How Addicts Survived COVID

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – CHEERLEADERS FOR SOBRIETY – 

May 6, 2021 – Max Hyde- 2 days agoAs an opioid addict of 10 years, I survived Covid by finally getting clean. Got some Kratom from a local head shop, used that lightly instead of taking opiates, and eventually weened myself off of the Kratom. I’ve been an addict since I was a child so if I can do it, you can too… 

Adrian G

2 days ago I almost became an alcoholic during covid. No job, very little drive and confidence. I hope to return to a fully functioning and hopeful human being soon. Let’s get through this yall.. 

S K 2 days ago If you’re an addict or suffering through problems, don’t be ashamed. EVERYBODY stumbles and falls. What makes you a winner is being able to get back up and keep at it step by step. I don’t look down on these folks, but applaud them for not giving up. You can do this! …

4NPUSHA ;P 2 days ago I’m a recovering addict. 3 years now and sometimes I still struggle at low points but find it in myself to fight for my beautiful life I’ve created. I hope you all find something inside yourselves to fight for , whether it’s for yourselves or for those watching you decay.. wish you all strength and hope.

more@YouTube

The post How Addicts Survived COVID appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

Rapper, producer create music on addiction, recovery

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

MUSICAL EXPRESSION – 

May 7, 2021 – Lerner enrolled in the Frost School of Music  at the University of Miami to study hip-hop. But college brought its own pressure, and Lerner began to self-medicate, turning to alcohol and marijuana. After a wisdom tooth extraction, he developed an addiction to oxycodone, and then to cocaine and heroin.

At the same time, Joshua Sherman, a physician based in Vermont, was working with addicts and speaking out about the opioid addiction problem. In October 2018, Sherman, who also owned Old Mill Road, a Vermont-based media company, was building a recording studio in Arlington. A month later, he was invited to speak at a panel hosted by Fed Up Vermont, an organization raising awareness about opioid addiction in Vermont.

“One elderly person stood up and said, ‘I’m 80 something years old, I’ve got three damaged grandkids that I’m now raising. I don’t have the health for it, and I don’t have the money for it, and what am I supposed to do?’” said Sherman.

more@TimesUnion

The post Rapper, producer create music on addiction, recovery appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

Church-Going Couple Accused of Operating Drug Lab

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – WHAT WAS THEIR FAVORITE TV SHOW? – 

May 6, 2021 – Craig Johnson, chief deputy sheriff at the Wise County Sheriff’s Office, told Newsweek in a Thursday email that the investigation is “on-going” and that authorities couldn’t provide further information at this time. “As far as the Melton’s church attendance I’m not certain which church they attended. There are two churches [within] walking distance of their home, and several more only a very short drive away,” Johnson added.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last month that drug overdose deaths have surged during the coronavirus pandemic. Preliminary data from the CDC showed that more than 87,000 Americans died of a drug overdose in the 12-month period that ended in September. That marked the highest number of drug overdose deaths since the 1990s.

DMT and methamphetamine are federally listed as Schedule 1 drugs, which means the government has determined that they have no currently accepted medical use and also have a high potential for abuse.

more@WFAA

The post Church-Going Couple Accused of Operating Drug Lab appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

What is Imposter Syndrome?

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

FAKE IT ’TIL YOU MAKE IT – 

May 05, 2021 -When I tell people I have an anxiety disorder and ADHD, I still often wonder if they believe me. While society as a whole has taken some important first steps toward destigmatizing mental health disorders, a greater willingness to speak openly about neurodivergence has also opened the door for critics who speculate that these disorders are over-diagnosed or that some people are self-diagnosing as a way to pathologize normal feelings of insecurity, angst, or lack of focus. And some have been accused of falsely claiming anxiety or some other mood or behavioral disorder as an identity or for attention, minimizing the reality of the condition felt by those who really have it.  When you’ve been successful in your career, for example, you may question whether your ADHD diagnosis is legit, “because other people discount it or they don’t see it,” IngerShaye Colzie, MSW, LCSW, a coach and counselor focused on ADHD, says. “They don’t know all the stuff you’re doing behind the scenes in your head, running around or working twice as hard.”

