In a recently completed qualitative study of nursing leaders' views of requirements for practice, seven aspects of recovery practice were revealed as central for graduates to learn. It is challenging to teach in-depth understanding of recovery in a nursing curriculum because there are so many competing content areas and as a result, time is pressed. But because it is so vital to understand, educators would benefit from developing and sharing teaching strategies that explore recovery deeply, memorably and engagingly, in order to encourage theory to be put into practice. Recent research into narrative pedagogy suggests that better use of stories, especially those that have strong emotional pull, such as well-made films and memoirs may offer solutions to creative educators. Stories can have transformative potential - because once heard and heeded, the person can never go back to exactly how they were before. Recovery learned in this way, becomes a threshold concept for the mental health curriculum. This paper outlines an engaging and time-efficient teaching strategy to develop these skills drawing on the concept of narrative pedagogy.