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The Sacred Descent

Mental Mike

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Paperback

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English
Mental Mike
31 December 2025
Most people enter recovery believing the work requires them to climb upward toward strength, clarity, discipline, or spiritual victory. That belief is understandable. It is also one of the reasons sincere recovery efforts so often collapse. As a result, I did not write this book to teach you how to ascend. I wrote it to explain why recovery so often begins with a downward turn.

Addiction, trauma, and spiritual exhaustion do not arise because a person is weak or immoral. They occur because the systems that regulate meaning, safety, and identity have been overwhelmed for too long. The nervous system adapts. The mind adapts. Identity adapts. Substances and compulsive patterns emerge not as rebellion, but as survival strategies. The failure is not that these strategies appear; it is that they eventually stop working. When they fail, collapse follows, and then the collapse is frequently misinterpreted. People are told they have lost faith, lacked discipline, or resisted change. In reality, many have reached the limits of structures that could no longer hold the weight of their lives.

What I call the sacred descent is the moment when false supports give way. It is the stripping away of illusions about control, identity, and how transformation actually occurs. This descent is not punishment or abandonment. It is a necessary reordering that makes honesty possible. I have spent decades working with people at this threshold; individuals in early recovery, caught in relapse cycles, or exhausted by trying to fix themselves through effort alone. I have seen how often they are urged to push harder at the very moment their system requires containment, silence, and recalibration. I have also seen how dangerous it is to mistake collapse for failure.

This book rests on a simple but demanding premise: we are living organisms made of borrowed molecules, living on borrowed time. That reality does not diminish us; it clarifies our responsibility. Recovery is not about earning worth or achieving purity. It is about stewarding what remains with honesty, restraint, and care. The Unified Flux Model that underlies this work was developed to help make sense of what unfolds beneath addiction and recovery: neurologically, psychologically, relationally, and spiritually. It does not replace faith, treatment, or accountability. It provides a coherent framework that respects human limits while insisting on responsibility.

The rhythm explored here (descent, silence, emergence) has always governed fundamental transformation. Before reorganization, there is disintegration. Before clarity, there is quiet. Attempts to bypass these phases may feel productive, but they rarely endure. If you are reading this because you feel lost, empty, or stalled, I want to be clear: nothing has gone wrong. You may be standing at the precise point where real change becomes possible. The task is not to escape the descent prematurely, but to enter it consciously... without turning loss into shame.

This book does not promise ease. It offers orientation. It is meant to help you understand where you are, why effort alone may no longer work, and how to move forward without betraying yourself. If you are willing to stop fighting the descent and learn how to inhabit it, what emerges may not be who you imagined becoming, but it will be real.

And real is enough to build a life on.
By:  
Imprint:   Mental Mike
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 13mm
Weight:   308g
ISBN:   9798233203985
Series:   The Unified Flux Model for Recovery
Pages:   228
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Michael (""Mental Mike"") is a recovery educator, counselor, and systems thinker with three decades of experience working at the intersection of addiction, trauma, violence, and human behavior. His work is grounded not in theory alone, but in sustained frontline engagement with individuals navigating substance use disorders, criminal justice involvement, domestic violence, and complex psychological injury. Across his career, Michael has worked in residential treatment settings, correctional environments, community supervision, and higher education. He has taught hundreds of college-level courses, trained professionals, and supported individuals at every stage of recovery - from acute stabilization through long-term reintegration. This breadth of experience has shaped his central conviction: recovery fails most often not because people lack motivation, but because they are asked to change without being given a coherent understanding of what is happening within them. Academically, Michael holds four Master's degrees and has completed extensive professional training across counseling, behavioral health, crisis intervention, and trauma-informed practice. His approach integrates neuroscience, depth psychology, and lived experience into structured educational frameworks designed for real-world application. Rather than offering abstract inspiration, his work emphasizes clarity, regulation, accountability, and sustainable change. Michael is also a survivor of early relational trauma and family dysfunction, a reality he does not hide behind credentials. His understanding of addiction, shame, and emotional fragmentation is informed both professionally and personally. This dual perspective allows him to address recovery with directness and compassion, without moralizing or minimizing the difficulty of change. Michael created the Unified Flux Model (UFM) and develops long-form recovery curricula, standalone educational texts, and licensed materials used by individuals, treatment programs, and community organizations. His work is especially valued by readers and professionals who are seeking depth, structure, and honesty in a field often dominated by oversimplification.

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