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Bob Dionne Photography

Bob Dionne Photography
  • Home
  • Recent Work
  • Artistic
  • Human
  • Nature
  • Recovery52 Project
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“It is through living that we discover ourselves, at the same time as we discover the world around us.”
― Henri Cartier-Bresson

Recovery52 Blog:

My intention here is a 52-week project with at least one photo and text content describing my journey and thoughts about my recovery from substance abuse.

[The images displayed here are based on my own captures and edits, reflecting my thoughts of journeying toward the unknown, never sure what I will encounter around the bend, accepting and learning from whatever comes.]


Featured posts:

  • February 2026
    • Feb 27, 2026 Harm Reduction Is a Beginning — Not the Destination Feb 27, 2026
    • Feb 21, 2026 A Year of Learning to See Clearly Feb 21, 2026
  • January 2025
    • Jan 1, 2025 Recovery52 – Year 2 Anniversary – A Photo Project: Two Years On Jan 1, 2025
  • January 2024
    • Jan 18, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 52 – A Finish Line Jan 18, 2024
    • Jan 11, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 51 – IntentRecovery52 – Week 51 – Intent Jan 11, 2024
    • Jan 4, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 50 – One Year Sober Jan 4, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 29, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 49 – Trinkets, Tokens, & Talismans Dec 29, 2023
    • Dec 21, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 48 – Praise & Apologies Dec 21, 2023
    • Dec 14, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 47 – Fears and Trust Dec 14, 2023
    • Dec 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 46 – Seeking Truth Dec 7, 2023
  • November 2023
    • Nov 30, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 45 – Challenging Limiting Beliefs Nov 30, 2023
    • Nov 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 44 – Happy Thanksgiving! Nov 23, 2023
    • Nov 16, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 43 – Pick Up The Shovel Nov 16, 2023
    • Nov 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 42 – My Why Nov 9, 2023
    • Nov 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 41 – Not This Time Nov 2, 2023
  • October 2023
    • Oct 26, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 40 – Transitions Oct 26, 2023
    • Oct 19, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 39 – Trash Talking Oct 19, 2023
    • Oct 12, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 38 – Boarded Up Oct 12, 2023
    • Oct 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 37 – Moving Forward Oct 7, 2023
  • September 2023
    • Sep 28, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 36 – Recipe for Recovery Sep 28, 2023
    • Sep 21, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 35 – Passion Over Addiction Sep 21, 2023
    • Sep 14, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 34 – Gratitude for Today Sep 14, 2023
    • Sep 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 33 – Two Thieves Sep 7, 2023
  • August 2023
    • Aug 31, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 32 – Governing the Kingdom Aug 31, 2023
    • Aug 24, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 31 – Toxic Media Detox Aug 24, 2023
    • Aug 16, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 30 – My Coping Styles Aug 16, 2023
    • Aug 10, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 29 – Defense Mechanisms Aug 10, 2023
    • Aug 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 28 – Avoiding and Evading Aug 6, 2023
  • July 2023
    • Jul 27, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 27 – Trigger Stacking Jul 27, 2023
    • Jul 20, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 26 – Habit Slipping Jul 20, 2023
    • Jul 13, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 25 – Feeling My Feelings Jul 13, 2023
    • Jul 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 24 – Trust and Fear Jul 6, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 29, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 23 – Anticipation, Awareness, and Achievement Jun 29, 2023
    • Jun 22, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 22 – Finding Calm with Intention Meditation Jun 22, 2023
    • Jun 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 21 – Myopic Recovery Jun 15, 2023
    • Jun 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 20 – Taking Inventory Jun 9, 2023
  • May 2023
    • May 31, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 19 – Gratitude for Mindfulness May 31, 2023
    • May 28, 2023 A Thought ... May 28, 2023
    • May 26, 2023 A Thought ... May 26, 2023
    • May 25, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 18 – The Addictive Voice May 25, 2023
    • May 17, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 17 – Now & Then May 17, 2023
    • May 11, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 16 – Being Thankful May 11, 2023
    • May 4, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 15 – Happy Birthday to Me May 4, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 25, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 14 – Some Valuable YouTube Resources Apr 25, 2023
    • Apr 20, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 13 – Flexing the Sobriety Muscle Apr 20, 2023
    • Apr 13, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 12 – Boredom is a Choice Apr 13, 2023
    • Apr 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 11 – It Was Just A Dream Apr 6, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 30, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 10 – Complacency Mar 30, 2023
    • Mar 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 09 – A Time to Celebrate Mar 23, 2023
    • Mar 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 08 – My Healthy Grounding Habits Mar 15, 2023
    • Mar 8, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 07 – Attention to the Moment Mar 8, 2023
    • Mar 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 06 – Remind Me Why I'm Doing This? Mar 2, 2023
  • February 2023
    • Feb 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 05 – Serious Recovery ... This Time! Feb 23, 2023
    • Feb 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 04 – Perspective & Choice Feb 15, 2023
    • Feb 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 03 – Reaction vs Response Feb 9, 2023
    • Feb 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 02 – Self-Awareness Feb 2, 2023
  • January 2023
    • Jan 26, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 01 – Change Jan 26, 2023
    • Jan 19, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 0 – The Beginning of Intention Jan 19, 2023

