Overcoming FOMO in Recovery: 6 Ways to Stop Missing-Out Anxiety and Embrace Your New Life



Kerry Kenn is an award-winning freelance writer specializing in addiction, mental health, and wellness content. She brings empathy, clarity, and research-driven insight to stories that support recovery, resilience, and personal growth across consumer, clinical, and business audiences.




Kerry Kenn is an award-winning freelance writer specializing in addiction, mental health, and wellness content. She brings empathy, clarity, and research-driven insight to stories that support recovery, resilience, and personal growth across consumer, clinical, and business audiences.
Table of Contents
- The Truth About What You're Missing: 6 Ways to Beat FOMO
- 1. Challenge Your Thoughts: Question the FOMO Story Your Brain Tells
- 2. Remember What You're Really Missing: Hangovers, Regrets, and Risks
- 3. Take a Break From Social Media to Protect Your Peace
- 4. Focus on Your Own Milestones, Not Others' Highlight Reels
- 5. Your Own Fun: Build a Life Others Want to Join
- 6. Build New Routines: Finding Joy Without Drugs or Alcohol
Ever wonder what you’re missing out on now that you’re sober? If this “wondering” escalates to fear or obsession, FOMO may have you under its thumb.
What is FOMO, you ask? Fear Of Missing Out: “A form of social anxiety, whereby one is compulsively concerned that one might miss an opportunity for social interaction, a novel experience, profitable investment or other satisfying event.”
If you’ve chosen recovery over relapse, sober over stoned, and a new life over your old one, FOMO might creep up on you. You’ve had to make changes to your lifestyle, find new hang-outs and learn new ways to use your time. You say “no” to things you used to embrace. You may have moments when you wonder – am I missing out on too much? But dwelling on this notion that you’re missing out on “fun” things can be dangerous to sobriety.
The Truth About What You're Missing: 6 Ways to Beat FOMO
Keep in mind, these healthy changes you’ve made do cause you miss out on things. But what you’re missing out on are the things you no longer want – addiction, enslavement, broken relationships, regrets, hangovers, overdose, death.
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To stay on the right path, use the following tactics to kick FOMO to the curb.
1. Challenge Your Thoughts: Question the FOMO Story Your Brain Tells
If your brain tries to take you on the FOMO train, find another track. Ask yourself: “What’s really the worst that could happen if I ‘miss out’ on ___?” Simple acceptance that it’s okay to say no to things can go a long way to victory over FOMO. Remind yourself that your sobriety and overall health are way more important.
2. Remember What You're Really Missing: Hangovers, Regrets, and Risks
As I mentioned, the “fun” you are “missing” isn’t really enjoyable at all. Hangovers. Potential accidents. Regrets from embarrassing things you say or do that you can’t take back. Health issues. When it comes to drug and alcohol use, the acronym should really be GFMO – grateful for missing out.
3. Take a Break From Social Media to Protect Your Peace
Social media has its perks. It also has its downside. If you’re constantly reading about what others are doing, you’re more likely to experience FOMO. Try cutting back (or even cutting out) your social media time. It will be easier to focus on your own life and what’s best for you, rather than what others are up to.
4. Focus on Your Own Milestones, Not Others' Highlight Reels
When you’re working toward personal goals, you’re less concerned with how others are spending their time. If you start to wonder what you might be missing out on, you can remind yourself that those activities don’t align with your goals. Stay focused on the milestones ahead and continue working toward them.
5. Your Own Fun: Build a Life Others Want to Join
Who decides what activities are worth doing? You! Why worry about what others are doing to have fun? Create your own good times – healthy, sober memories. Let others fear missing out on your stuff!
6. Build New Routines: Finding Joy Without Drugs or Alcohol
As you make your own FOMO fun, it can help to replace old activities with new ones that don’t involve drugs or alcohol. Maybe you go for a daily bike ride during happy hour. Maybe you go to a movie on Saturday night instead of a drunk-fest. As you find new things to occupy your time, you discover life can be fun without substance abuse.
Ready to Build a Life You Won't Want to Miss?
If FOMO is threatening your recovery, professional support can help. Recovery.com connects you with treatment centers offering evidence-based care for addiction and co-occurring anxiety. Find a program that helps you build lasting sobriety and genuine contentment. No more missing out on what truly matters.
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