Last activity on 09/15/2025
By the end of this lesson, participants will be able to:
“You don’t rise to the level of your intentions. You fall to the level of your systems.”
— James Clear
“Like a city whose walls are broken through is a person who lacks self-control.”
— Proverbs 25:28 (NIV)
Shawn swore he’d stop gambling. He deleted his apps, promised his partner, and even joined a support group. But one night, alone and overwhelmed, he downloaded the app again. Why? Because nothing prevented him. He was relying on willpower instead of guardrails. Once he added blockers, shared his passwords, and removed access to funds, the temptation lost its grip. He realized recovery required more than good intentions—it required a plan.
Guardrails are protective systems that keep you from veering off course. They don’t eliminate temptation—but they make it harder to act on.
You can’t always control your urges, but you can control your access.
Guardrails are not a sign of weakness. They are a commitment to strength.
Create a personal “Relapse Prevention Grid” like this:
Area | Risk | Guardrail |
---|---|---|
Digital | Late-night access to gambling apps | Install site blockers, phone curfew |
Financial | Easy access to funds | Call the sponsor after every shift |
Emotional | Lonely after work | Call sponsor after every shift |
“God, I want to be free—but I know my strength alone isn’t enough. Help me be wise, not just willful. Please show me where I’m vulnerable. Teach me to build healthy boundaries—not out of fear, but out of faith in Your plan for my healing. Strengthen my resolve and give me the courage to ask for help. Amen.”
Guardrails aren’t punishment. They are protection.
They create space between impulse and action, and that space is where freedom grows.