(928) 377-5230
Tim Hayden
Co-Founder
Kevin Lussier
I highly recommend this facility, the staff truly care. Even long after Iâve graduated treatment, Iâm still connected. Helping me through all stages of my growth. I didnât just go to treatment, I found a new way to live. Iâm living my best life and my journey has just begun. Iâm forever grateful.
After years of struggling with substance abuse and deep-rooted trauma, my loved one was lost, hopeless, and disconnected from both himself and God. AnchorPoint not only helped him find recovery, but also led him back to faith and a completely new way of living. The compassion, patience, and dedication of the team is unlike anything we’ve experienced. They didn’t just treat symptoms, they helped him heal from the inside out. Today he’s thriving, living a healthy spiritually grounded lifestyle. We are forever grateful for the role AnchorPoint played in this transformation.
It is such a welcoming facility with all the comforts of home, an excellent location to recover and be transformed by the faith-based Christian program it offers for healing and restoration!
Addiction can strain even the strongest relationships. Lies, manipulation, and broken promises often follow the patterns of addiction; not because a person is âevil,â but because the disease clouds judgment and self-control. Step 5 of AA recovery encourages self-accountability, reflection, and humility, acknowledging the ways your actions have hurt others. Â
The Bible says that confessing your sins brings mercy and healing. When you confess honestly, you not only let go of the weight of your past mistakes but also connect with God’s grace and walk in integrity.Â
Step 5 of AA provides the tools to rebuild trust, repair relationships, and move forward in recovery with both confidence and spiritual strength.
Step 5 is about having the guts to face the truth. It’s not a step to feel bad about yourself; it’s a step to take control of your story. Telling God, yourself, and someone else you trust exactly that what you did wrong is a sign of strength, not weakness.  Â
Step 5 is, at its core, a spiritual act. When you tell God and someone else about your mistakes, you are being honest and truthful. When you accept this step, you not only let go of the weight of your past mistakes but also receive God’s strength to rebuild trust and relationships and move forward with confidence and purpose.
Step 5 is a key part of building trust and accountability because it turns honesty from a private thought into a shared reality. When you tell someone you trust about the things you’ve done wrong, you’re not only taking responsibility for them; you’re also asking for help, guidance, and some level of oversight to help you get better. This step lets other people know that you are serious about making changes and are dedicated to living a life of honesty.
Here are some ways that Step 5 helps keep individuals in recovery responsible and rebuild lost trust with loved ones:
For many people struggling with addiction, Alcoholics Anonymous is more than just a meeting; it’s a lifeline. One lecture or book isn’t what makes AA strong. It’s the living, breathing community that surrounds the journey. Listening to someone else’s story can be powerful. It shows that another person has fought the same temptations and despair and found a way to move on.
The program offers a balance of freedom and structure: regular meetings, being responsible, and the spiritual grounding of the Twelve Steps. It acknowledges that recovery isn’t something that should be done alone. Â
Step 5 isnât about impressing anyone or making yourself look better. Itâs about honesty. Take a quiet moment with God, your higher power, however you see Him, and really look at the man youâve been. Write it down if you have to. Name the mistakes, the grudges, and the lies. Itâs tough, but facing the mirror of your life is how we start to break free.
Step 5 calls for trustworthy, grounded, empathetic ears. Often itâs your sponsor, a mentor, or a fellow brother in the program. Someone who has walked the road and can hold your story without judgment. You want someone who can say, âI hear you, man,â and mean it.
When you share, itâs tempting to defend yourself or rationalize your past. Resist that. Speak plainly and sincerely. Let the words fall without armor.Â
Step 5 is not a one-time fix; itâs a lifestyle of honesty and courage. Each time you stumble, each time you hide, you have the opportunity to come back and repeat. The more you practice, the more natural it becomes. Â
AnchorPoint Recovery in Arizona is a Christian rehab rooted in neuroscience and guided by the NeuroFaithÂź model as developed by Dr. Jeffrey Hansen, PhD. It uses faith and evidence-based therapies to treat trauma and addiction. We offer several levels of care to guide patients through their recovery journey from start to finish.Â
Although treatment plans are tailored to each individual’s needs, AnchorPoint follows a unified therapeutic frameworkâmuch like the AA modelâthat emphasizes surrender, accountability, and connection to a higher purpose.Â
By helping men move beyond self-reliance and isolation, we guide them toward healing that integrates brain science with faith, restoring meaning, identity, and hope beyond addiction.
We work with a variety of insurance plans and are committed to reducing financial barriers to care.
