recognize danger points, and move toward support.
The goal is not to make the chaplain the person’s recovery manager. The goal is to help the person use proper recovery supports with greater honesty.
9. Breaking the Cycle Requires Connection
Addiction says, “Hide.”
Recovery says, “Tell the truth.”
The gospel says, “Come into the light.”
First John 1:7 says:
“But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses us from all sin.”
Walking in the light includes confession, accountability, prayer, wise community, and changed behavior over time.
Connection may include:
calling a sponsor
attending a meeting
contacting a pastor
telling a spouse or accountability partner appropriately
asking a trusted friend to stay nearby
calling a counselor
contacting a treatment provider
joining worship
meeting with a mentor
using a crisis line if needed
moving to a safer environment
The chaplain supports connection. The chaplain does not become the whole connection.
10. Breaking the Cycle Requires a Next Right Step
People in crisis often cannot process a long plan. They need one faithful next step.
The chaplain might ask:
“What is the next right step you can take in the next ten minutes?”
Examples include:
“Call my sponsor.”
“Leave this place.”
“Throw away the substance.”
“Go to a meeting.”
“Text my accountability partner.”
“Tell my wife I am struggling before I use.”
“Ask someone to sit with me in a public place.”
“Pray honestly.”
“Turn off the phone.”
“Call emergency help.”
“Stop driving.”
“Go back to the recovery home.”
“Tell the truth instead of hiding.”
Small steps matter. The goal is movement toward life, truth, safety, and support.
11. Breaking the Cycle Requires Spiritual Truth
Addiction lies. Scripture tells the truth.
Addiction says, “You are alone.”
God says, “I will in no way leave you, neither will I in any way forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5, WEB).
Addiction says, “You are only your worst failure.”
God says, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17, WEB).
Addiction says, “Hide.”
God says, “Walk in the light” (1 John 1:7, WEB).
Addiction says, “There is no way out.”
God says, “God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted above what you are able” (1 Corinthians 10:13, WEB).
Chaplains should share Scripture with consent. A good question is:
“Would you be open to hearing a Scripture that speaks to this moment?”
Scripture should be offered as light, not as a weapon.
12. Breaking the Cycle Requires Embodied Wisdom
People are embodied souls. Addiction does not only affect the mind or will. It affects the body, nervous system, sleep, appetite, energy, pain, memory, and habits.
A person may be more vulnerable when they are:
hungry
angry
lonely
tired
sick
grieving
anxious
overstimulated
sleep-deprived
physically hurting
isolated
spiritually dry
The old recovery reminder “HALT” — hungry, angry, lonely, tired — captures a basic wisdom: embodied conditions matter.
A chaplain can ask:
“Have you eaten today?”
“Did you sleep last night?”
“Are you alone right now?”
“What emotion is strongest?”
“Is your body telling you something?”
“Would moving to a safe public place help?”
These questions do not replace spiritual care. They make spiritual care more realistic.
13. Breaking the Cycle Requires Boundaries
Sometimes the next right step is a boundary.
Boundaries may include:
avoiding old contacts
blocking a dealer’s number
not carrying cash
staying away from certain places
deleting unsafe apps
avoiding secret meetings
not driving while triggered or impaired
having accountability with money
refusing romantic entanglements during early recovery
not living with unsafe people
keeping recovery home rules
following probation, parole, or program conditions
telling the truth before a relapse happens
Chaplains should encourage boundaries without becoming the person’s controller.
A chaplain might say:
“What boundary would protect your recovery today?”
Or:
“Who can help you keep that boundary?”
Boundaries are not punishment. They are protection.
14. Breaking the Cycle Requires Mercy and Accountability Together
Some ministry responses emphasize mercy without accountability. Others emphasize accountability without mercy. Recovery chaplaincy needs both.
Mercy says:
“You are not beyond God’s reach.”
Accountability says:
“This behavior matters, and repair is needed.”
Mercy without accountability can become enabling. Accountability without mercy can become contempt.
Jesus brings both truth and grace. John 1:14 says He came “full of grace and truth.”
An Addiction Recovery Chaplain can say:
“God’s mercy is real. And because your life matters, we need to take this seriously.”
That sentence holds both compassion and responsibility.
15. What Addiction Recovery Chaplains Should Do
Addiction Recovery Chaplains should:
Learn to recognize the addiction cycle.
