Safety for People in Recovery Living Alone

Recovery is a daily commitment. A daily check-in reinforces that commitment while ensuring someone knows if you need support.

Over 20 million Americans are in recovery from substance use disorders, and those living alone in early recovery are 3 times more likely to relapse undetected. Isolation is consistently cited as the number one risk factor for relapse.

The Challenge

Living alone removes the natural accountability that shared living provides, and isolation is the most dangerous environment for someone in recovery

Relapse or overdose in an isolated setting can be fatal because nobody is present to administer naloxone, call 911, or provide immediate intervention

The stigma of addiction makes it harder to ask for help, set up safety systems, or admit that you need someone checking on you

How I'm Alive Helps

A daily check-in that serves dual purposes: safety monitoring and recovery accountability. Each tap is both 'I'm alive' and 'I'm showing up for my recovery today'

If you miss a check-in, your sponsor, recovery partner, or trusted person is alerted -- catching the critical window when intervention could prevent a tragedy

Completely private and judgment-free. The app doesn't know or care about your history. It simply monitors a daily signal and alerts someone when that signal stops

The Deadly Intersection of Recovery and Isolation

Every addiction recovery program emphasizes the same thing: don't isolate. Connection is the antidote to addiction. Community, accountability, and regular human contact are the pillars that support sobriety. Yet many people in recovery live alone, sometimes by necessity and sometimes by choice. Living alone in recovery isn't automatically dangerous, but it removes the safety nets that shared living provides. A roommate or partner would notice behavioral changes, unusual absences, or signs of relapse. A person living alone has no such passive monitoring. And in the worst-case scenario -- an overdose or medical emergency related to substance use -- the absence of another person can be the difference between life and death. A daily check-in with I'm Alive provides the minimum viable accountability that recovery requires. It's not a substitute for meetings, sponsorship, or community. But it ensures that the absolute worst outcome -- dying alone because nobody knew you needed help -- is prevented. Your sponsor, a recovery friend, or a family member is alerted within hours if you can't check in.

Accountability Without Judgment

The word 'accountability' in recovery often carries weight -- the expectation of confession, explanation, and emotional processing. Important as these are, they can feel overwhelming, especially for someone living alone and managing early recovery. I'm Alive offers a different kind of accountability: the simple, daily act of confirming you're here. No questions asked. No conversation required. No explanation of how you're feeling or how your day went. Just a tap that says 'I'm present.' For many people in recovery, this low-pressure accountability is exactly what's needed alongside the deeper work of meetings and therapy. It's a daily touchpoint that doesn't drain emotional energy but provides genuine safety. And on the days when the disease wins and you can't make that tap, it triggers the response you've pre-arranged with someone who understands. Your emergency contact should be someone who knows your situation: a sponsor, a recovery partner, or a family member who understands what a missed check-in might mean. They can then respond appropriately -- whether that's a text to check in, a visit, or calling emergency services.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How can people in recovery stay safe living alone?

Set up a daily check-in with I'm Alive and name your sponsor or a recovery partner as your contact. Maintain your meeting schedule, keep your therapist's number accessible, and build a support network. The check-in provides the daily accountability and safety net that living alone otherwise lacks.

Can I use I'm Alive as a recovery accountability tool?

Yes. While the app is designed for general safety, many people in recovery use the daily check-in as both a safety measure and a recovery touchpoint. Each day you check in is a day you showed up. If you can't check in, someone who cares is alerted.

Is my recovery status private?

Completely. I'm Alive doesn't collect any health information, diagnosis, or personal history. It's a safety tool, not a medical system. Nobody would know you're in recovery from looking at the app. It's just a daily check-in.

Who should be my emergency contact in recovery?

Ideally, someone who understands your recovery: a sponsor, a trusted fellow in recovery, or a family member who is educated about addiction. They should know what a missed check-in might mean and how to respond -- whether that's a gentle text, a visit, or escalating to emergency services.

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