Wish Recovery’s Blog Monthly Archives

March 2026

Adderall Side Effects: What Your Body Is Trying to Tell You

You Googled this at some point—probably after noticing something you couldn't quite name, like loss of appetite or increased anxiety. Your appetite disappeared. Your heart ran a little faster than it used to. You felt sharp, then flat, then irritable before dinner in a way that surprised you. Adderall side effects are real, and they're not always the ones on the package insert. This is what they actually feel like—and what they might be telling you.

Adderall changes people. That's what it's supposed to do—improve focus, reduce impulsivity, help the parts of the brain that struggle with executive function finally quiet down enough to work. But for a lot of people who take Adderall, it also does other things. Things worth understanding, whether you've had a prescription for years or you've started to wonder if the way you've been using it has shifted somewhere along the way.

Movies About Anxiety: 28 Films That Show What You’re Feeling Is Real

It’s 2 AM and your chest is doing that thing again—tightening around nothing, like your ribs forgot how to hold space for air. So you type three words into a search bar: movies about anxiety. You’re not looking for a film recommendation. You’re looking for proof that someone else has felt this and survived. This guide is built for that moment.

 

Key Takeaways

• Anxiety disorders affect over 264 million people globally, yet more than two-thirds never receive treatment.

• Research shows that watching movies about anxiety can measurably reduce symptoms through a process called cinematherapy.

• 28 films organized by social anxiety, panic attacks, OCD, PTSD, agoraphobia, and depression and anxiety.

• When anxiety comes with addiction or depression, integrated dual-diagnosis treatment produces the strongest outcomes.

 

If you have questions about feelings you can’t explain or you think there may be something wrong
in your internal world,
speak to someone today to get answers.

Are Drunk Words Sober Thoughts? What Psychology Says

You said something last night you can’t take back. Or maybe someone said something to you—and now you’re lying awake wondering if the alcohol cracked open something real. The old saying claims drunk words are sober thoughts. But what if the truth is messier, more human, and worth understanding on its own terms?

Key takeaways

  • Alcohol lowers inhibitions but also distorts perception, judgment, and emotional intensity.
  • Drunk words may carry fragments of real feeling—rarely the whole truth.
  • What you do after the confession matters more than what was said during it.
  • And patterns of drunk confessions may signal a relationship with alcohol worth examining.

If what was said last night is still echoing, you don’t have to sort through it alone. Talk to someone who understands—reach out to Wish Recovery today.

The Relapse That Saved My Life: Why Setbacks Aren't Failures

Relapse isn't failure—it's the middle of your recovery story. If you used again after weeks, months, or even a year sober, that voice screaming "failure" is operating with incomplete information. This video unpacks what your brain actually built during your sober time, why most people who make it long-term got there through detours, and one 90-second practice you can do right now.

How Long Does Alcohol Stay in Your System? Guide

You're three drinks in at happy hour and your phone's out—calculator open, Google search running, mental math happening. If I stop now and leave in two hours, am I safe to drive? If I have that test tomorrow, will this show up? Every website gives a different answer regarding how long it takes to detect alcohol in your system.Some say hours, some say days, some say it depends on a dozen factors they don't actually explain.

Here's what's actually happening in your body when drinking alcohol, exactly how long alcohol stays detectable, and when these questions might mean something bigger than just tonight's logistics.

What is Wet Brain? The Risky Truth Every Drinker Needs to Hear Now

Here's something they don't mention during happy hour: hours—not months—separate reversible brain damage from a permanent condition that steals your ability to form new memories. It's called wet brain, and it happens to people who never thought they were "that kind of drinker."

You might have heard it mentioned in passing. Maybe you laughed it off as something that only happens to people on the street. But Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome isn't picky about zip codes or tax brackets. It shows up in boardrooms and studio apartments alike, and it doesn't wait until you "hit rock bottom" to begin its work.