A Forever Recovery
121 Capital Ave NE, Battle Creek, MI 49017
Reviews
03/19/2020
I saw something about A Forever Recovery for the first time maybe 7 years ago. I was looking into rehabs for my son and AFR had seemed like it would be a good place for him. Before I called, I did a bit of research and after reading some of the reviews and posts about AFR, I changed my mind about sending him there. There were far too many reviews and posts that said AFR wasnâÂÂt much more than a recruitment center for a cult, and I had no interest in sending my son to a place like that.
My son spent the next 6 years in and out of rehab and each time he relapsed, IâÂÂd start looking for a new rehab for him and I would see the ads for AFR. After 6 years of son making zero improvement, I thought if a cult could get my son sober, it might just be easier to get him out of that cult than getting him sober another way. Which is a stupid thought to have but, I was at the end of my rope and I didnâÂÂt know what else to do for my son. I ended up calling AFR just to see what they said about those reviews and posts and I found out that AFR isnâÂÂt affiliated with that cult anymore. Which made sending my son there an easy decision.
AFR has an impressive set-up and the more I heard about it, the more excited I was to have my son go there. AFR has different programs that their clients choose from. They donâÂÂt have a one size fits all mentality when it comes to treatment and I thought that, more than anything else, would help my son. Honestly, IâÂÂm a bit embarrassed to admit that it never occurred to me that my son wasnâÂÂt the only problem. That the programs he was doing werenâÂÂt right for him. Whenever I found out that he had relapsed, I blamed him. I thought that he wasnâÂÂt trying hard enough or didnâÂÂt care enough to try. IâÂÂd been sending him to 12-step programs because it was the only program that I knew anything about. ItâÂÂs been around for so long that it didnâÂÂt occur to look into different programs.
When my son was at AFR he was able to choose a program that he felt comfortable doing and his attitude towards his recovery changed after deciding to do the SMART program. He put much more effort into doing that program because heâÂÂd finally found something that made sense to him.
The clients at AFR are also moved forward on their programs based on their individual progress. As I said earlier, they donâÂÂt have a one size fits all mentality at AFR, so the clients choose their programs but, they also stay at AFR for however long it takes them to get that program right. My son started at AFR with the same attitude that heâÂÂd started every other rehab heâÂÂd been to. Annoyed that he was back in rehab with a plan to ride out his time there while putting as little effort as possible. After he went through detox and saw the different program they have, he spent time figuring out what he wanted to do, and that attitude changed. Being at AFR stopped being something that he had to do, and it became something that he wanted to do.
He stayed at AFR for 18 weeks because he wanted to stay for that long. He knew that being at AFR was helping him and felt that the program he was doing was something that would really be able to help him stay sober, so he put everything into doing his program right.
Going to A Forever Recovery gave my son a better chance at staying sober than every other rehab heâÂÂs ever gone to. I am very happy that I finally called AFR and gave them a chance because going there has saved my sonâÂÂs life. He got home last week, and IâÂÂve never seen him so determined to stay sober. HeâÂÂs doing everything heâÂÂs supposed to b...
02/20/2020
When my husband and I started looking into rehabs for our daughter, we knew she wasnâÂÂt ready to get help. We couldnâÂÂt do nothing though so, we started looking into treatment centers she could go to. When we first spoke with the intake counselor at AFR we told him that we didnâÂÂt know when or even if our daughter would ever agree to go to treatment. The intake counselor we worked with was great though. He was willing to talk to my husband or I whenever we called with a question, and he was instrumental in helping us get our daughter to agree to go to rehab. He helped us understand why our daughter wasnâÂÂt willing to talk to us about rehab, why sheâÂÂd refused to get help in the past and he coached us on better ways to go about talking to our daughter about getting help. Knowing that it might be a very long time before our daughter went to his center, he still spoke with us at least once a week, asking after us, after our daughter, he gave us some really great advice in that time and he helped us cope with having a daughter that was addicted to drugs.
He also helped us get everything set up so that as soon as our daughter did agree to go to treatment, sheâÂÂd be on a plane and headed to AFR before she had a second to change her mind and back out. Having our daughter go to AFR was the best thing to do and it was the perfect place for her to get the help she needed.
It didnâÂÂt take long after she arrived at AFR for the changes in her to become noticeable. For starters, I hadnâÂÂt a single phone call with her in over 5 years where she wasnâÂÂt calling me just to ask for money and getting into a fight when I wouldnâÂÂt give her any. When she finished detox and called home, I was able to talk to her asking for money or having any kind of disagreement with her at all. Which was such a nice change.
After sheâÂÂd been at AFR for 3 weeks, her dad and I went to visit her, and the physical changes were just as amazing. SheâÂÂd lost a lot of weight because of her drug use and sheâÂÂd started gaining that weight back. Her skin was also clearing up but, best of all, she looked and sounded so much happier.
As a parent, you worry about your kids. Having one of them start to use drugs is awful. Watching as your kid becomes completely dependent on a drug like heroin, when thereâÂÂs nothing that they will let you do to help them, itâÂÂs a horrible thing to have to deal with. Your watching your kid choose to hurt themselves, knowing that until they make the decision to get help, thereâÂÂs not much you can do to help them.
Having that kid finally get the help they need and watching them come back and start acting like the person you love in amazing. Because my daughter went to A Forever Recovery, because of the help my husband and I received before our daughter had even agreed to go there, sheâÂÂs now off everything, completely sober and has been for 5 months.
Since coming home sheâÂÂs been vigilant in continuing her aftercare program. She speaks to her aftercare counselor regularly, though that tapers off the longer sheâÂÂs home, however she can call her aftercare counselor if sheâÂÂs needing help with something.
Our daughter knows that just because she went to treatment and is still sober, that doesnâÂÂt mean her dad and I completely trust her again. Since sheâÂÂs been home sheâÂÂs done a lot of work to earn her dadâÂÂs and my trust back. We knew that she needed to start working and doing something with her day but, we wer...
