Meaningful Activity Planning is a recovery-oriented practice for strengthening agency, hope, self-direction, and practical support in a life defined by the person rather than by symptoms alone.
Step-by-step guide
- Present Meaningful Activity Planning as a tool owned by the person, not by the professional
- Ask how this tool connects with the person's own definition of recovery
- Identify strengths, supports, rights, preferences, and barriers
- Turn the conversation into one concrete, self-chosen next step
- Review what helped, what did not help, and what should be changed in the plan
When to use
- When the person wants a life-oriented plan beyond symptom management
- When hope, identity, connection, meaning, or agency need support
- In community mental health, rehabilitation, peer support, and long-term care contexts
Key phrases
How could Meaningful Activity Planning support your own version of recovery this week?
Follow-up questions
What choice belongs to you here?
Who or what could support this?
What would make this plan more realistic?
Alternative phrasings
This is your plan; we can adapt it to your language.
Recovery does not have to mean doing everything alone.
Warnings
- ⚠️ Do not turn recovery into pressure to be optimistic
- ⚠️ Do not use autonomy language to abandon the person without material support
- ⚠️ Collaborative safety planning remains necessary when risk is high
Source: Anthony, W. A. (1993); Deegan, P. Leamy et al. CHIME framework; Copeland WRAP
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.