Resources

Safety is the first line of defence in recovery.

Lillylinks.com aims to link personal choices, equitable access, and flexible recovery solutions for individuals and their families.  

We work within safeguarding and trauma-informed understandings when creating our all resources. If you currently have additional professional assistance our program can be an advantage to personalising your recovery. The program design is to be self-directed. 

We provide access to both free and fee pay resources.

 
Click to access our Free Simple Safety Plan

The second part to getting better and staying well is finding access to Support & Help.

Helps: Both a Noun & Action. Makes it possible to get better. **If mentally ill, we will need help in order to get better.

Supports: Both a Noun & Action. Carrys and endures the weight in part or whole, active in assistance, &/or keeps it upright. **We need support in order to keep us well.

Currently in Recovery: We access resource styles of Help & Support. Sometimes they are people, but now tools, learnings, and education are often more effective for both types of help & support for getting better and keeping us well.

Which ones we need to access depends on many parts, mostly the level of the condition of our health and the available life choices.
Many access points are determined by firstly the nature of our ill health, secondly how we access support and help, plus the amount of effort (such as time and money) we can give.

The Collective Recovery Response uses both helps & supports in various modalities.

Help & Support, various forms including formal, informal, and alternatives, each will have parts that are positive and negative. 

Click to see Lilly Links: Resources Solutions User Guide

The person who has ill health is a part of the decision-making to accessing these help and support resources. Living with shifting and/or complex daily life means mental ill health needs regular support and help resources that are easy to access and understands the hidden triggers.


Recovery can feel like we are in a fight to find our personal answers.

It’s a worthwhile process to know that we are not in battle against other people. Recovery is about improving our ability of function and returning to a state of personal wellbeing and strengthening our health. Combative recovery can lead to disappointing outcomes.

Regardless, of how much pain and ill health we face, we will have adversities in day-to-day life. If we are fighting a cause for justice that is not ours, we are losing the battle to finding our personal resolve for strengthening health and functional wellbeing. 

Finding the Right Resources 

The LAST IMPROTANT factor is our personal resolve. 

Below is a FREE resource as a question key that helps determines if self-directed recovery is right for today or you need to use additional professional assistance. 

Adjusting Key Questions: Use to test your practical starting ability