01/23/2020
I was ready to start a new life when I went to A Forever Recovery. I wanted, more than anything to stop doing drugs and all the other harmful things I was doing. When I first got to AFR, I was this weird mix of hopeful yet, jaded. I wanted to get clean but, I was very sure that it was something I could do. Just the fact that I did want to get clean helped though. I was more receptive to doing the program and to doing the work I needed to do. While I was going through my program, I learned how to navigate my life and my choices, so I didnâÂÂt fall back into old habits. Because of the things I learned at AFR, IâÂÂm still sober today. 6 months ago, I finished my program, and while IâÂÂm still sober and very happy about that, my life is also more stable than itâÂÂs been in years. Which is important for me. Having that stability helps me so much to stay sober. While I was going through my program at AFR, I learned so much about myself. I learned why IâÂÂd been doing the things IâÂÂd been doing, why IâÂÂd been making horrible choices in my life, and where my reactions came from. I learned how to stop myself from instantly spinning out of control as soon as something went wrong. How to take a step back when something didnâÂÂt go right, reevaluate things and then deal with my issues the right way, before I got to the point where using seemed the best option. One of my problems when I finished a rehab was the fact that always, always in the back of my mind, if I was having a bad day, if something was going wrong or any other little problem I was having, I could make it go away by using. I knew the problem itself wouldnâÂÂt go away but, I knew that I wouldnâÂÂt care about the problem anymore. Dealing with things takes more work than it does to use and pretend that the problem doesnâÂÂt exist. So, while I was going through my program I learned how to spot and deal with my problems before it got to the point where I felt like I needed that escape. While I was going through my program, I decided that I didnâÂÂt want to go home to my parentâÂÂs house. I probably could have gone home and stayed sober but, I had family in Colorado, and I decided that starting over would be a lot easier to do if I was doing it in a place where IâÂÂd never used. So, and I decided that starting over somewhere new would be easier and less stressful for me. IâÂÂve always had a hard time asking for help, I always felt like if I asked for help, I was failing at whatever it was. So, IâÂÂd try to do everything on my own and IâÂÂd fail anyways. When I was going through my program, I realized that staying sober was something I wasnâÂÂt going to be able to do without help and that the bigger support system I had, the easier it would be for me. That asking for help wasnâÂÂt failing but, making sure I could succeed. So, while I was going through my program, I asked my aunt and uncle for help. TheyâÂÂve been amazing. My uncle helped me get a job and I started working 5 days after getting to Colorado. IâÂÂve been doing good at my job too. IâÂÂve been making it work on time every day and havenâÂÂt missed a day since I started. ItâÂÂs the best record IâÂÂve ever had with a job. IâÂÂve also been acting like an adult for the first time in my life. Paying all my own bills and everything. Before I went to AFR I didnâÂÂt think this kind of life was possible for me. As much as I wanted to be clean and sober, I didnâÂÂt truly believe I could do it. The counselors at AFR were great with me. They were always exactly what I need...
12/12/2019
Going to A Forever Recovery was the hardest and most worthwhile experience of my life. My problem with drugs started when I was 19 and it started with pain pills and it progressed to heroin, Xanax and whatever else I could get. When I was 23 my parents convinced me to get help. I went to a rehab that put me on Suboxone and weaned me off the Suboxone as I moved through detox. The Suboxone helped me so much when I was taking it. I helped me feel normal and when I took it, I didnâÂÂt have the urge to use. So, when I relapsed after finishing that program and relapsing, I went to a doctor and asked to be put on it. I stayed on Suboxone for next 4 years and life was pretty normal in that time. I went to work and had a stable job. Went out with friends without always wanting to use. I was still taking something though, and after 4 years of it I decided that it was time for me to get off.
Which was extremely hard. I had though that because I was coming off Suboxone and not off heroin or pain pills that the withdrawal would be easier for me to get through. It wasnâÂÂt and I ended up taking Percocet, trying to ease the withdrawal symptoms without taking Suboxone. Pain pills have a much shorter half life than Suboxone which was my reasoning for the Percocet but, the end result was that I was right back where I had started, addicted to pain pills. I started researching rehab center and after finding A Forever Recovery I asked my parents to help me get into the program. Going to AFR wasnâÂÂt easy but, I wanted my life Back and I felt that AFR was the best chance I had to get it. The staff at AFR helped me so much. It was hard there, especially in the beginning because as a drug addict youâÂÂre used to manipulating people and situations to get your way. The staff at AFR, being that theyâÂÂve dealt with drug addicts so much and have helped a lot of people, they donâÂÂt allow you to manipulate anything. They also have staff at AFR who were addicted to drugs as well and they know exactly what someone would say or do because theyâÂÂd have done the same thing so, it really is impossible to manipulate them. In the beginning of my program it made me angry and I had a rough time of it. IâÂÂm glad it was like that at AFR because I needed it. My parents knew I was on Suboxone and they knew that it wasnâÂÂt good for me to stay on it that long but, IâÂÂd convinced them that if I wasnâÂÂt on Suboxone, IâÂÂd be using pain pills and so they paid for my Suboxone and doctor appointments. Hell, when I wanted to get off Suboxone the Percocet that I took came from them. My parents knew it was wrong but, it goes to show you just how manipulative a drug addict can be. They way AFR approaches rehabilitation helped me a lot. They have different programs there, so I wasnâÂÂt stuck doing some cookie cutter approach to rehabilitation. The counselors helped me find the right program for me and that was the SMART program. Which has been amazingly helpful. IâÂÂve changed so much since going to AFR. I went to AFR in November of 2018 and my program lasted just over 10 weeks. I got home in January and IâÂÂve stayed sober since getting home. It wasnâÂÂt exactly fun to stay at AFR through the holidays even though the staff worked hard to make the holidays nice, itâÂÂs not the same as spending Christmas with your family. It was worth it though because this is the first Christmas in over 11 years that IâÂÂll spend Christmas with them and be completely sober. I canâÂÂt thank the staff at AFR enough for everything theyâÂÂve helped me achieve. I have over 12 months sober and itâÂÂs because the staff at AFR made me do the hard work so I could stay sober long term.
11/27/2019
My parents talking me into doing the A Forever Recovery program ended up being the greatest thing for me. IâÂÂve gone to my parents a lot over the years when I needed help and what amazes me is that to this day, no matter how much IâÂÂve put them through, and IâÂÂve really put them through more than any parent should have to deal with, is that theyâÂÂve always been supportive and willing to get me treatment for my drug addiction. TheyâÂÂve always been hopeful that IâÂÂd get sober even after I stopped trying.
IâÂÂve gone to a lot of rehabs over the years. Some of them helped a bit and some of them didnâÂÂt help at all but, after years of trying to get sober every time I relapsed it just became another failure and another reason to stop trying. When my parents started telling me about AFR I was at a point in my life where I just wanted to give up. I wasnâÂÂt suicidal, I didnâÂÂt actually want to die but, I was really damn tired of it all that I wasnâÂÂt very far away from being suicidal. So, when my parents told me about AFR and asked me to go there, I said no. IâÂÂd hurt them so many times by relapsing and I thought that it would be better to not get their hopes up by going to rehab. They kept pushing though and I did finally agree to go. I didnâÂÂt go to AFR because I thought it would help. I went because I thought that after I relapsed again my parents might stop trying and itâÂÂd be easier on them.
I went into the program at A Forever Recovery 9 months ago, and I loved it there. Being at AFR was a lot easier for me than I expected. The staff are pretty great when youâÂÂre going through detox. There are people working at AFR who have been addicts as well so it isnâÂÂt just people who want to help but donâÂÂt have a true understanding of what youâÂÂre going through. The pains and discomforts that you feel when detoxing can be brutal and because theyâÂÂve actually experienced it, they know how to help.
