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Addiction Counseling and Recovery Support

Relapse Prevention in Florida

Recovery is about more than abstinence—it’s about building a life that feels sustainable and meaningful. At Be Calm Counseling & Sobriety Support Services, I offer specialized support with relapse prevention in Florida, helping you create lasting change and a thriving, balanced life. 

What to Expect

DBT-based Relapse Prevention Skills

Embark on a journey of sobriety management with tailored strategies to prevent setbacks. These skills empower you to navigate the challenges of recovery with confidence and resilience. 

Tools for Emotional Regulation & Healthy Coping

Emotional regulation is crucial for maintaining stability. I provide you with practical tools that help you handle emotional hurdles effectively, allowing you to face daily stresses with ease. 

Support for Families

Recovery is a collective journey. I offer insights that help families understand recovery dynamics without enabling patterns. By fostering a supportive and informed environment, we can aid in your successful journey to recovery. 

Practical Strategies for Long-term Stability

Develop strategies that ensure long-term growth and healthier relationships. Together, we build a foundation of meaningful connections and stability that supports your sustainable recovery. 

Get in Touch 

With my personal recovery experience, I understand the courage it takes to start, to rebuild, and to maintain balance. Therapy is a space to do that work with clarity, accountability, and compassion. For more information, feel free to contact me. 

Addiction Counseling and Recovery Support

Education, Consultation, and Training

Available Nationwide

Before becoming a therapist, Katherine Murphy taught college-level courses for over 10 years in the Humanities and Ethnic Studies. She brings this academic background into educational workshops, trainings, and consultations for families, workplaces, classrooms, and community groups. Programming emphasizes communication skills, systems awareness, and supportive approaches to behavioral and mental health challenges.

Behavioral Counseling for Sustained Change

This work focuses on identifying patterns that increase vulnerability during periods of stress, transition, or emotional overload. Therapy supports clients in strengthening awareness, interrupting unhelpful behavioral cycles, and building skills that promote stability, flexibility, and long-term change. 

What to Expect

DBT-Informed Behavioral Skills

Sessions integrate DBT-informed skills to support emotional awareness, distress tolerance, and effective decision-making during high-stress or high-risk situations. The focus is on maintaining progress and responding skillfully when challenges arise. 

Tools for Emotional Regulation & Healthy Coping

Emotional regulation is a core component of behavioral health. Therapy provides practical tools to increase emotional awareness, manage stress responses, and respond to challenges with greater flexibility and effectiveness. 

Support for Families

Families often play an important role in behavioral and emotional health. Consultation supports families in understanding patterns, setting healthy boundaries, and responding in ways that promote stability and accountability without over-functioning or enabling.

Practical Strategies for Long-term Stability

Therapy focuses on practical strategies that support long-term growth, healthier relationships, and increased capacity to navigate life transitions with resilience and self-awareness. 

Get in Touch 

Therapy is a collaborative space to explore patterns, build skills, and support meaningful change with clarity, accountability, and compassion. If you have questions or would like to learn more, please feel free to get in touch. 

OPENING

Addiction recovery is not just about stopping a behavior. It is about learning how to live with yourself, your emotions, your relationships, and your nervous system without needing to escape. 

This work is direct, structured, and honest. If something is not working, we look at it clearly and we change it. 

Therapy also feels different when it comes from someone who understands addiction from the inside, not just from a distance. 

ACCEPTANCE AND CHANGE

DBT is built on two things at the same time: acceptance and change. 

There is a reason you used. 

You may have been trying to numb your feelings, cope with how your life felt, or quiet a mind that would not slow down. When you used, you got a moment of relief. A second of peace. That mattered. 

We acknowledge that. We do not pretend it was random or meaningless. 

At the same time, what once worked is no longer working. 

Now the work shifts. 

  • You learn how to quiet your mind without escaping.
  • You learn how to be present in your life without needing to check out.
  • You learn how to feel things in a way that is safe and tolerable. 

We understand why the pattern developed, and we actively build something different. 

