What Is Substance Use Disorder?
Substance use disorder is a health condition that can affect the brain, body, emotions, relationships, and daily responsibilities. It can involve alcohol, prescription medications, opioids, or other substances, and it may become difficult to stop even when the person wants to make a change.
This video explains what substance use disorder is and why recovery often requires understanding, support, and the right care.
At Serenity Nonprofit, we know substance use struggles are not a sign of weakness or failure. Healing is possible, and no one should have to walk through recovery alone.
This video is shared for educational purposes to help individuals and families better understand mental health, behavioral health, recovery and wellness topics
What This Video Covers
- What substance use disorder is and how it can affect daily life.
- Why substance use can become difficult to control over time.
- How substance use may impact emotions, relationships, work, school, and health.
- Why compassion and support are important parts of recovery.
- When professional treatment may help someone take the next step.
Understanding Substance Use Disorder
Substance use disorder can happen when repeated substance use begins to interfere with a person’s life, health, safety, relationships, or responsibilities. It can affect judgment, cravings, mood, stress responses, and decision-making. For some people, substance use may begin as a way to cope with pain, trauma, anxiety, depression, stress, or difficult life circumstances. Over time, the body and brain may become dependent on the substance, making it harder to stop without support. Understanding substance use disorder helps reduce shame and opens the door to care, treatment, and recovery.
Why This Matters
Substance use disorder can affect more than the individual. Families, caregivers, children, friends, and communities may also feel the impact. When people understand substance use as a treatable health condition, it becomes easier to respond with compassion instead of judgment.
Support can help people build safer coping skills, strengthen recovery, reduce relapse risk, and reconnect with stability, health, and hope.
When to Seek Support
It may be time to seek support if substance use is:
• Becoming difficult to cut back or stop
• Affecting relationships, work, school, parenting, or daily responsibilities
• Causing withdrawal symptoms, cravings, or emotional distress
• Being used to cope with anxiety, depression, trauma, stress, or pain
• Leading to unsafe situations, legal problems, health concerns, or relapse
Support is especially important if someone feels unable to stop on their own or if substance use is creating safety concerns.
How to get started
Contact Serenity Nonprofit to schedule an appointment. Our team will guide you through each step, answer your questions clearly, and provide respectful, compassionate care focused on your safety, comfort, and long term well being.

