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CMHA-CT recognizes Recovery Month 2025
Sep 1, 2025
September is Recovery Month, and CMHA-CT joins communities across Canada and around the world in recognizing this important observance. Recovery Month is a public health movement that affirms recovery is possible, that support is essential and that stigma remains one of the most significant barriers to seeking help.
In Canada, about 21 per cent of people will experience an addiction in their lifetime (Government of Canada, 2022; CMHA Ontario). Addiction does not discriminate. It impacts individuals, families and communities across every demographic. Yet despite its prevalence, stigma continues to silence conversations and discourage people from reaching out. Recovery Month challenges that silence by creating space for dialogue that could save lives.
Recovery in Canada: hope, healing, community
Canada’s recovery movement is anchored by a consistent call: hope, healing, community. These three words reflect the essence of what recovery means across this country. They remind us that recovery is not a linear or uniform process, but a continuum. People may move between harm reduction, counselling, peer support, treatment or rehabilitation depending on their circumstances and goals.
Recovery Month is an opportunity to highlight that continuum. It’s important to note that recovery is not only about abstinence or sobriety. For some, it means reducing harm and building stability. For others, it means long-term treatment and structured supports. For many, it means learning to live well with ongoing challenges. Each pathway is valid, and each deserves recognition and respect.
Recovery also relies on the broader conditions that shape health and wellness. Access to timely mental health and addictions services, safe and affordable housing, strong community networks, and opportunities for meaningful work or purpose are all critical. Without these social supports, recovery is harder to sustain. With them, recovery becomes not just possible, but probable.
Addiction in Canada: facts we can’t ignore
Alcohol remains the most common substance for which people meet the criteria for addiction, affecting nearly 18 per cent of Canadians (CMHA Ontario). Despite its normalization in our culture, alcohol is linked to more than 200 diseases and injury conditions, including liver cirrhosis, cardiovascular disease and several cancers (World Health Organization).
Opioids continue to devastate communities. Between January 2016 and December 2023, more than 42,000 Canadians died from apparent opioid toxicity, with fentanyl and other toxic substances driving the majority of deaths (Government of Canada, 2024).
Concurrent disorders, where mental illness and substance use occur together, affect a significant proportion of individuals seeking support (Public Health Agency of Canada). This reality highlights the importance of integrated, person-centred care.
What we always like to remind our readers is that addiction is not a moral failing. It is a complex health issue influenced by biology, environment, trauma and social determinants of health – things like poverty, housing instability and systemic inequities.
Why recovery is personal
Behind every statistic is a story. Addiction and recovery affect real people, real families and real communities. Everyone has a connection: a neighbour, a co-worker, a sibling, a parent or even a friend.
That is why at CMHA we say: every person struggling with addiction is someone’s someone. They are someone’s child, someone’s partner, someone’s loved one. And when they recover, that recovery ripples outward. Healing relationships, strengthening families and restoring communities.
Recovery Month is an opportunity to honour those stories and to remind ourselves that when we reduce stigma and expand supports, we are not only helping individuals. We are helping the people who love them too.
Why Recovery Month matters
Recovery Month offers three essential opportunities:
- To amplify voices of lived experience. Personal stories challenge stigma and demonstrate that recovery takes many forms.
- To educate communities. Public awareness of harm reduction, treatment and recovery options helps reduce misinformation and foster empathy.
- To affirm that support works. Recovery is not only possible. It is probable when people have access to the right resources, delivered without judgment.
Our commitment
At CMHA-CT, we recognize that everyone’s recovery journey is unique. Whether through harm reduction supports, counselling, peer programming, housing services or community partnerships, we are committed to walking alongside individuals at every stage of recovery.
We believe in meeting people where they are, honouring their autonomy and providing a continuum of supports that allow them to build meaningful, sustainable lives in recovery.
Call to action
This September, we encourage everyone to:
- Learn more about local recovery and harm reduction services.
- Support individuals in your life by listening without judgment.
- Advocate for stronger, evidence-based policies that expand access to care.
- Share stories of recovery to help break down stigma in your community.
If you or someone you know is struggling with their substance use or seeking recovery supports, contact CMHA-CT at (705) 267-8100.
Recovery is not one path, but many. By fostering healing and community, and by remembering that every person is someone’s someone, we can ensure no one walks their recovery journey alone.