Harm Reduction Is a Beginning — Not the Destination

February 27, 2026 in Recovery52

My Recovery Perspective on Harm Reduction

I believe in harm reduction.

If someone is overdosing, you reverse it. If someone is sharing contaminated needles, you reduce infection. If someone is at risk tonight, you reduce the chance they die tonight. Survival matters.

Especially now, in a fentanyl environment where a single relapse can be fatal, reducing immediate harm is not optional — it is lifesaving. The same is true with alcohol. Drunken driving kills people. Excess kills people. The consequences are real.

I would not be here writing this if I had not been given a few chances. Sobriety was not my first attempt. Over the years of returning to use — and sliding back into overuse — I tried moderation. I tried cutting back. I tried switching drinks. I tried rules and limits.

Moderation felt responsible. It sounded reasonable. It allowed me to believe I was in control.

But even one or two drinks lowered my inhibition just enough to weaken the next decision. Reduced use did not move me forward. It prolonged the instability. Each return to “controlled” use led back to the same place.

What finally broke through wasn’t a new strategy. It was a close friend who spoke plainly. The message, in essence, was this: you don’t have goals. You don’t have purpose. You’re drifting.

It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t cruel. It was honest.

That clarity cut through every private negotiation I had been making with myself.

In early recovery, compassion matters. Shame rarely produces stability. Fear rarely produces insight. Addiction clouds judgment. It feels like choice but often behaves like compulsion. No one can be argued into sobriety. No one can be forced into willingness. At the same time, we eventually have to acknowledge the part we still control.

When someone is tangled in denial or confusion, the first step is connection. “Meet them where they are” is a phrase I often hear, and I agree with it. You cannot help someone you refuse to see. 

There is a difference between someone trying and stumbling, and someone not yet ready to move. Most of us in recovery failed before we succeeded. That deserves compassion.

Harm reduction belongs in that early stage. It can keep someone alive long enough for clarity to emerge. It can reduce chaos enough for treatment to become possible. Clean syringe programs reduce infectious disease. Naloxone reverses overdoses. Some medically supervised approaches help certain people reduce alcohol or drug use. These efforts reduce direct harm — and that matters.

But none of them guarantee recovery. Addiction is complex. People are different. Outcomes vary. Reduced harm is not the same as restored life.

At some point, the message must change.

Meeting someone where they are is a starting place. It is not a permanent address. Harm reduction without forward movement can quietly become maintenance of decline.

For some people, harm elimination — complete sobriety — may be the only stable goal. I know it was for me. Eliminating alcohol ended the negotiation. It restored clarity. It allowed me to set goals again. It helped me rediscover purpose and joy in living.

I am not opposed to harm reduction. I support it as a beginning. But it cannot be the destination for everyone.

If you are considering moderation, be honest about your own history. Patterns tell the truth. If every attempt at managing your use eventually collapses, that is information. If someone who cares about you is brave enough to tell you that you are drifting, listen. 

If you love someone who is struggling, lead with compassion. But do not confuse compassion with silence. Meeting someone where they are does not mean agreeing that where they are is working. It means starting there — and then expecting movement.

Harm reduction can save a life. 

But recovery is what rebuilds it.

Tags: recovery, sobriety
A Year of Learning to See Clearly →
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email: bdionne.photography@gmail.com
phone: 503.313.4911