I did the SMART program at AFR. There are different programs there but, thatâÂÂs the program that I was most interested in. IâÂÂve gone through 12-step programs before and they just donâÂÂt work for me. ThatâÂÂs one thing I really loved about AFR, I wasnâÂÂt made to do the same program as everyone else, I didnâÂÂt have to hope that doing another 12-step program would help me when itâÂÂs never helped before.
It also helped me a lot that I was there for 2 months. IâÂÂve done 60-day programs before and relapsed right away so it isnâÂÂt just how long I was there for, itâÂÂs not solely the program that does makes AFR different or the staff they have there. All those things together though, made going to AFR the best experience IâÂÂve ever had when going through rehab.
Best of all, IâÂÂm still sober. IâÂÂve been home for 7 months and I havenâÂÂt used at all. The SMART program really helped with that. Staying sober when youâÂÂre at rehab is easy. ThereâÂÂs nothing around to tempt you or to distract you. So, when you have a craving at rehab itâÂÂs pretty easy to just push it aside and work on your program. When you get home through, that craving is a lot harder to push aside and the SMART program helped me learn how to deal with the cravings so I wouldnâÂÂt give in to them.
ItâÂÂs been 9 months since the last time I used and 7 of those months have been at home. I canâÂÂt believe how good I feel right now. My life is my own again. Thank God my parents never gave up on me, because without them sending me to A Forever Recovery, IâÂÂd still be using.
10/31/2019
The reviews I read about A Forever Recovery made it sound amazing and when I sent my daughter there, I hoped and prayed that it was as good as it sounded. That going to AFR would help my daughter change her life in a positive way. My daughter started using heroin 10 years ago. Right after she first started using, things got bad so much faster that I could have ever anticipated. It takes barely any time for someone to become addicted to opiates and I saw that firsthand with my daughter.
IâÂÂve sent my daughter to so many rehabs in the last 10 years that going to rehab had become something of a joke to her. After the first few rehabs didnâÂÂt help, she started believing that nothing would, and she started taking each rehab less and less seriously. ItâÂÂs not quite right to say that rehab was a joke to her. She did want to get clean, she didnâÂÂt think the rehab she was at would help her, so she wasnâÂÂt trying to and the only reason she continued going to rehab at all was to humor her dad and me. So, itâÂÂs not surprising that they didnâÂÂt help her and that she continued using.
When I first found AFR and started talking to someone there, I was impressed with them. I wasnâÂÂt sure how effective AFR would be in helping my daughter because it was so different from every other center that sheâÂÂd been to but, thatâÂÂs also why I wanted her to go. AFR is the first place IâÂÂve found that looks at and treats drug addiction and recovery the way that they do. It was refreshing to talk to someone who honestly wanted to and thought that theyâÂÂd be able to help my daughter. Once I decided to send her to AFR they helped me get everything set up so that when my daughter agreed to go, it wouldnâÂÂt much more than driving her there and she wouldnâÂÂt have time to change her mind. Anyone who has ever tried to get someone into rehab knows that as soon as they agree, you need to be absolutely ready because they can and will change their minds very quickly.
AFR is only a few hours away from where we live so I drove her there and was able to see the way they treated and interacted with my daughter, and I was impressed with the level of care and compassion they showed my daughter. The process of my daughterâÂÂs recovery started differently at AFR because they made sure that it would. While they were checking my daughter in, before sheâÂÂd even started detoxing, they explained their program and what sheâÂÂd be doing there. They talked to her, and somewhere during her check in process she started seeing AFR differently to the other rehabs and they got my daughterâÂÂs agreement to put in the effort on her program.
During her program, the staff were patient with her. They understood that sheâÂÂd been guarded for so long that it would take more for her to open up and talk to them about her problems. They worked with my daughter until she felt comfortable enough to open up and start working with them to deal with her problems. While my daughter was at AFR she became a better person. She learned how to live her life without using drugs as a crutch for when she wasnâÂÂt happy or when something didnâÂÂt go her way. She learned all of this because of the staff at AFR and because the program she did was a program she was interested in and could understand the philosophy behind.
In the last 10 years, IâÂÂve spent a lot of time looking, talking to and getting my daughter into different rehabs. A Forever Recovery has the best collection of staff that IâÂÂve seen. The way AFR is run and the staff th...
08/01/2019
5 years ago, my dad had a heart attack. When I went to visit my dad in the hospital after his surgery he begged me to get help. IâÂÂd been addicted to heroin for 9 years at that point. He told me that he didnâÂÂt want to watch me die before him because of my addiction and he didnâÂÂt want to die before knowing that I was sober and would be okay. ThatâÂÂs the point when I started caring about myself again and wanting to get sober. His heart attack also made me realize that I didnâÂÂt have forever to fix things with my dad, if I wanted to have a relationship with him again I needed to get clean.
I went to A Forever Recovery and after finishing the program there I stayed sober for 6 months. It wasnâÂÂt always easy but it was amazing being sober again. Unfortunately, I relapsed at the 6 month mark. For a few months I hid it from my dad, he eventually realized IâÂÂd been using again and confronted me about it. We talked and I agreed to go back to rehab. He wanted me to try a different program and even though IâÂÂd really liked it at AFR I agreed with him. Even though IâÂÂd been good for 6 months after AFR, I still had relapsed so we were hoping another program would do more. I went to a different rehab and relapsed a lot quicker, then 2 more rehabs that I relapsed after before my dad and I decided that AFR had been the most helpful and that IâÂÂd go back there.
There were 2 years between my first program at AFR and the second. I was nervous about going back there. Worried that it would be weird or that the staff at AFR would be disappointed that I was back. It wasnâÂÂt like that at all though. There are staff at AFR who dealt with addiction themselves and the staff who hadnâÂÂt been addicts had been around long enough to understand how hard it is to get and stay sober.
It felt right going back to AFR. ThereâÂÂs so much about the staff working at AFR that made it easy for me. I got along with the staff and the other clients there so it wasnâÂÂt hard to stay there for however long I needed to be there. The counselors at AFR will push you to work really hard on your program. When you arenâÂÂt working on your program though the staff and counselors do a lot to make sure you have a good time there. They were always planning activities or outings for us which was really nice and I always had a good time during them.
ItâÂÂs really nice to have people who understand you when youâÂÂre going through rehab. My counselors experience with addiction made it possible for me to talk to him about anything and whatever he said in response or whatever advice he gave me I knew it came from experience and that he was just repeating something heâÂÂd read. He had found what worked for him to stay sober and he helped me find what would work for me.
I learned so much about myself during my second program at AFR. By the time I graduated I knew what I could and couldnâÂÂt handle. I knew who and what I could handle being around and who and what I absolutely had to stay away from if I wanted to stay sober.
Going through the program at AFR helped me a lot with my dad and our relationship. My counselor talked to him routinely throughout my program. He kept my dad updated on what I was doing, where in my program I was and how I was doing. He also helped my dad understand addiction in a way I never could. With his help my dad and I started working on repairing our relationship.
