Learning to Trust Yourself Again After Addiction

Medically Reviewed By:

EricChaghouriMD-641h-e1758224525342

Dr. Eric Chaghouri

Medical Director

Dr. Eric Chaghouri is a distinguished forensic psychiatrist and addiction medicine specialist with a thriving private practice in West Hollywood and Century City, California. He specializes in the treatment of co-occurring psychiatric and addictive disorders and is recognized for his work with attorneys, courts, and legal teams in both civil and criminal litigation. He also provides expert consultation on psychiatric issues for major television networks and oversees a growing team of mental health clinicians.

Graduated summa cum laude from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 2007 with a Bachelor of Arts in Biology Medical degree from the Keck School of Medicine of USC in 2011 Postgraduate training began with an internship at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Three years of general adult psychiatry residency at the Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center.

Share this Post

Recovery isn’t only about putting down the substance. It’s about coming back to yourself. After years of addiction, most people don’t recognize the person looking back at them in the mirror. The thoughts feel scrambled, the decisions feel uncertain, and there’s a quiet voice beneath everything that asks, “Can I even trust myself anymore? Rebuilding that trust takes time, and it doesn’t happen by accident. It happens through honest work, small wins, and the slow rediscovery of who you actually are. It’s a slow process of coming back to yourself in recovery and learning what trust feels like again.

Why Addiction Breaks Self-Trust

Active addiction asks you to lie. To yourself, to the people who love you, to your doctor, to your own body when it’s begging you to stop. After enough of those lies, the relationship you have with yourself starts to crack.

You stop believing your own promises. You make plans you don’t keep. You set boundaries you break before the day is over. Over time, your inner voice goes quiet because you’ve stopped listening to it, and it’s stopped expecting you to.

This is one of the hardest parts of addiction that no one really warns you about. It’s not just the physical damage or the broken relationships. It’s the way you slowly lose your own respect.

What “Coming Back to Yourself” Actually Means

People hear “find yourself” thrown around so often that it’s lost most of its meaning. In recovery, though, it’s not abstract. It’s specific, and it’s slow.

Coming back to yourself looks like:

  • Noticing what you actually like when there’s no substance shaping your preferences. The music you choose when you’re sober. The food you reach for. The way you spend a quiet Sunday.
  • Sitting with feelings instead of numbing them. Sadness, anger, boredom, joy. Letting yourself feel things without running.
  • Remembering what you cared about before the addiction took over. Hobbies, dreams, people, places. Pieces of you that got buried.
  • Building new interests that belong to sober you. Recovery isn’t only about going back. Some of who you become is brand new.
  • Listening to your gut again. It still works. It just got drowned out for a while.

How Trust Gets Rebuilt, One Promise at a Time

self trust in addiction recovery

Self-trust isn’t rebuilt through grand declarations. It’s rebuilt through small, kept promises to yourself.

You say you’ll go to a meeting. You go. You say you’ll call your sponsor before that craving gets worse. You call. You say you’ll get out of bed even though everything in you wants to stay buried in it. You get up. Each of those moments adds a single brick to a foundation that addiction had completely worn down.

The promises don’t have to be big. They just have to be real and kept. Over weeks and months, those small acts of integrity stack up, and one day you realize you’ve started to believe yourself again.

You learn to trust yourself the same way you lost that trust. One choice at a time.

The Role of Therapy in Rediscovery

Doing this work alone is hard. A good therapist or counselor is one of the most useful tools you have during this part of recovery, because they can hold up a mirror you don’t have to face by yourself.

Therapy gives you space to look at the parts of you that addiction covered up. Old wounds, patterns from childhood, ways you learned to cope before you had better options. None of this is comfortable, but it’s how you stop being a stranger to yourself.

What Gets Lost in AddictionWhat Recovery Helps You Rebuild
Self-trustConfidence in your own choices
A clear sense of identityKnowing what you value and want
Emotional awarenessThe ability to name and feel emotions
Personal goalsA vision for the life you’re building
Self-respectBelieving you’re worth the effort

Building a Life That Feels Meaningful

The end goal of recovery isn’t only sobriety. It’s a life that’s actually worth being sober for. That part doesn’t show up all at once. It builds slowly, through choices that line up with who you’re becoming.

Some people find meaning through faith. Others through service, through creativity, through family, through work that matters to them. There’s no one right answer. The point is that recovery gives you back the ability to choose, and meaning grows from the choices you make.

If you’ve spent years feeling like you were just surviving, this might be the strangest and best part of getting sober. You start to want things again. Real things, not the kind addiction was always promising and never delivering.

How to Start Reconnecting With Yourself

connecting with yourself in addiction recovery

If you’re early in recovery, here are a few simple ways to begin.

  1. Write things down. Journaling isn’t for everyone, but even a few minutes a day of putting your thoughts on paper helps you hear yourself again.
  2. Try one new thing a week. A class, a walk somewhere new, a recipe you’ve never made. Small experiments help you figure out who sober you actually is.
  3. Spend time alone, on purpose. Not isolation, but quiet time without distractions. Your own company is something worth getting comfortable with again.
  4. Be honest in therapy. The work only goes as deep as you let it. Don’t perform recovery. Live it.
  5. Be patient. Rebuilding a self takes longer than putting down a substance. Give it time.

Call Today and Start Coming Back to Yourself

Recovery is the chance to meet yourself again. At Changes Treatment Center, we support clients through every step of that process. From therapy and aftercare to community programs that help you build a life worth living. Located in Costa Mesa, California, we’re here when you’re ready. Call (949) 227-0412 today and take the first step toward something that feels like yours.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is it so hard to trust yourself after addiction?

Active addiction involves a lot of broken promises and self-deception. Over time, your relationship with your own word breaks down. Rebuilding that trust takes consistent action, not just intention, which is why it can feel so slow at first.

How long does it take to feel like yourself again in recovery?

There’s no fixed timeline. Some people start to feel more grounded within a few months, while others need a year or more to feel fully reconnected. The early months tend to be the most disorienting, and things usually get clearer with time and support.

Can therapy really help me figure out who I am again?

Yes. Good therapy gives you space to look at parts of yourself that addiction kept hidden. A skilled therapist helps you understand your patterns, your needs, and your values, which is the foundation for figuring out who you are now.

What if I don’t know what I like or want anymore?

That’s normal in early recovery. Most people feel that way at first. The way through it is small experiments, regular check-ins with yourself, and patience. Your preferences and interests come back as your nervous system settles and you have more space to notice them.

How does Changes Treatment Center support this kind of personal work?

Our program is built to support the whole person, not just the addiction. Through individual therapy, group work, and community-based programs like Cooking for Recovery and Fitness Therapy, we help clients reconnect with themselves while they reconnect with life.