Author: latahrecoverycenter
Recovery Radio 7/26/2018
Recovery Radio 7/19/18
Recovery Radio 7/5/18
Recovery Radio 6/28/2018
Recovery Radio 6/7/18
September at the Latah Recovery Center
It’s our birthday, AND its National Recovery Month. We actually kicked off a little early, when IROAR motorcycle rally came to town and OPTUM insurance presented us with a $15k donation. Thank you OPTUM!
We have a LOT going on this month to celebrate recovery:
- Birthday Party 9/15, 10-1
- Latah Recovery Festival 9/29, 4-9 at the Fairgrounds
We also have some special offerings for the month:
Acupuncture for Recovery w/Megan Baumgarner Sept 6 and 27 2-3pm
Recovering Parents Thursdays 5-6:30
Tai Chi by Laughing Moon Fridays 3-4pm
Peer Social Activity: Picnic at Fair Sat. Sept 16
See the linked calendar for all the rest!https://latahrecoverycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/september-2018-at-the-latah-recovery-center.pdf
Did you know we have a radio show? Every Thursday at 1:10! Recovery Radio is on KRFP, and can be accessed as a podcast on both I-tunes and GooglePlay. New episodes are being posted today.
This Week at the Latah Recovery Center
What’s the biggest news this week? We are kicking off Septembers National Recovery Month activities a bit early with IROAR! Idaho Recovery Open Awareness Ride. A large group of bikers from throughout the state are touring each of the Recovery Community Centers, ending up in Boise in time for the opening of the Boise recovery rally. They come through Moscow Friday from 9-11. Join us in welcoming them with a pancake feed at the 1912 Center!
Here’s the latest Writing Prompt from Write for You. Time for Action! https://latahrecoverycenter.org/2018/08/27/write-for-you-time-for-action/
This weeks special offerings:
Acupuncture for Recovery Aug 30, 2-3pm
IROAR!
You can see our full schedule of about 25 regular weekly offerings at this link: https://latahrecoverycenter.org/
Write for You: Time for Action!
by Nancy Casey
In the world of English grammar, verbs are the words that describe action. Action is everywhere. Every living thing is doing something all the time, and so are non-living things, even if we don’t pay much attention.
In your writing today, you will be on the lookout for action and try to notice it in lots of different ways. When you do that, you are thinking up verbs.
Begin with a clean sheet of paper. Settle into a place with a lot of things in front of you. Maybe you’ll be looking out a window or across a room. You could be in a public place like a library or a park bench. You could be in your home. You can even be someplace where you are convinced nothing ever happens. (If you are sitting two feet away from a blank wall, maybe you will want to choose a different location.)
In your mind, start naming what’s in front of you. Write down a list of the names of the things (or people, or animals) that you see. Write the words in a column down the left-hand side of the page. Skip a line between each one. The words you write won’t be verbs. They are nouns, the names of things (or pets or people.)
Nouns come to life when you think up verbs to go along with them.
For each of the things (nouns) on your list, write a sentence that describes what it is doing.
For some things it will be easy—kids running, windshield wipers swishing, water boiling. For other things, you have to wake up your creativity and see the world from their point of view.
Often your first thought will be that an object is not doing anything, but even lying there doing nothing is doing something! Things that don’t appear to be doing much could be waiting or remembering. Dust covers a table. Grass can push up towards the sky or uncrumple itself after being walked on. The air fills up with moisture when it’s humid and sucks the moisture from your skin when it’s dry. The trick is to turn your mind sideways and try to see the world from the point of view of the thing you are looking at.
As you go down your list of nouns, if you have trouble noticing what something is doing and don’t know what to write, just skip it and go on to the next one. By the time you get back to it later, you will probably have an idea that you can use. Try not to use any verbs more than once.
By the time you have filled the page, you will have demonstrated to yourself that even a quiet room can be a busy, active place!
When you have finished, give your work a title. Make sure the date is on it somewhere, too. Add decoration and color to the page as needed. Here is an example of what a person could write.
Share what you have written! Post it as a comment below. You can type in your work. Or post a picture of it.
Nancy Casey has lived in Latah County for many years. Sometimes she teaches writing classes at the Recovery Center. You can find more of her work here. She offers (free!) writing help to anyone in recovery. This can be for any kind of writing project—resumes, letters, stories novels—email latahrecoverycenter@gmail.com for more information.
This Week at the Latah Recovery Center
Lots going on!
The latest from Write for You: https://latahrecoverycenter.org/2018/08/20/write-for-you-opposite-seasons/
Recovery Peer Volunteer Training Aug. 21 AND 28. This 6 hour training is for people wanting to learn how to coach and help people dealing with addiction and mental health issues! This offering is being held at First Step 4 Life recovery center in Lewiston. We need at least ten to hold the course, so please RSVP by August 19 to LatahRecoveryCenter@gmail.com UPDATE: We have our minimum. The training is happening! If you still want to come let us know!
Acupuncture for Recovery Aug. 30 from 2-3pm
Recovering Parents Aug. 23 and 30 5-6:30pm
Idaho Open Awareness Ride (IROAR). Help us welcome over 50 riders as they cruise throughout the state to bring awareness to recovery. We are hosting a free pancake breakfast when they come through town Aug. 31, 9-11am at the 1912 Center.
NEED SOME INSPIRATION? Recovery Radio every Thursday on KRFP at 1pm. Or download the podcast on iTunes or Googleplay.
Here’s the full calendar:
Click to access august-2018-at-the-latah-recovery-center.pdf
