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by | Apr 10, 2026 | Articles, Family and support, Leadership Insights, Recovering Hope Treatment Center Updates

Recovering Hope · Clinical Insights

Your Brain Isn't Broken.
It's Been Trying to Protect You.

Understanding the neuroscience of addiction and trauma — and why clinical, family-centered treatment is the most powerful path forward.

20+Years of clinical experience
4Specialized programs at Recovering Hope
MALMFT · LADC · AADCR-MN
SameDay access available
The Neuroscience of Addiction

What's Actually Happening
Inside Your Brain

One of the most damaging myths about addiction is that it's a choice — a moral failing, a weakness, a lack of willpower. After more than two decades of clinical work, I want to be direct: that is not what the science shows, and it is not what I see in the people I work with every day.

Addiction is a brain disorder. It hijacks the very systems your brain uses to survive — your reward pathways, your stress responses, your emotional memory. Understanding this isn't about removing accountability. It's about making real, lasting recovery possible.

What the research tells us: The American Society of Addiction Medicine defines addiction as a treatable, chronic medical disease involving complex interactions among brain circuits, genetics, the environment, and an individual's life experiences.

The amygdala: your brain's emotional control center

At the center of the addiction and trauma conversation is a small, almond-shaped structure called the amygdala. It governs how your brain processes fear, stress, emotional memories, and reward. When trauma or prolonged substance use enters the picture, the amygdala becomes dysregulated — and the effects ripple through every part of your life.

Fear Response

Recognizes and reacts to potential threats — real or perceived. Trauma keeps this system in a constant state of high alert.

Reward Processing

Substances hijack the brain's reward circuitry, making natural rewards feel flat while cravings intensify.

Stress Regulation

Governs the body's physiological stress response. Chronic stress from trauma or addiction dysregulates this system over time.

Emotional Memory

The amygdala attaches emotional significance to memories — which is why certain places, people, or feelings can trigger intense cravings years later.

Defense Mechanisms

Processes stimuli that trigger defensive behaviors as a survival mechanism — often misread as aggression or resistance to help.

Emotional Regulation

Collaborates with the prefrontal cortex to regulate emotional responses. This connection weakens with prolonged substance use.

The prefrontal cortex — the part of your brain responsible for rational decision-making, impulse control, and long-term planning — is also significantly impacted. This is why people in active addiction often make choices that seem irrational from the outside. Their brain's executive function has been compromised. They are not simply choosing poorly. They are operating with impaired neurological equipment.

Trauma & Addiction

Why Trauma and Addiction
Are Almost Always Connected

In my clinical experience, trauma and substance use disorder are rarely separate stories. They are usually the same story, told in two languages.

Trauma — whether from childhood abuse, domestic violence, loss, or chronic stress — physically alters brain structure and function. The hippocampus shrinks. The amygdala becomes hyperreactive. The prefrontal cortex loses its ability to regulate emotional responses effectively.

Substances, for many people, begin as a solution — a way to quiet a nervous system that never learned how to feel safe. They work, for a while. And then they stop working and create a new crisis on top of the original wound.

"We don't ask why the addiction. We ask what happened — and what the addiction was trying to solve."
— Carmichael Finn, MA, LMFT, LADC · Recovering Hope

This is why treatment that addresses only the substance — and not the underlying trauma — so often leads to relapse. The brain hasn't learned a new way to regulate. It hasn't processed what drove the use in the first place. When stress returns, and it will, the old pathways light up.

Effective treatment must work at the level of the nervous system. It must create safety — in the body, in the environment, in relationships — before it can expect lasting behavioral change.

For women and mothers specifically: Research consistently shows that women are more likely to experience trauma-related addiction pathways, and more likely to achieve lasting recovery in gender-responsive, family-inclusive treatment environments. This is the foundation of how Recovering Hope was designed.

