The Underrated Superhero   Tools for Substance Use Counselors

The Underrated Superhero

Resources
for Clinicians

December

"you made it: reflect & reset"

Before setting goals for next year, look at what you survived this year. You're still here. That's not nothing. This month is about reflection, rest, and getting through the hardest season.

šŸ’” December Tip

šŸ†
Before setting goals for next year, look at what you survived this year. You're still here. I survived another year in the trenches. That's not nothing.
šŸŽÆ

Personalize Your Calendar

The Winter 2026 Kit includes stickers to personalize your calendar with dates that matter to you—client milestones, personal reminders, or trigger dates.

šŸŒ‘ Winter Solstice

December 21, 2026

The longest night. Seasonal depression peaks. Check in on clients who struggle with darkness and isolation.

šŸŽ„ Christmas Eve/Day

December 24-25, 2026

Family, gifts, expectations, grief. Same approach as Thanksgiving—plan ahead, not the week of.

šŸŽ† New Year's Eve

December 31, 2026

Biggest drinking night of the year. Check in before, not after. Have a plan—or skip it entirely.

ā„ļø Cold Weather Dangers

Winter is deadly for vulnerable clients. Cold weather combined with substance use can kill.

  • Hypothermia: Alcohol makes you feel warm while losing heat faster. Passing out outdoors = life-threatening.
  • Overdose risk increases: Cold stress + opioids = respiratory depression. Using alone indoors to stay warm = no one to help.
  • Frostbite: Intoxicated clients may not notice symptoms until it's too late. Extremities at risk.
  • Isolation: Weather keeps people home. Transportation issues. Service closures. More using alone.

Action: Ask where clients are sleeping. Connect with warming centers and shelters. Don't assume they're okay—ask.

šŸ†

You Made It: Reflect & Reset

This three-page year-end worksheet helps clinicians pause before rushing into New Year's resolutions — because you can't plan where you're going until you've processed where you've been. It starts with reflection on what you survived this year (the hardest moments, what you handled that you didn't think you could, losses you carried). The next section focuses on wins worth remembering — client wins, professional wins, personal wins — because grief has a way of erasing the good. There's space to reflect on what you learned, followed by a checklist of things to leave behind (guilt about client outcomes, imposter syndrome, the belief that you have to do it all). The worksheet ends with gentle intentions for the year ahead: what you want more of, less of, and one thing you commit to protecting.

Best for: Clinicians at the end of the year who need to process before they plan. Use in December before the holiday rush, or in early January as a grounding exercise. Also useful for supervision conversations or year-end reflection with peers.

Available December 1st
ā„ļø

Cold Weather Safety Guide

This three-page guide covers winter-specific risks for clients in recovery, especially those experiencing homelessness or housing instability. It opens with hypothermia risk — why clients with SUD are at higher risk (alcohol causes vasodilation, making you feel warm while losing heat faster; intoxication impairs judgment about when to seek shelter; passing out outdoors can be fatal). The guide then covers how overdose risk increases in cold weather (cold stress combined with depressants strains the body, using alone indoors to stay warm means no one to help, supply changes as dealers adjust routes). There's a section on frostbite warning signs and why intoxicated clients may not notice symptoms. The middle section offers questions to ask clients about their winter safety, and the guide ends with a checklist of winter resources to have ready: warming centers, emergency shelters, 211 hotline, naloxone distribution sites, transportation assistance, and coat drives.

Best for: Addiction counselors working with clients who are unhoused or housing-unstable, or anyone whose clients may be at increased risk during winter months. Keep this guide handy from November through March.

Available December 1st

āš ļø Peak Crisis Season

Trend: Peak crisis season. Expect increased no-shows AND crisis calls. Don't overbook yourself.

Watch for: Clients disappearing in December. Weather, finances, family stress, and "I'll start fresh in January" thinking. Check in before they vanish.

For you: This is the hardest month. Protect your energy. You can't pour from an empty cup—and December will try to drain it. Survival is the goal. Everything else is extra.

šŸŽ‰ You Made It Through 2026

Another year in the trenches. You showed up. You cared. You kept going—even when it was hard. That matters. Rest. Reflect. Reset. And when you're ready, we'll do it again next year.

šŸ“ Related Reading