She continues, “There’s so much misinformation about ADHD that most of the time people don’t know what it is. And so even if they get diagnosed, sometimes you question it because you are able to do things some of the time.” So one day you may be able to function perfectly and the next you can’t get out of bed, which, Colzie says, can make you feel off-kilter.   When you’ve been successful in your career, for example, you may question whether your ADHD diagnosis is legit, “because other people discount it or they don’t see it,” IngerShaye Colzie, MSW, LCSW, a coach and counselor focused on ADHD, says. “They don’t know all the stuff you’re doing behind the scenes in your head, running around or working twice as hard.”

“have i been diagnosed with anxiety for 9 years? yes. do i still think i’m faking it? yes.”

She continues, “There’s so much misinformation about ADHD that most of the time people don’t know what it is. And so even if they get diagnosed, sometimes you question it because you are able to do things some of the time.” So one day you may be able to function perfectly and the next you can’t get out of bed, which, Colzie says, can make you feel off-kilter. 

more@InStyle

The post What is Imposter Syndrome? appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

The Sacklers Launched OxyContin. Everyone Knows It!

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

GREED KILLS, GREED KILLED – 

May 6, 2021 – Before Richard Sackler—father of David Sackler, who’s married to Joss—became president of Purdue Pharma, he played a central role in the company’s launch of OxyContin in 1995. In 2019, New York attorney general Letitia James described the drug as the “taproot” of the health crisis. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 500,000 people have died from an overdose involving an opioid between 1999 and 2019. For years prior, beginning with Richard’s father, Raymond, and uncles Arthur and Mortimer, the Sacklers occupied a simultaneously prominent and mysterious position: their name had been plastered across museums and universities, but the nature of the fortune that paid for those placements remained far more private.  The Sacklers’ desire for public obscurity pulses through Empire of Pain.Keefe writes about how Richard’s brother, Jonathan Sackler, as an owner of Purdue, sought to keep the Sackler name out of reports about the opioid epidemic. Into his old age, Raymond asked about how to make the Times“less focused on OxyContin.” Jonathan’s daughter, the Emmy-winning filmmaker Madeleine Sackler, is known to brush off questions about the original source of her money, Keefe writes. Arthur, whose pioneering workin medical advertising set the table for Purdue’s later success, once said that privacy allowed him to “do things the way I want to do them.” But some opportunities became too tantalizing for him to remain out of view. In 1978, New York City mayor Ed Koch, a friend of his, toasted the opening of the Met’s new Sackler Wing.

more@VanityFair

The post The Sacklers Launched OxyContin. Everyone Knows It! appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

They used drugs as children then turned their lives around. Here’s how!

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

SOBRIETY IS A GIRL’S BEST FRIEND – 

May 2, 2021-  But when she was 26 years old, a phone call with her father made her realize the “living hell” she had put her family through. That’s when she decided to reach out for help. 

Liller’s story is one in a widespread opioid crisis that has gripped the US since the late 1990s. Since 1999 the number of drug overdose deaths has quadrupled, with nearly 500,000 people dying from an overdose involving an opioid between 1999 and 2019, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

An estimated 1.6 million people in the US ages 12 and older have an opioid use disorder, according to a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration survey on drug use and health from 2019, the most recent year for which data is available. 

An estimated 10.1 million people misused prescription opioids, 745,000 people have used heroin, and 70,630 people died of a drug overdose in 2019, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. 

Methadone, oxycodone and hydrocodone are the most common drugs involved in prescription opioid overdose deaths, according to the CDC. “Anyone who takes prescription opioids can become addicted to them. In fact, as many as one in four patients receiving long-term opioid therapy in a primary care setting struggle with opioid addiction,” the CDC reported. 

CNN spoke to several adults who started using drugs as children but managed to turn their lives around. Here are some of their stories.

more@CNN

The post They used drugs as children then turned their lives around. Here’s how! appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

Out of the Closet

By Lisa F.

When I first came to AA in 2008, I was much too sick and scared to mind the God idea. Looking back, the AA in my small central California city was quite progressive: there weren’t many God references in the meetings or in people’s shares, and the meetings usually ended with the Serenity Prayer, not the Our Father.

When I finally got serious about getting sober in 2009, I fully expected to develop a “God-consciousness” as THE result of working the Steps, as this was promised to me repeatedly in the meetings. I wasn’t anti-God. I got a sponsor and “worked” the Steps with her, although I mainly answered with what I thought I was supposed to say. This approach seemed to work OK, but I definitely remember feeling disappointed when nothing changed on the God front: no white light or overwhelming sense of the presence of God. Deep down, I was worried I was doing something wrong, but I shrugged and kept going.