Since coming home IâÂÂve stayed clean. ItâÂÂs been 18 months and I love it. I love being sober, I love how much better my life is now. My dad and I are closer than ever and heâÂÂs actually become the person I talk to when IâÂÂm having a hard time staying clean.
07/04/2019
The other day I was speaking with my aftercare specialist from A Forever Recovery and she asked me if IâÂÂd write a few reviews online for the center. I donâÂÂt talk to her very often anymore because IâÂÂve been sober for 2 years now and donâÂÂt need to. ThatâÂÂs 2 years of sobriety, 2 years of having control over my life, 2 years without hurting or disappointing those around me. I canâÂÂt even begin to explain how amazing that feels.
When I went into the program at AFR O wanted to get clean. I had struggled with my addiction for years and it never mattered what rehab I went to, what program I tried, it was never enough. I could never make it past 6 months. Which sucks.
I had used heroin for 10 years and before I went to AFR I had been going to about 2 rehabs a year. By the time I was 30 IâÂÂd gone to over 20 rehabs and every single person in my life was suffering because of me and my addiction. My parents were miserable. I hadnâÂÂt spoken with my brother in over 3 years and my sister had been engaged for 5 years without planning her wedding because she was afraid that IâÂÂd show up to it high. I knew all this, knew I was hurting the people I loved and who loved me and still I couldnâÂÂt stop messing up.
The last few rehabs before going to AFR my parents werenâÂÂt sending me to them thinking that IâÂÂd stay sober after. We all wanted that sure, but by that point it was more about sending me to rehabs because when I was in rehab they knew where I was and they knew that I wasnâÂÂt getting into any trouble. When I was in rehab they werenâÂÂt worried that theyâÂÂd get a call from the cops telling them IâÂÂd been found dead of an overdose. To be perfectly honest, before I went to AFR thatâÂÂs how I figured IâÂÂd die. I didnâÂÂt want to but after having a heroin habit for 10 years it was more of a surprise that I wasnâÂÂt dead.
So, when I went to AFR that was the main reason. Keeping me out of trouble. Every rehab I went to I went with the hope that this one would be that magical, special place that would perform a miracle and IâÂÂd be able to stay sober but realistically we werenâÂÂt expecting that.
AFR was that special, miracle performing place for me though. The reason AFR was so different for me was the staff working there. After going to so many rehabs IâÂÂd gotten lazy about doing the programs when I was there. I didnâÂÂt really expect the program to work so had stopped putting in effort. The staff at AFR didnâÂÂt allow that. They were hard on me and they made sure that I worked hard on my program and did each step right.
The dedication and commitment that the staff at AFR have towards the clients and their sobriety is something I hadnâÂÂt ever experienced before. Every person working there was invested in every client. They wanted all of us to be able to use what we learned there and stay sober.
They made sure I did my program right and when I went home after I graduated I was still terrified. I knew what I had learned. Knew how to use it but being home and around everything again had me scared. I ended up calling my aftercare specialist constantly. She helped me a lot as well. Every time I had something come up that I had trouble dealing with IâÂÂd call her and she helped me get through every snag, every hiccup, every bit of trouble I had she was there, always willing to talk to me and help me work through it so I wouldnâÂÂt relapse. Her always answering my calls and being willing to talk to me almost daily is a big reason IâÂÂm still sober today.
Saying that going to AFR saved my life is an understatement. My sobriety, the fact that IâÂÂm still alive and on good terms with my family again is...
06/06/2019
ItâÂÂs been almost 10 years since my brother started using cocaine. His using got really bad about 2 ý years ago. Before that he was binging only on the weekends or when he was on holiday and because of that his addiction never seemed to get out of control and he was able to convince people, mostly our parents, that he wasnâÂÂt an addict. He had no problems keeping his job, he had his own home, paid all his bills and so our parents never understood that he needed help.
He started using daily about 2 ý years ago. He stopped binging on just the weekends and from then on every penny he had went to his addiction. He stopped paying bills, stopped doing everything that convinced our parents he was fine. Then 2 years ago, he was arrested.
Which I though was a really good thing. It was what finally woke both him and our parents up to the fact that he did really need help. When he called me from jail, I called our parents and they agreed with me that they wouldnâÂÂt bail him out of jail unless he agreed to go straight to rehab. Which he did.
In was in and out of rehabs for the next 1 ý years. HeâÂÂd check himself in, do okay while he was there and then relapse after a week, sometimes two of being home. That all happened after the first rehab. That first rehab he was a bit delusional going in. He didnâÂÂt tell anyone but, his plan was that by going to rehab he could keep using cocaine but, would go back to only binging on the weekends and such. So, that first rehab he relapsed the first day he was home.
After going to 5 rehabs in a 2 year period, he still wasnâÂÂt doing any better. Our parents then came across the A Forever Recovery website and it was such a good find. When they showed me the website and told me some about the program I started getting excited again about him going to rehab. We all started talking to him about the facility and what made it different and better than the others heâÂÂd been to.
The first thing was the ability heâÂÂd have to choose his own program. The other thing I was excited about was that heâÂÂd have people who worked at AFR who understood him better. Not because theyâÂÂd been to school and worked at a rehab for a while but because they had their own histories and experiences with drugs and addiction.
He agreed to go to AFR 5 months ago. From the beginning the program just seemed better for him. Not everyone who works at AFR was a drug addict but, the ones that he worked with helped him so much. He was more willing to talk to them about his problems and experiences because he wasnâÂÂt worried about being judged by them. He knew theyâÂÂd gone through the same things and it made things easier for him.
Since his arrest my brother has been trying to get better. Even with that first rehab, he was trying to get better. The desire to do better, to stay sober was there. Only he didnâÂÂt have the ability to do it. Going to AFR gave him the tools he needed to get and stay sober. No matter how long.
HeâÂÂs been home for 3 months and heâÂÂs still sober. ItâÂÂs the longest heâÂÂs been sober since he first started using cocaine all those years ago. HeâÂÂs done pretending heâÂÂs doing okay when heâÂÂs not. HeâÂÂs not lying about being sober anymore, he really is sober. Every day things are getting better for him and he has more control over his own life. A Forever Recovery was a great find and IâÂÂm so happy our parents were able to find the right place to send my brother.
06/06/2019
Provided by YP.comIt’s almost 10 years since my brother started using cocaine. How much he used didn’t get really back until 2 ½ years ago. Before that he binged. He would use over a weekend or go on a weeklong bender if he was on holiday. Because of this, the way he used, he had no problems with keeping his job and because his every penny didn’t go towards his addiction he had a nice home and his bills were always paid. This helped him convince our parents that he was not an addict and didn’t need help.
I was constantly trying to make our parents that he’d never stop using completely unless he got help. As soon as I had them convinced that he needed help, he’d smooth it all over and convince him that he had it under control and wasn’t using anymore.