Ask calm, practical questions.
Help people name triggers and warning signs.
Encourage early truth-telling.
Support connection with sponsors, pastors, recovery groups, and wise helpers.
Offer prayer by permission.
Share Scripture with consent.
Protect dignity.
Watch for crisis signals.
Refuse false secrecy when safety is at risk.
Encourage next right steps.
Respect recovery plans and program rules.
Avoid becoming the person’s whole support system.
16. What Addiction Recovery Chaplains Should Not Do
Addiction Recovery Chaplains should not:
Shame people for relapse risk.
Pretend the addiction cycle is simple.
Promise secrecy in unsafe situations.
Become the person’s sponsor, therapist, treatment provider, or crisis manager.
Give unsafe rides, money, housing promises, or secret access.
Ignore overdose risk, suicidal language, severe intoxication, or violence risk.
Treat relapse as proof that God is finished with the person.
Use Scripture as a weapon.
Encourage isolation.
Replace the recovery support system.
Take control of another person’s recovery.
17. Sample Chaplain Phrases
When someone says, “I think I’m going to use tonight”:
“Thank you for telling the truth before it happened. Are you safe right now, and who from your recovery support can you contact immediately?”
When someone says, “I already messed up, so why stop?”
“Shame wants you to keep hiding. The next right step still matters. Let’s move toward safety and support now.”
When someone says, “Please don’t tell anyone”:
“I care about your privacy, but I cannot promise secrecy if your safety or someone else’s safety is at risk. Let’s think about the safest next step.”
When someone says, “I don’t know what triggered me”:
“Let’s slow it down. What was happening before the craving became strong?”
When someone says, “I just need you, not my sponsor”:
“I care about you, but I do not want to replace the support you need. Let’s contact your sponsor or recovery support now.”
18. Ministry Sciences Reflection
The addiction cycle shows how thoughts, emotions, habits, body states, relationships, spiritual beliefs, and environment can interact. A craving is not just a thought. Shame is not just a feeling. Secrecy is not just privacy. Each part of the cycle can strengthen the next part.
This is why tone matters. A shaming response may push secrecy. A calm response may help truth emerge. A vague encouragement may not be enough when danger is present. A controlling response may create dependency. A wise response helps the person reconnect with responsibility, support, and hope.
The chaplain should notice patterns without pretending to diagnose or treat clinically. The chaplain serves best when spiritual care stays grounded, humble, practical, and connected to appropriate supports.
19. Organic Humans Reflection
The Organic Humans framework reminds us that people in recovery are embodied souls. Their addiction is not the whole story, but it may affect the whole person.
A trigger may come through the body. A craving may affect thinking. Shame may attack identity. Secrecy may break relationships. Isolation may weaken hope. Spiritual despair may make relapse feel inevitable.
Whole-person care sees the person as more than a behavior. It also refuses to ignore behavior. The person is an image-bearer with dignity, responsibility, weakness, agency, wounds, habits, hopes, and spiritual significance.
The chaplain also is an embodied soul. Recovery ministry can awaken anxiety, urgency, rescuing impulses, anger, grief, or exhaustion in the chaplain. That is why chaplains need prayer, supervision, debriefing, rest, and accountability.
Reflection and Application Questions
What part of the addiction cycle is easiest for you to recognize?
What part of the addiction cycle is easiest to miss?
Why does shame often lead to secrecy?
How can a chaplain speak truth without adding humiliation?
What is the difference between helping someone name the next right step and taking control of their recovery?
Why should chaplains encourage connection with sponsors, recovery groups, pastors, counselors, or crisis support when needed?
What kinds of triggers might be common in your ministry setting?
Why does embodied care matter in addiction recovery?
What boundary might protect a chaplain from becoming the person’s entire support system?
What phrase from this reading could you use in a real ministry conversation?
References
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services. Alcoholics Anonymous. 4th ed. Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, 2001.
Bible, World English Bible translation.
Cloud, Henry, and John Townsend. Boundaries: When to Say Yes, How to Say No to Take Control of Your Life. Zondervan, 1992.
May, Gerald G. Addiction and Grace: Love and Spirituality in the Healing of Addictions. HarperOne, 1988.
Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press, forthcoming/course framework.
VanVonderen, Jeff. Good News for the Chemically Dependent and Those Who Love Them. Bethany House, 1989.