At two years sober, my husband’s job transfer moved us from Central California to Sugar Land, Texas. I jumped in to the local AA, but I immediately noticed a difference: everyone around me was a proclaimed Christian, and they talked about God – a LOT about God – in their shares. Most went to the same suburban mega-church. I immediately felt “off,” although I was warmly welcomed into the local fellowship. I couldn’t seem to work up the nerve to say to anyone that the God thing had never worked for me.

Instead, I jumped into a new career (which I loved), and I started an advanced degree. My life got super-busy (kids in high school), and my meeting count dropped to one meeting every week or two. The insanity to drink returned, and I relapsed in 2012.

What followed: several painful years of “slipping,” in and out of AA. I could only get sober and stay sober for anywhere from three to eight months. Each time I went to the same large Houston treatment facility. I was quite compliant, but I repeated my bad habit of telling people what I thought they wanted to hear. Instead of saying what I was really feeling, I would only share what I THOUGHT I should say. I freely acknowledged that AA worked great (for Christians), but I suspected, deep down, that it wasn’t meant for me. I remember trying with all my might to get on the “God bus,” but it never worked.

At the third rehab stint, in 2015, I was utterly broken – lost marriage, lost custody, lost career. However, I was FINALLY willing to ‘fess up about the God issue. I could barely bring myself to say the word “atheist.” In fact, I had a harder time describing myself as an “atheist” than I did as an “alcoholic” or “addict.”

My roommate in the Detox unit was a very sweet, older Christian lady. I could see that her faith meant a lot to her. She read her Bible every morning, and she talked to God throughout the day. It seemed to me that she would be a natural for AA-style recovery. I mentioned this to the Detox counselor.  He looked at me and shook his head.  He said, “She’s right where you are, too – in a rehab DETOX UNIT. We get devout believers in here all the time. I don’t think it’s a matter of faith.” (He knew I was an atheist.) He said something I’ve never forgotten: “Maybe it doesn’t matter what you believe. Maybe it only matters what you DO.”

Sitting in the main meeting room, I felt something change, in the pit of my stomach. I thought, “I’ve GOT to make this work.”  I asked my counselor, “Is there anyone here on staff, or in the Alumni group, who I could talk to about being a non-believer in recovery?” In a treatment center with hundreds of patients, with thousands of patient Alumni, she couldn’t think of anyone – at all – that identified as an atheist or agnostic. The stigma is that strong. Thankfully, I picked up a book in the Treatment Center’s little bookstore called Waiting: A Non-Believer’s Higher Power by Marya Hornbacher. I cannot overstate how finding that book transformed my recovery and gave me hope for the first time. It was an absolute revelation, and I was nearly weeping in relief upon reading the author’s experience.

Because I am a non-believer, they asked at the rehab if I would like a counselling session with the Spirituality Program Administrator, a Christian minister. He was a kind and helpful man, and he told me, “Atheists and agnostics have been part of A.A. from the very beginning. They helped to get it off the ground. They found an authentic recovery, and it worked for them. I think authenticity is at the heart of how we recover. I myself have had to seek out local meetings that are more inclusive and open, because a lot of them are NOT – but you can find them if you look.” He also mentioned that there were “secular” Houston AA meetings as well as information about organizations such as SOS, LifeRing, Refuge Recovery, and some others that I can’t remember anymore. I will always appreciate his kindness.

Although my voice still shook and cracked with nerves when I spoke, I finally started sharing at meetings about being an atheist. Of course, there were some condescending follow-up shares and comments, but I found that I could let those pass. I knew that other people, like me, were making this stuff work.  When we had computer lab at the rehab, I Googled phrases like “Atheist agnostics in AA” and “Atheist recovery.” I found several helpful websites (aaagnostica.org was the first) and Facebook groups. Finding these gave me even more hope. I made a vow (again, that deep feeling in the pit of my stomach) that I was going to make this work.  I promised myself that I would be the secular voice that I didn’t hear when I was new and struggling.