This changed 2 ½ years ago. He started using every day and everything went downhill for him very fast. Then 2 years ago, he was arrested and I was happy about this. It makes me sound like a rotten sister but, I was happy because it was the wake-up call both him and our parents needed. They all finally understood that this problem wasn’t going away and he needed to go rehab. I got our parents agreement not to bail him out of jail unless he went straight to rehab from jail. Which he did agree to.
For the next year and a half he was in and out of a number of rehabs. He’d check himself in, do good while he was there. He’d finish his program and leave and within a week, two at the most, he would start using again. Before we found A Forever Recovery my brother went to 5 rehabs in a 2 year period and wasn’t doing any better.
When our parents found A Forever Recovery they showed me the facility website and told me a bit about what the intake counselor told them the place was like, I became excited about him going there. We all started talking to him about going to AFR and explaining to him why going to AFR would be different and better than the other rehabs he’d gone to.
The first thing we stressed was the ability he’d have to choose his own program and the second thing we stressed was at AFR they have people working there who understand addiction incredibly well. Not because they’d gone to school or worked in a rehab for some time but, because they had their own experience and histories with addiction. Not every person who works at AFR has a history with addiction but, enough of them do that my brother would be comfortable there.
5 months ago he went to AFR and he did better there right from the beginning. Because he had those staff to talk to, he was more willing to talk about his problems and whatever experiences he had because of his addiction to cocaine. He was more open about everything and didn’t try to make light of his experience because he wasn’t worried that he was being judged by anyone.
Since his arrest my brother has been trying to get sober. I know that. The desire to get sober and stay sober was there. He didn’t have the ability to do it though. Going to AFR gave him the tools he needed so that he could stay sober. No matter how much time had passed.
He’s been home 3 months now and he’s still clean. Which is big. This is the longest stretch of time he’s been sober since he first started using. Now, he’s not pretending or lying about doing okay, he really is doing okay. He’s not trying to convince people that he’s sober, he really is sober. Since he went to A Forever Recovery every day has been better for him and he every day he has more control over his life and his decisions.
05/09/2019
My parents and I chose A Forever Recovery because they offer the SMART Recovery program there. The SMART program is the only program I was interested in doing because it seemed to be the only program I hadnâÂÂt done before. My parents and I were hoping that it would be more beneficial than the other programs IâÂÂve been through.
I really like it at AFR. The facility was nice. The staff were amazing. They were very easy to work with. Their true understanding of drug addiction and what it was like made it easy for me to listen and work with them and the SMART program was exactly what I needed.
Going through this program completely changed the way I viewed addiction and recovery. They donâÂÂt take the view of âÂÂonce an addict, always an addictâ whether youâÂÂre currently on drugs or not. Instead, addiction is looked at as addictive behavior. Something that can be worked on and changed.
One of the first things you do on your program is take stock of your life. I had to look at my life without any blinders on and it forced me to see how much IâÂÂve changed for the worse since I started using. I did comparisons of every part of my life. I looked at my family life and how thatâÂÂd changed, my relationships and how I am with work. My health, my happiness, everything and it was eye opening to say the least. It was great motivation for me to work very hard on my program and to stick with it when it got hard.
During the program I learned how to recognize my triggers. I figured out which triggers were riskier than others. Which ones could be avoided and which ones needed to be handled a certain way. Then I learned how to handle them and myself in any situation I could possibly find myself in. All this you learn and practice through role-playing. The role-playing is taken seriously there which I appreciate because I was able to get the practice in that I needed so when I got home I could stay sober.
You also work on what to do when you have a craving. I used pills for 10 years before going to AFR. The longest IâÂÂve managed to stay clean after getting out of rehab was 6 months and those 6 months were awful for me. I would have these cravings and I didnâÂÂt know how to do with them. IâÂÂd try to grit my teeth and just power through it but, thatâÂÂs not very easy. I was miserable all the time and eventually gave in and used. Through this program itâÂÂs understood that when you get home youâÂÂre cravings arenâÂÂt going to disappear. You might have less cravings when youâÂÂre in rehab but thatâÂÂs more because you in a controlled environment with a lot of other people who also donâÂÂt want to use. At home itâÂÂs different and youâÂÂre going to have cravings. I learned how to deal with them. First just by distracting myself until the craving past. Every time I had the urge to use IâÂÂd go for a run or I work on my art. ItâÂÂs helped a lot. Now, I donâÂÂt have as so many cravings and the cravings I do have are milder and easier to get through.
Every rehab IâÂÂve been to before, it always felt like I was just fighting to not get worse. I wasnâÂÂt getting any better from doing those programs. A Forever Recovery is the first rehab IâÂÂve been to where it felt like I was working and fighting to get better. IâÂÂve wanted to have the ability to keep myself clean for a very long time now and I finally have it. Because I went to AFR and did the SMART program there.
04/04/2019
8 months ago, my son went to A Forever Recovery because he was addicted to heroin. ItâÂÂs the first rehab heâÂÂs been to and itâÂÂs been the only one heâÂÂs needed. IâÂÂm so glad I found AFR because IâÂÂve heard so many stories of addicts who have had to go to 10, 15, 20 rehabs or more before they find one that works for them. Because I found AFR, which is a rehab that works for my son, he wonâÂÂt ever have to do that.
He started using heroin 3 years ago. He had started seeing this girl who was using. When they first got together she wasnâÂÂt using all the time, so he had no idea she was using until theyâÂÂd been together for about a month. She got him started on it, though he could have been smarter and just walked away.
As he started using heroin more and more he changed. He became sullen, petulant and resentful. Then there were the times where he was mean, very mean. He and I got in an argument when he was still living with me. I had found out that he was using heroin and that his girlfriend had given it to him. I wanted him to leave her and go get help. He refused and moved out of my house and in with her. It was a year before I saw him again. Then, when I did see him it was only because he wanted money and thought IâÂÂd give it to him.
8 months ago, he had a scare and agreed to get help. His girlfriend had almost died from an overdose and he called me. When that happened he finally realized that using heroin could get him killed, no matter how careful he was. When he agreed to go to rehab I sent him to A Forever Recovery.
I had found AFR 4 months earlier and had been speaking with the intake counselor there fairly regularly. Which I want to say something about. When I called AFR the first time I had no way of knowing if my son would ever get help. He and I werenâÂÂt even talking at the time and I told all this to the intake counselor. He still answered all my questions about the facility and then spoke to me almost weekly after that. He would ask how I was, how I was dealing with everything and he gave me great advice on dealing with my son and his addiction. Then, when I called to tell him my son had agreed to go to treatment, he got him into AFR so fast my son had no chance to balk and change his mind.