What Effective Treatment Looks Like

Recovery Is a Process —
Not a Single Event

One of the most important things I tell clients — and their families — is that recovery is not a destination you arrive at. It is a process of building new neural pathways, new coping skills, new relationships, and a new relationship with yourself. That takes time. It takes clinical expertise. And it takes the right environment.

1

Safety and Stabilization

Before any meaningful therapeutic work can happen, the brain and body need to feel safe. This is why the first stage of treatment focuses on physical stabilization, environmental safety, and building trust with the clinical team.

2

Trauma Processing

Using evidence-based approaches — EMDR, CBT, DBT, and family systems therapy — we work to process the underlying experiences driving addictive behavior. This is where the deepest and most lasting change happens.

3

Skill Building and Integration

New emotional regulation skills, relationship patterns, and coping strategies are practiced and integrated into daily life — including parenting, communication, and managing stress without substances.

4

Community and Continuity

Long-term recovery is sustained through connection — peer support, family healing, community resources, and a clinical aftercare plan tailored to each person's life. At Recovering Hope, we build this village with you.

A note on medication-assisted treatment (MAT)

For many people, MAT — including Suboxone, Vivitrol, or methadone — is a clinically appropriate and evidence-based component of recovery. It reduces cravings, stabilizes brain chemistry, and creates space for the deeper therapeutic work to happen. Our team can help you understand whether MAT is right for your situation. Call us at 844-314-4673.

Recovering Hope Programs

Four Pathways, One Goal —
Your Lasting Recovery

At Recovering Hope, every program is built on the same clinical foundation: trauma-informed, gender-responsive, family-centered care. The right fit depends on where you are right now — and our team will help you figure that out on a free call.

Women's Residential SUD Treatment

Live-in, family-inclusive care — our most comprehensive program. Children welcome on-site.

Outpatient Substance Use Treatment

Intensive therapy several days a week while maintaining daily family life and responsibilities.

Outpatient Lodging

Safe, supportive housing paired with outpatient treatment — removing the stability barrier to care.

Mental Health Services

Integrated mental health care treating trauma, anxiety, depression, and PTSD alongside addiction.

Minnesota Medical Assistance (Medicaid) accepted. Same day access is available. You don't need to have everything figured out before you call — that's what the call is for.

Ready to Learn What
Treatment Could Look Like for You?

Our team is here to answer your questions — about our programs, about what to expect, about insurance, about bringing your children. No pressure. No commitment. Just a real conversation with people who know this work.

Free, confidential · Same day access available · Medicaid accepted

inquiries@RecoveringHope.life · Mora, Minnesota
CF
Written by Carmichael Finn Executive Director · MA, LMFT, LADC, AADCR-MN · Recovering Hope

With over two decades of clinical experience, Carmichael Finn holds licenses as an alcohol and drug counselor in the State of Minnesota and a Master's degree in Marriage and Family Therapy. In addition to their leadership role at Recovering Hope, Finn serves as Adjunct Faculty at Metropolitan State University and Minneapolis College, teaching in Alcohol and Drug Counseling programs, and is the owner of Carmichael Finn LLC, specializing in team-building, training, and quality consultation for behavioral health organizations. Finn serves on the Board of Directors of Thrive Family Recovery Resources, a 501(c)(3) dedicated to families navigating addiction and healing, and serves as President of the Minnesota Alliance of Rural Addiction Treatment Programs (MARATP) Ethics Committee.

MA — Marriage & Family Therapy LMFT Licensed LADC Licensed AADCR-MN Metropolitan State University MARATP Ethics Committee Thrive Family Recovery Board

What’s Actually Happening Inside Your Brain

Addiction is a brain disorder. It hijacks the very systems your brain uses to survive — your reward pathways, your stress responses, your emotional memory. Understanding this isn’t about removing accountability. It’s about making real, lasting recovery possible.

You Don’t Have to Choose Between Getting Better and Being a Parent

Across Minnesota, thousands of mothers are silently fighting addiction — not because they don’t want help, but because the thought of being separated from their children feels like losing everything. We want you to know: there is a better way.