This time, too, I paid attention to the WHOLE treatment plan, which included things like individual therapy, prescription medication, a three-month stint in a sober living house, and yoga/exercise – all in addition to 12-step activities. I decided that I was going to try it all, and then I would see what stuck. I also got involved in the Alumni Association at the rehab, which is a large and active organization.

Over time, I went back to grad school and finally finished that damned degree. I was able to repair my relationships with my (now young adult) kids, and I even repaired my marriage. I’ve also managed to achieve a good career, but I keep recovery the priority. Today, I think of recovery like the gas tank of a car: I must keep filling the tank with what I call “recovery stuff.” When I stop filling the tank, I will be vulnerable. As long as I remember to fill my tank, I’ll be OK.

After some time, I started getting requests to lead meetings and to serve as the “go-to” person whenever a patient or a newcomer was wrestling with the “God stuff.” When COVID hit, I started leading an hour-long information group with the patients at the rehab center. Part of my talk, which I always say very clearly, is this: “Belief in God is NOT a requirement to having a happy, healthy, full, and active recovery. If no one has told you this, yet, I am telling you now. It doesn’t matter what you believe. It only matters what you do.”

I know some secular recovery purists don’t care for the sponsorship idea, but I view it as just another beneficial recovery relationship. The rehab’s medical director told me, “Even if you take the 12 Steps and meetings as behavior modification combined with peer support, you will find them to be effective.” I’ve found the Steps to be somewhat helpful, of course with adapted wording. Doing Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth Steps provide a helpful foundation for continued growth and friendship. Many of my most meaningful recovery relationships have come from sponsorship. My sponsees are about 50/50 believers and non-believers.

Today, I go to at least one “secular” recovery meeting each week, as well as three or four in-person “traditional” 12-Step meetings. I remain active in the rehab’s Alumni association, making sure patients hear about my experience as a successfully sober atheist/agnostic. I’ve found that it is enough – it is more than enough – and I am very grateful. I know the 12-Step purists and the dogmatic theists will always be present, and they will always be “Loud and Proud” in the Rooms, but I finally feel comfortable being “Loud and Proud” right back about my secular recovery. My voice doesn’t shake and quake when I share about it, anymore.


Lisa F. was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and raised as a devout Catholic, going to parochial school and receiving Confirmation from the archbishop as a teen – although she was frequently in trouble for asking questions based on her personal reading. In college years, she majored in Ancient Greek and Roman history, as well as a good amount of philosophy and comparative religions. Lisa became an “in-the-closet” non-believer over this time, but it didn’t become an urgent issue until trying to get sober in 2012, in Houston, Texas. After several painful years, in and out of AA, she fully embraced her agnosticism in 2015 and has been sober ever since. She remains active in Houston-area recovery in both secular and traditional AA, and her mostly tolerant traditional AA home groups now steer new non-believers her way. Lisa shares a PDF – Secular Recovery Resources – at her local rehab’s Alumni association, where she also remains active, lending a helpful hand to those in early recovery.


For a PDF of this article, click here: Out of the Closet.


 

The post Out of the Closet first appeared on AA Agnostica.

Out of the Closet

By Lisa F.

When I first came to AA in 2008, I was much too sick and scared to mind the God idea. Looking back, the AA in my small central California city was quite progressive: there weren’t many God references in the meetings or in people’s shares, and the meetings usually ended with the Serenity Prayer, not the Our Father.

When I finally got serious about getting sober in 2009, I fully expected to develop a “God-consciousness” as THE result of working the Steps, as this was promised to me repeatedly in the meetings. I wasn’t anti-God. I got a sponsor and “worked” the Steps with her, although I mainly answered with what I thought I was supposed to say. This approach seemed to work OK, but I definitely remember feeling disappointed when nothing changed on the God front: no white light or overwhelming sense of the presence of God. Deep down, I was worried I was doing something wrong, but I shrugged and kept going.

At two years sober, my husband’s job transfer moved us from Central California to Sugar Land, Texas. I jumped in to the local AA, but I immediately noticed a difference: everyone around me was a proclaimed Christian, and they talked about God – a LOT about God – in their shares. Most went to the same suburban mega-church. I immediately felt “off,” although I was warmly welcomed into the local fellowship. I couldn’t seem to work up the nerve to say to anyone that the God thing had never worked for me.