Even though my son had agreed to go to rehab, he wasnâÂÂt 100% committed to getting sober. So, mid detox he decided heâÂÂd gotten enough help and that he wanted to leave. I had just gotten him there so when he called I refused to help him get home. Still, he could have left if heâÂÂd been determined enough and if the staff at AFR hadnâÂÂt been so great with him. What made the biggest difference was the fact that the people talking to him about completing his program were staff member who had been addicts themselves. Because theyâÂÂd gone through the same thing as him he had an easier time listening to them. 3 other times during his program heâÂÂd tried to leave and each time they got him to stay.
Since my son completed his program heâÂÂs been doing so much better. He isnâÂÂt with that girl anymore and is starting to get back in touch with the friends he had before he started using. He and I both know that he has a lot of work still to do for him to stay sober. IâÂÂm confident though that he will continue to do that work.
04/04/2019
Provided by YP.comMy son went to A Forever Recovery 8 months ago. It’s the only program he’s been to because he hasn’t used since going there. He started using heroin 3 years ago but, before that he was a great kid. He was nice, social, had good friends and had a job he really liked. He wanted to go to college and get a degree in something but, hadn’t decided what yet.
When he was 19 he started dating this girl. I didn’t like her at all but, you can’t really tell your kid that you don’t like their girlfriend. Not at his age at least. I don’t think she was using all the time when they first started dating. She’s the one who first gave him heroin though and they started using more together. I wish she hadn’t given him any but, I also wish my son had been smarter and not taken it.
When he got to the point where he was using every day he changed so completely. He became sullen and mean. We got in an argument because I had learned that he’d been using heroin and that she was the one who gave it to him. I tried to talk to him about leaving her and getting treatment. He instead, moved out of the house and in with her. No matter how many times I called him he just refused to see me. It was a year before he agreed to see me, which I was overjoyed for. Unfortunately, he just wanted money.
8 months ago, he had a scare. His girlfriend had overdosed and almost died. He agreed that he needed help but, even I could tell it wasn’t so much about getting sober as it was about not dying.
I had found A Forever Recovery 4 months before that and had been speaking with an intake counselor almost weekly for those 4 months. Which I’d like to say something about. The intake counselor I spoke with during that time knew that there wasn’t any sort of guarantee that my son would ever go there. Every time I called him though, he answered and spoke with me. He gave me great advice on dealing with my son and as soon as my son agreed to go to AFR he helped get him there very quickly.
Because my son wasn’t fully committed to getting sober, he tried to leave while he was in detox. He could have left without my help if he’d been determined enough, the counselors at AFR talked to him and managed to convince him to stay. 3 times during his program he wanted to leave and each time they talked to him and got him to stay to complete his program.
One reason my son was able to be convinced to finish his program there was that the staff working to convince him to stay were those who had dealt with their own addiction. Because they understand so completely what addiction is like, they were able to help my son through his treatment.
Since getting home he’s been doing great. He’s living with me again. He stopped seeing that girl and started seeing his friends from before he started using. I’m so glad my son went to AFR. I’ve heard of people who have gone to 20 rehabs and are still using. I’m just glad my son won’t be one of them. I’ve given the information about AFR to his ex-girlfriends parents and I pray that she goes there and gets the help she needs as well.
03/07/2019
My daughter went to A Forever Recovery 14 months ago. When she completed her program and left she did well for 6 months. When she relapsed 8 months ago we sent her back to AFR. I obviously had hoped and prayed that she wouldnâÂÂt need rehab a second time and when she did well for so long I started to believe that she wouldnâÂÂt. She did end up needing help again though and we chose to send her back to AFR because of how well she did there and how much they helped her the first time.
When my daughter first told her dad and I that she needed help and why we were both stunned. She went to AFR because of an addiction to methamphetamine and she started using when she went off to college. I guess she was having some trouble keeping up with everything and one of her roommates gave her some Adderall to help her catch up with her studies. From what she told me, after that it was easy for her to find more when she wanted it and that led her to getting hooked on meth.
Before she asked us for help I didnâÂÂt know anything about addiction. I had watched a couple shows about interventions or a documentary here and there about someoneâÂÂs addiction but those shows are for drama and didnâÂÂt help me when it came to helping my daughter.
We found A Forever Recovery through a referral service. ThereâÂÂs so many programs out there, so many different places and I was lost. When we called the referral service and told the guy what we were having problems with he suggested AFR because they have different programs there. It took the guess work out for us. We didnâÂÂt have to figure out what kind of program would work for our daughter. It worked out well too. When she finished detox her counselor helped her get on the right program for her.
Going through her program made her a stronger, smarter person. She was happy again and pleasant to be around. She did great when she got home at first. She was working and looking into different colleges to finish her degree. I really thought everything regarding her addiction was over and done with. Maybe it was naïve of me but I didnâÂÂt think sheâÂÂd go back to doing something that hurt her.
Instead, she was having some trouble with something or other and stopped working on staying sober. She went out, found some meth and relapsed. She started using again and she needed to go back to rehab. We didnâÂÂt even look at other rehabs, we just called AFR, made sure they had a spot for her and packed her up.
SheâÂÂs home again and doing even better this time, I think. More than anything sheâÂÂs more vigilant in making sure she is doing what she needs to do to stay sober. Her aftercare work isnâÂÂt something that she gets annoyed with or puts off. She speaks to her aftercare specialist a lot more and doesnâÂÂt ignore his calls. ItâÂÂs been helping her a lot. Having someone that she respects and trusts to talk to.
I hope she doesnâÂÂt need to go back to rehab but weâÂÂd send her to A Forever Recovery again if she did. They take such good care of the clients there and our daughter learned so much there that I wouldnâÂÂt trust anyone else to get her back on track.
02/14/2019
I went to A Forever Recovery because I became dependent on my prescription medication. My dependency started slowly really. For over a year I took my prescription exactly as I was supposed to. I never took it more than I needed and always followed the instructions on the bottle exactly. IâÂÂve had headaches most of my life and for most of my life IâÂÂve dealt with them as best as I could. Until 5 years ago I had never taken anything stronger than an Advil for them. Then, my sister gave me a Vicodin and it helped. It helped so much more than I thought it would. For the first time in what felt like forever I took something and then felt better and could function again. After that I went to my doctor and got a prescription for myself. Like I said before, for over a year I didnâÂÂt abuse my prescription, I wasnâÂÂt dependent on them to feel okay. I took them when I needed but never more than I needed. Then about 4 years ago I had a week that was filled with headaches. It was every day and I dealt with it the only way I knew how by then. I took my prescription and I ended up taking more and more. I realized after I got to AFR that I was probably making the headache worse and last longer by taking the Vicodin but all I knew then was that I wanted the pain to end any way I could get it to. After that week I became more dependent on my prescription and ended up getting a stronger one from my doctor. I hid it all from my husband. I might have become dependent by then but I had a system and it worked for a while too. I didnâÂÂt miss work, always made dinner and cleaned the house. Nothing changed all that much so my husband didnâÂÂt realize that I wasnâÂÂt exactly the same. Eventually though he noticed I wasnâÂÂt exactly right and really realized something was wrong when my sisterâÂÂs husband sent her to rehab and my husband realized heâÂÂd seen some of the same things with both of us. He asked me about it and it worked out for me because I had been trying to get my courage up to talk to him about it. Together we decided that I needed rehab but he didn't want me going to the same place as my sister and I agreed with that. It wouldn't have been good for me. So we started looking for places and when we found A Forever Recovery we decided to send me there. The facility is in Michigan and we live in Arkansas so it wasnâÂÂt exactly around the corner from us but it seemed like the place was right for me so thatâÂÂs where I went. It really was perfect for me too. The staff were great. TheyâÂÂre really nice and understanding and yet they were relentless about making sure I understood and apply each part of my program before moving on to the next step. They helped me find different, better ways to deal with my headaches as well so that I didnâÂÂt go right back to using something during the first headache I had at home. I wanted my husband informed about my progress through my program and they were great about that. It helped us a lot when I got home too. He understood me better and our marriage hasnâÂÂt ever been better than it is right now. IâÂÂm so grateful for the help I received at A Forever Recovery and for the support IâÂÂve continued to receive since IâÂÂve been home. My life and my marriage is great again and they helped me make that happen.