Understanding Alcohol Related Liver Disease

Understanding the physical consequences of alcohol use isn’t about shame — it’s about clarity. When you know what’s happening inside your body, you’re better equipped to make the brave choice to heal. At Recovering Hope, this is a conversation we believe in having openly, and with compassion.

Rural Addiction Treatment in Minnesota: Why Local Care Matters

When someone is ready to seek help for addiction, timing is everything. The difference between getting care today and waiting weeks — or not going at all — can be life-changing. For people living in rural Minnesota, that gap has historically been one of the biggest barriers to recovery.

At Recovering Hope Treatment Center in Mora, MN, we believe that where you live shouldn’t determine whether you get the help you need. Here’s why local, rural-based care is not just convenient — it’s a critical part of lasting recovery.

Is Detoxing from Heroin Dangerous? What You Need to Know

communities across the country. One of the most common—and most important—questions we hear is: “Is it dangerous to detox from heroin?” The honest answer is yes—it can be, especially without proper medical care. But avoiding detox altogether is far more dangerous. At Recovering Hope, we believe education saves lives. Let’s walk through what you need to know. Understanding the Risks of Heroin Detox Detox is often the first step toward recovery—but it can also be one of the most physically and emotionally challenging.

The Power of Empathy: Why Connection is the Heart of Healing

The Heartbeat of Healing In the realm of mental health and substance use treatment, empathy isn’t just a nice sentiment—it’s the foundation of healing. When someone is battling both addiction and mental health challenges, they often find themselves trapped in cycles of shame, isolation, and despair. Empathy is the bridge that invites them into connection, allowing them to feel seen, heard, and understood without judgment.

Finding Your Way Back After Emotional Abuse

Emotional abuse can leave deep wounds that are not always visible. Healing is possible, and recovery begins with support, safety, and hope. Emotional abuse does not always leave bruises, but the effects can be just as painful and long-lasting. Many women struggle for years before recognizing that what they experienced was abuse. Others know something is wrong but feel trapped, confused, or disconnected from themselves.

At Recovering Hope, we understand that emotional abuse can impact every part of a person’s life— confidence, relationships, mental health, and sense of identity. The good news is that healing is possible.

What Is Emotional Abuse?
Emotional abuse is a pattern of manipulation, control, intimidation, and psychological harm used to overpower another person. It may happen in romantic relationships, families, friendships, or other close connections. Instead of physical violence, emotional abuse often targets a person’s sense of worth and reality. Over time, this can make someone question their own thoughts, feelings, and memories.

What the Death of Tyrah Davis Reveals To Us

Twenty four year old Tyrah Davis died in a jail cell while suffering from opioid withdrawal. Her death was not inevitable. Severe withdrawal can cause relentless vomiting, diarrhea, and dehydration that require medical care, sometimes as simple as IV fluids and monitoring. Instead of compassion, public reaction in some corners has been filled with blame and contempt. Addiction is a medical disease, not a moral failure. Tyrah’s death exposes a deeper problem in how our systems and our culture respond to people who are sick and suffering.

Understanding Problem Gambling: A Conversation Worth HavingUnderstanding Problem Gambling: A Conversation Worth Having

March marks Problem Gambling Awareness Month, a time to bring attention to an issue that often goes unnoticed until it begins affecting daily life. As gambling becomes more accessible through apps, online platforms, and sports betting, the line between entertainment and risk is becoming easier to cross—especially for younger generations. At Recovering Hope, we see how important early awareness and open conversations can be in preventing deeper challenges down the road.

When Depression Doesn’t Look Like Depression

This experience is often referred to as high-functioning depression—a form of ongoing depression that hides beneath productivity and outward stability. At Recovering Hope, we often work with women who have spent years pushing through their pain. They’ve relied on being busy, being strong, or being “the one others depend on.” While these strategies may help them function, they often come at the cost of feeling truly connected, rested, or fulfilled. Understanding high-functioning depression is the first step toward something more than just getting through the day; it’s the beginning of real healing.