NeuroFaithℱ and AA Step 8: Willingness to Make Amends

Tim Hayden

Co-Founder

Tim is passionate about serving others, leading people to Christ, and more specifically breaking the stigma of addiction and mental health in the Church and across the world. Tim merges his desire to further the Kingdom with 18 years of experience in the Corporate IT world where his background has ranged from working for small startups to leading national teams at global software companies. Tim graduated from Mount Vernon Nazarene University with a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration, Marketing, and Communications. Tim and his wife are active in their church community serving in the youth department, marriage mentoring, and life group mentoring. In his spare time, Tim enjoys spending time with his family in the great outdoors camping, mountain biking, and snowboarding. “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.” – John Wesley
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Step 8 of Alcoholics Anonymous asks men to do something most have spent years actively avoiding: make a list of everyone they have harmed and become willing to make amends to all of them. It is one of the most relationally demanding steps in the program, and for good reason.

For men carrying years of addiction, trauma, shame, and broken trust, the idea of facing the people they’ve hurt can feel impossible before it feels necessary.

At AnchorPoint, Step 8 doesn’t happen in isolation. It happens inside a clinical and spiritual framework, NeuroFaithℱ. This model is specifically designed to build the neurological and relational conditions that make genuine amends possible rather than performative.

What Is NeuroFaithℱ and Why Does It Matter for Step 8?

NeuroFaithℱ, developed by Dr. Jeffrey Hansen, Ph.D., is a recovery model that integrates evidence-based neuroscience, trauma-informed clinical care, and Christ-centered spiritual principles. Its foundational premise is that addiction is not a moral failure but an adaptive response to pain and that lasting recovery requires healing across every dimension of a man’s life: brain, body, relationships, and spirit.

Step 8 requires a man to look honestly at how his addiction affected the people around him, not from a place of crushing shame but from a place of grounded accountability.

Shame dysregulates the nervous system and shuts men down. Accountability, supported by safety and connection, is what actually moves them forward [1].

Why Is Step 8 of AA So Hard for Men With Trauma Histories?

For men who grew up without secure attachment, or whose relationships were shaped by neglect, abuse, or chronic instability, close relationships were never fully safe to begin with. Addiction deepened that relational damage, leaving behind a trail of broken trust, withdrawn connection, and unspoken harm [2].

When Step 8 asks a man to revisit those relationships with honesty and willingness, it isn’t just asking him to make a list. It’s asking him to re-engage with the relational world he learned to protect himself from. Without clinical support, that process can collapse under the weight of shame, avoidance, or emotional flooding [2].

This step is where NeuroFaithℱ creates a foundation that makes Step 8 sustainable.

How Does Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapy Support the Step 8 Process?

Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy, developed by Dr. Richard Schwartz, works from the understanding that the mind is made up of distinct internal parts, each carrying its own beliefs, emotions, and protective roles. For men in recovery, the parts that blocked connection, the controllers, the isolators, and the rage-driven protectors weren’t failures of character. They were responses to pain that never got addressed [3].

IFS helps men approach those parts with curiosity rather than judgment. Before a man can make amends outwardly, he often needs to make them inwardly, acknowledging the parts of himself that caused harm while he was trying to survive. That internal reconciliation is what allows Step 8 to move from a list on paper to a genuine shift in how a man sees himself in relation to others.

Romans 12:2 speaks to this process directly: “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” IFS, within a NeuroFaithℱ framework, gives that renewal a clinical pathway.

What Role Do Brotherhood and Sociometrics Play in Making Amends?

Recovery at AnchorPoint is not a solo mission. It happens inside a community of men, and that community is itself a clinical tool. Sociometrics, the therapeutic study of interpersonal relationships and group dynamics, informs how group work is structured so that men aren’t just sitting in a room together but are actively building the relational skills they’ll need to repair harm in the real world [4].

For many men, the group work at AnchorPoint is the first place they’ve ever been fully honest about who they’ve hurt and what they’ve done. That experience of being known, held accountable, and still accepted is significant. It activates the social engagement system, builds oxytocin-mediated trust, and rewires the association between vulnerability and danger into one between vulnerability and connection [4].

How Does Attachment-Based Family Therapy Fit Into Step 8 Work?

For many men in recovery, the relationships most damaged by addiction are the ones closest to home: spouses, children, parents, and siblings. Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT) provides a structured, clinically guided process for beginning to repair those bonds [5].

Rather than putting a man in a room with a family member and hoping honesty goes well, ABFT first builds the individual’s capacity for regulated, attuned communication before attempting relational repair. It addresses the underlying attachment wounds that both parties carry, creating conditions where amends can actually be received, not just delivered.

Christian Rehab for Men in Arizona Built for Real Transformation

AnchorPoint Recovery is a Christian rehab center for men in Arizona rooted in neuroscience and guided by the NeuroFaithℱ model, developed by Dr. Jeffrey Hansen, Ph.D.

We combine faith-based care, clinical therapy, and relational healing to address the root causes of addiction and trauma. Our programs integrate brain science with faith to restore identity, purpose, and connection beyond addiction.

We accept major insurance providers and commit to making care accessible. Join a brotherhood of men committed to not just recovery, but true transformation. Contact our admissions team today.

Sources 

[1] Dearing, R. L., et al. (2005). On the importance of distinguishing shame from guilt: Relations to problematic alcohol and drug use. Addictive Behaviors, 30(7).

[2] Schindler, A. (2019). Attachment and substance use disorders—Theoretical models, empirical evidence, and implications for treatment. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10.

[3] Hodgdon, H. B., et al. (2022). Internal family systems (IFS) therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among survivors of multiple childhood trauma: A pilot effectiveness study. Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 31(1).

[4] Olff, M. (2012). Bonding after trauma: on the role of social support and the oxytocin system in traumatic stress. European journal of psychotraumatology, 3, 10.3402/ejpt.v3i0.18597.

[5] Diamond, G., et al. (2016). Attachment-based family therapy: A review of the empirical support. Family Process, 55(3).

Need a Higher Level of Care?

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When outpatient isn’t enough, AnchorPoint provides structured, faith-based residential care for men ready to rebuild.

AnchorPoint is a brother program to Holdfast Recovery under the same ownership and clinical leadership.ARE.

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