02/07/2019
Provided by YP.comI started using prescription drugs 5 years ago. My sister had already become addiction to them which was something I didn’t know at the time. I’ve had bad headaches most of my life and I was with her one day when I had one. She offered a Vicodin and I took it. I didn’t think much of it when I took it even though I’d never taken anything stronger than an Advil for a headache. It helped, more than I thought it would and so I went to my doctor and got a prescription for it. When I first got my prescription they really helped me. I took it exactly like I was supposed to too. I didn’t take any more than I needed and only when I needed it. About 4 years ago, I had a week of headaches. It was awful and I thought it would never end. I ended up using my Vicodin very quickly and after that I started using more and more. Eventually I was dependent on them and wouldn’t feel good if I didn’t take something. I hid it from my husband for a couple years. I was still going to work every day, still cooking and cleaning. That did eventually change but not until the very end. I was trying to get up the courage to talk to him about it when my sister’s husband told him that he was sending my sister to rehab and that he thought I might be using as well. My husband asked me and I needed him too. I was able to talk to him after that and told him everything that had been going on. We decided that I needed rehab as well but neither of us thought sending me to the same place as my sister was a good idea. We found A Forever Recovery and quickly settled on sending me there. We live in Arkansas so it’s not exactly close to us but we both felt like it was the best place for me. It really is an amazing facility. The staff there are kind and understanding and yet they were relentless about making sure each step of the program I did was done exactly right and that I understood it and could apply it before they allowed me to move on to the next step. A Forever Recovery is the only rehab I’ve been to and before going there I didn’t know much about rehab or addiction. I didn’t know that there were so many programs out there and going to A Forever Recovery helped me deal with that. They have different programs there and when I got there they helped me choose the program that would be right for me. They also helped me find better ways to deal with my headaches so I wouldn’t go back to using a prescription the first time I had a headache at home. They kept my husband informed about what I was doing and were great to help him understand what I was dealing with, the best way to help me and the best way to ensure I don’t fall back to old habits. Since getting home I’ve stayed sober and my husband and I are doing better than ever. I’m so grateful for the help I received at A Forever Recovery and for the support I continue to receive. I really understood exactly how much the program helped me when my sister relapsed and I knew exactly how to handle myself without using. I can see in my sister where I’d be if I hadn’t gone to AFR so I’m doubly glad I went there.
12/13/2018
I was stunned when my parents told me they were sending me to A Forever Recovery. I wasnâÂÂt actually addicted to anything so why would I need to go to rehab? It wasnâÂÂt that I thought I could handle my problem by myself or anything. I didnâÂÂt even consider that I had a problem at all. Before going to AFR I had used meth once or twice a week maximum for a couple months. That was it. Sometimes it was over a weekend, sometimes it was during the week but never more that once or twice a week. My parents found some meth in a bag of mine though and that was it. If I wanted to keep living with them, if I wanted helped with college, I was headed to rehab. It was a little embarrassing going to rehab with no actual drug habit. IâÂÂd get asked what my drug of choice was and I didnâÂÂt actually have one. IâÂÂd get asked how long IâÂÂd been using or how bad my habit was and I hadnâÂÂt been using very long and didnâÂÂt really have a habit. So yeah, when youâÂÂre in rehab with people who have been using for 15 years, itâÂÂs a bit embarrassing. I had to spend a day in detox. Not because I was detoxing, I hadnâÂÂt used anything in over a week but, everyone has to spend at least 24 hours in detox to make sure you arenâÂÂt going to have some latent kick or anything. So, embarrassing and while IâÂÂm glad I went now, when I first got there I was furious at my parents for sending me at all. With how much I was using I thought if my parents found out IâÂÂd get grounded or theyâÂÂd take me to a few NA meetings for some sort of scared straight thing. I got over it though and once I did, the program really did help me. No matter what I thought of my own drug use I had developed some pretty crappy habits and thatâÂÂs what I got help me. The program I did could be applied to any sort of addictive behavior and that helped too. AFR isnâÂÂt a bad place. ItâÂÂs actually really nice and much better than I had pictured rehab to be like. I was only there for a month. Some of the other clients had been for much longer but the way it works there is that youâÂÂre there for as long or as short as you need and I only needed a month. ThereâÂÂs some really decent people working at AFR too. They understood my history and didnâÂÂt try to get me to admit I was a drug addict or convince me that the problem was much bigger than it was. They helped me figure out why I had even started using and helped me deal with that issue so I didnâÂÂt end up with a much worse habit. Now that IâÂÂve finished my program IâÂÂm glad my parents were so set on making me go. I might not have had some horrible drug habit but, I did have things in my life that I needed help with and I got that help at AFR. I got my life sorted and back to normal before I ended up with a problem that was much bigger and harder to deal with.