MY STORY

I have been in recovery from opioid addiction for over 15 years. 

I know what it feels like to hide it until you cannot anymore. To believe you can manage it on your own. To carry the shame, especially when you are just starting to face what is really happening. 

At one point, I thought I had a 30-day problem. I would stop the pills, get through it, and then I would be fine. I was not fine. I needed help. 

Recovery did not happen on my own. It came through a recovery group and a therapist who understood addiction in a real, grounded way. That combination changed everything. 

Addiction is often what we use to cover our feelings, our reality, and our inability to cope with ourselves. Recovery is learning how to live without needing to escape. 

There is a period in early recovery where you feel stripped down. Without the substance or behavior, you may not recognize yourself. You may not know how to cope, how to relate, or how to feel steady. That is not failure. That is part of the process. 

Over time, you build something real. You find your voice again. You learn how to stay. 

WHY BECALM

You are not getting vague or passive therapy here. You are getting clear, direct work that is built for change. 

This is not a “how was your week” experience. We are actively working on what is happening, why it is happening, and what to do differently. 

Therapy feels different when it comes from one of your own. There is less explaining and more honesty about what addiction actually looks like. 

I will give it to you straight. Not harshly, but honestly. Avoidance, minimization, and trying to manage it alone are part of the pattern. We name that and work through it. 

This work is DBT-informed because DBT is different. It is structured and practical. It gives you real skills for what to do when urges hit, when emotions spike, and when your mind starts pulling you back. 

WHAT IS DBT AND WHY IT IS DIFFERENT

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a structured, skills-based therapy for people who feel things intensely and get pulled into patterns they cannot seem to stop. 

It is not passive. It is not just talking about your week. 

It focuses on what to do in the moment when things are actually hard. 

Distress tolerance

How to get through urges and high-stress moments without making things worse

Emotion regulation

How to lower emotional intensity instead of being overwhelmed by it 

Mindfulness

How to slow things down and create space between feeling and action

Interpersonal effectiveness

How to communicate clearly and reduce relationship stress

DBT works because it gives you something to actually do when it matters. 

EARLY EXPERIENCES AND WHY THIS MAKES SENSE

Early experiences matter more than most people realize. 

You may not call it trauma. Maybe it was just stressful, chaotic, inconsistent, or you felt like you had to hold it together too early. That still impacts you. 

When your system grows up in that kind of environment, your mind does not slow down easily. Emotions hit harder. Stress sticks longer. It becomes harder to feel settled in yourself. 

So it makes sense that you found something that worked. 

Something that gave you a break. Something that quieted things down, even for a second. 

Addiction often starts there. 

This is not about blaming your past. It is about understanding why your system works the way it does so you can change it. 

SHAME AND RECOVERY

Shame is the feeling that your worst moments mean something about who you are. 

It sounds like: I should be able to fix this. I have already messed this up. What is the point. 

It takes what you did and turns it into who you are. 

That is what keeps people stuck. 

When shame is high, you stop being honest. You pull back. You avoid. You disconnect. And that is when relapse becomes more likely. 

Guilt is different. 

  • Guilt says, I did something I need to take responsibility for. It keeps you moving forward. 
  • Shame says, I am the problem. It makes you want to give up. 

In this work, we separate those two. 

We keep accountability. We drop the part that tells you that you are not worth the effort. 

You are not trying to erase yourself. You are trying to change what is not working. 

WHAT THIS WORK FOCUSES ON

  • Understanding your specific addiction pattern 
  • Identifying triggers and high-risk situations 
  • Reducing shame and increasing self-awareness 
  • Building DBT-informed coping skills 
  • Managing urges and emotional overwhelm 
  • Recognizing relapse patterns early 
  • Addressing underlying anxiety, trauma, and stress 
  • Rebuilding identity and self-trust 

CLOSING

Recovery is not something you do perfectly. It is something you stay in. 

If you are tired of trying to manage it on your own, this work gives you structure, honesty, and the skills to actually change what is happening. 

You do not have to have it figured out. You just have to be willing to start.