Holiday Support Resource Hub
Your centralized hub for seasonal recovery support — built for providers, families, and community partners. Updated regularly with new tools, resources, and clinical insights.
Welcome to Your Holiday Resource Hub
A curated resource hub for clinicians and care teams, designed to streamline access to high-risk season education, warming resources, crisis supports, and family tools.
Explore all available resources below

Resources on This Page
High-Risk Season Education
Winter Warming Resources
Food Shelves & Meal Supports
Domestic Violence Survival Resources
Addiction & Recovery Support
Resources for Family & Loved Ones
High-Risk Season Education
Over the next few months, we’re releasing new blogs and educational resources to keep you informed on the latest research, trends, and real-world challenges people face during the holiday season. From increased relapse risks to the stressors that impact individuals in substance use recovery, our goal is to equip you with timely insights and practical tools to support yourself, your loved ones, or the people you serve.
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Halloween to New Year's: the hidden relapse curve providers should know
The holiday season is one of the highest-risk times of year for people in recovery. Rising stress, increased alcohol use, and disrupted routines create a predictable spike in relapse and crisis starting as early as late October.

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SAMHSA Support During the Holidays
The holidays aren’t joyful for everyone, and that’s okay to say out loud. Stress and triggers can impact mental health and recovery. Help is available 24/7, private and confidential.
Share the word, support makes the season safer. View their toolkit below!


Winter Warming Resources
Cold weather can be dangerous, especially for those facing housing instability. Explore local warming centers, emergency shelters, and community programs offering heat, supplies, and support during extreme temperatures.
Food Shelves & Meal Supports
Access to food plays a big role in steady recovery and overall wellbeing. Consistent meals from food shelves and community meal programs can lower stress, support healthy routines, and create stability during heavy seasons. This can also ease pressure for families and providers supporting someone on their recovery journey. Below, you’ll find links to multiple interactive maps and resource locators to help you quickly find, share, and use food and meal support options in real time.


Domestic Violence Survival Resources
Substance use, mental health, homelessness, and domestic violence often overlap. When basic safety is disrupted, recovery can feel harder to hold onto. Support includes a safe place to stay, crisis lines, and advocacy without judgment. Access to help protects stability and empowers people to take the next right step forward.
Confidential support and safety resources are available below.
Addiction & Recovery Support
Whether you’re providing addiction care or navigating recovery yourself, this section offers clear, reliable resources to help support real recovery connections and continuous care.
SAMHSA
A U.S. health agency offering free, trustworthy mental health and substance-use resources, a national helpline, guides, and treatment locators.
Narcotics Anonymous
A global, peer-support network providing free meetings and step-based recovery support for people seeking freedom from drug addiction.
Alcoholics Anonymous
A free, peer-led recovery community that helps people stop drinking through shared support, accountability, and ongoing meetings.

Resources for Family & Loved Ones
People supporting someone in recovery need tools too. This section includes guidance, group support, safety resources, and care options to help families and loved ones show up with confidence, compassion, and steady support.
Kai Shin Family Group
Join our monthly family support group every third Friday. Learn about addiction and recovery, better understand the treatment process, build coping skills, and connect with others who you can relate to. Next group held on December 19th.

Nar-Anon for Loved Ones
Nar-Anon supports families and friends of people affected by substance use. Meetings focus on emotional support, shared group wisdom, understanding addiction, self-care, and ongoing community connection throughout a loved one’s recovery journey.
Al-Anon for Loved Ones
Al-Anon offers a peer-led community for families and friends affected by someone’s drinking. Meetings provide shared support, guidance, healthy boundaries, and connection with others who understand the emotional impact on loved ones.

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Let us help you take the next step in your recovery journey - with care, compassion, and support.