10/25/2018
A Forever Recovery is a great place to go if you need help getting off drugs or alcohol. The facility has such a great setup. AFR doesnâÂÂt feel like a rehab. ItâÂÂs not all sterile and white. ItâÂÂs actually a really comfortable place to be. The property the facilityâÂÂs on is really pretty. ItâÂÂs in a secluded location with tons of space. ItâÂÂs a place where you can really settle your mind and start to sort through your issues. You really do feel comfortable there, which I think is really important. Especially in the beginning when you first get there and are going through detox. The program at AFR is great. First, going through detox they work with you to make sure that youâÂÂre doing a detox that youâÂÂre comfortable with. Each person does a detox thatâÂÂs tailored to them and what they need. There isnâÂÂt a blanket way to handle either detox or addiction and they understand that at AFR. Going through detox they make sure you do so with as little discomfort as possible. Once you finish detox and are ready to start your program, you have multiple programs available to choose from. They understand there that what works for one person isnâÂÂt always going to work for someone else. So, each person that goes through AFR does a program that has the best chance of helping them. ItâÂÂs an incredibly smart way to deal with addiction and recovery. So many people who need help with addiction arenâÂÂt able to just go to one program and never use again. Most of us have to go to multiple places. With so many people who have gone to rehab before and done one program or another, not having to do that same program over again just in a new place, but instead, having choices on what program to do, itâÂÂs a really big deal. You get to do a program that works for you. ThereâÂÂs a lot more to AFR than just rehab and the additional things they offer make it such a great place. Not additional program stuff but thing like having a great gym to work out in. Good and healthy food to eat. Music and art therapy classes. Yoga classes and all the other stuff they offer. So many people come to rehab malnourished and having good, healthy food and a good gym to work out in helps. Having yoga classes for people who donâÂÂt like working out in a gym is also great. ItâÂÂs so much easier to stay sober when youâÂÂre feeling good and are healthy and the gym, food and yoga help with that. The music and art therapy classes are great. You get to be creative in both of these classes and theyâÂÂll help you work through something that bothering you without really having to talk about it. Really, just having that creative outlet helps. People going through their program at AFR will pick up an old hobby or start a new one. There will be someone who starts playing the guitar again, or whatever it is they played. ThereâÂÂll be someone who starts drawing again. Or there will be someone who starts knitting again and then teaches others how to knit as well. The best thing about AFR though is the staff there. They are amazing. ThereâÂÂs a good amount of them who have struggled with addiction themselves. Which helps more than youâÂÂd think. ItâÂÂs easier helping someone when you know personally what they are going through. ItâÂÂs also a whole lot easier accepting that help from someone who truly understands what youâÂÂre dealing with. The program and the staff, those two things together make A Forever Recovery such a wonderful place to go when you need help or when someone you loves needs help dealing with addiction.
09/06/2018
IâÂÂm really happy with the way A Forever Recovery was able to help my son. He was addicted to crack cocaine and heroin and had been for a long time. WeâÂÂve tried for so many years to help him but heâÂÂs always either refused to go to treatment or if he did agree to go he wouldnâÂÂt do anything to help himself while he was there. Just bided his time until he could go home. What finally convinced him to get some real help was watching his best friend overdose in front of him. It really scared him, as it should have. He finally agreed to get help and to really try this time. I found A Forever Recovery and right away I felt that it would be a good place for him. I liked that he wouldnâÂÂt be given more drugs there. That when he got home he wouldnâÂÂt be off heroin and crack but on some psychiatric medication instead. He would be completely clean and just have to do the work to stay that way. The staff at AFR are great. A lot of them have worked through their own problems with addictions and that gave them a great insight into what my son needed during his program. They were great as their job. Very professional but also extremely kind and understanding. They also helped me a lot in understanding my son and working with him to deal with the problems we had. For years IâÂÂve watched my son screw up his life and for years I wasnâÂÂt able to do anything to help him, not really. It led to some pretty bad arguments between us. I didnâÂÂt understand why he didnâÂÂt want to just get help to get clean. The staff at AFR helped me understand more about my son and what he was going through, what addiction was like and why he wouldnâÂÂt want to get help. They also kept me updated on his progress throughout his program and how he was doing during each step. They needed his permission of course to talk to me about all of it because heâÂÂs over 18 but with that they were awesome about calling me with updates and talking me through how I could help him. I also liked that thereâÂÂs no time limit for each personâÂÂs program. ItâÂÂs all evidence based. Which meant that if the staff didnâÂÂt feel he was ready to move on to the next step of his program, he didnâÂÂt. I took a lot of comfort in that. Especially with the staff who had dealt with addictions themselves. Because I knew that they would see more signs of whether he was ready to move on or not then someone who didnâÂÂt have that first-hand experience. The program my son did was something else as well. They have multiple programs at AFR. Whenever he agreed to go to rehab in the past, I always sent him to a 12-step programs. I just didnâÂÂt know any different. At AFR they have different programs and each one is tailored to the individualâÂÂs needs. So, for the first time, my son got the exact right kind of help he needed, it took as long as it needed to take as he worked with people who really cared about him and his sobriety. ItâÂÂs not just a job to the staff at AFR and it shows in everything they do. My sonâÂÂs back home now since completing his program and heâÂÂs doing great. HeâÂÂs a much happier, bright person. HeâÂÂs working closely with his aftercare specialist and that seems to be helping a lot. IâÂÂm so glad my son went to AFR. ItâÂÂs been amazing watching the personâÂÂs he becoming. Which is a happy, smart and sweet guy. Going to AFR saved his life and I would recommend the program for anyone looking to get help or looking to help a loved one.
08/09/2018
Going to A Forever Recovery saved my life. It wasnâÂÂt that going there just helped me get off drugs, though it definitely did that. Going to AFR helped me create a life that I truly wanted to be a part of. While at AFR I dealt with my addiction in ways that I hadnâÂÂt before. They really understand addiction there. They know that what works for one person isnâÂÂt necessarily going to work for someone else. So, to help with that they have different programs available there. When I finished detox and was getting ready to start my program I met with my counselor who went over the different programs there and helped me figure out which of them was the right one for me. That made a big difference for me. For the first time since I started using and trying to get clean I wasnâÂÂt passively working on my recovery. I made a decision about my own recovery and that made me much more inclined to work harder on it. I put in so much more effort because of it. One of the great things about AFR is that itâÂÂs not only about addiction there. They understand that being sober is only part of the recovery process. They had classes and workshops available where I could learn basic life skills that I never acquired because I was using. Throughout my program I learned a lot more about my triggers and different coping skills so that I didnâÂÂt end up in a situation out of my control. I also learned basic things like how to communicate better, how to write a resume and have a job interview where I knew what to do and didnâÂÂt sound like an idiot. The basics of having a balanced diet and how eating right would improve my mood. Those things are incredibly basic skills that everyone should have yet I didnâÂÂt. Another thing that happened during my program at AFR was that I became a happier person. More willing to be part of the group and help those around me. I was never depressed in a clinical sense but going through rehabs and relapses is in itself depressing. That depression didnâÂÂt go away when I was in the other rehabs so I was surprised when I realized how happy I was. How much I looked forward to each day and what IâÂÂd learn. When I graduated from AFR I felt ready to go home. I knew what I needed to do, what I needed to stay away from and how to do that. When I got home I knew I couldnâÂÂt be idle for long so I started looking for work right away. I found a job and now I love what IâÂÂm doing. IâÂÂm smart enough to understand what I can and canâÂÂt handle right now and having a full paycheck at my disposal is a bad idea right now. So, my parents have been helping me with that. Things are going really well in my life and IâÂÂm happier than IâÂÂve been in forever. IâÂÂm a more active participant in my familyâÂÂs lives now and itâÂÂs been great. IâÂÂve had some huge changes in my life and itâÂÂs because I went to A Forever Recovery.
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