Instead, I jumped into a new career (which I loved), and I started an advanced degree. My life got super-busy (kids in high school), and my meeting count dropped to one meeting every week or two. The insanity to drink returned, and I relapsed in 2012.

What followed: several painful years of “slipping,” in and out of AA. I could only get sober and stay sober for anywhere from three to eight months. Each time I went to the same large Houston treatment facility. I was quite compliant, but I repeated my bad habit of telling people what I thought they wanted to hear. Instead of saying what I was really feeling, I would only share what I THOUGHT I should say. I freely acknowledged that AA worked great (for Christians), but I suspected, deep down, that it wasn’t meant for me. I remember trying with all my might to get on the “God bus,” but it never worked.

At the third rehab stint, in 2015, I was utterly broken – lost marriage, lost custody, lost career. However, I was FINALLY willing to ‘fess up about the God issue. I could barely bring myself to say the word “atheist.” In fact, I had a harder time describing myself as an “atheist” than I did as an “alcoholic” or “addict.”

My roommate in the Detox unit was a very sweet, older Christian lady. I could see that her faith meant a lot to her. She read her Bible every morning, and she talked to God throughout the day. It seemed to me that she would be a natural for AA-style recovery. I mentioned this to the Detox counselor.  He looked at me and shook his head.  He said, “She’s right where you are, too – in a rehab DETOX UNIT. We get devout believers in here all the time. I don’t think it’s a matter of faith.” (He knew I was an atheist.) He said something I’ve never forgotten: “Maybe it doesn’t matter what you believe. Maybe it only matters what you DO.”

Sitting in the main meeting room, I felt something change, in the pit of my stomach. I thought, “I’ve GOT to make this work.”  I asked my counselor, “Is there anyone here on staff, or in the Alumni group, who I could talk to about being a non-believer in recovery?” In a treatment center with hundreds of patients, with thousands of patient Alumni, she couldn’t think of anyone – at all – that identified as an atheist or agnostic. The stigma is that strong. Thankfully, I picked up a book in the Treatment Center’s little bookstore called Waiting: A Non-Believer’s Higher Power by Marya Hornbacher. I cannot overstate how finding that book transformed my recovery and gave me hope for the first time. It was an absolute revelation, and I was nearly weeping in relief upon reading the author’s experience.

Because I am a non-believer, they asked at the rehab if I would like a counselling session with the Spirituality Program Administrator, a Christian minister. He was a kind and helpful man, and he told me, “Atheists and agnostics have been part of A.A. from the very beginning. They helped to get it off the ground. They found an authentic recovery, and it worked for them. I think authenticity is at the heart of how we recover. I myself have had to seek out local meetings that are more inclusive and open, because a lot of them are NOT – but you can find them if you look.” He also mentioned that there were “secular” Houston AA meetings as well as information about organizations such as SOS, LifeRing, Refuge Recovery, and some others that I can’t remember anymore. I will always appreciate his kindness.

Although my voice still shook and cracked with nerves when I spoke, I finally started sharing at meetings about being an atheist. Of course, there were some condescending follow-up shares and comments, but I found that I could let those pass. I knew that other people, like me, were making this stuff work.  When we had computer lab at the rehab, I Googled phrases like “Atheist agnostics in AA” and “Atheist recovery.” I found several helpful websites (aaagnostica.org was the first) and Facebook groups. Finding these gave me even more hope. I made a vow (again, that deep feeling in the pit of my stomach) that I was going to make this work.  I promised myself that I would be the secular voice that I didn’t hear when I was new and struggling.

This time, too, I paid attention to the WHOLE treatment plan, which included things like individual therapy, prescription medication, a three-month stint in a sober living house, and yoga/exercise – all in addition to 12-step activities. I decided that I was going to try it all, and then I would see what stuck. I also got involved in the Alumni Association at the rehab, which is a large and active organization.

Over time, I went back to grad school and finally finished that damned degree. I was able to repair my relationships with my (now young adult) kids, and I even repaired my marriage. I’ve also managed to achieve a good career, but I keep recovery the priority. Today, I think of recovery like the gas tank of a car: I must keep filling the tank with what I call “recovery stuff.” When I stop filling the tank, I will be vulnerable. As long as I remember to fill my tank, I’ll be OK.

After some time, I started getting requests to lead meetings and to serve as the “go-to” person whenever a patient or a newcomer was wrestling with the “God stuff.” When COVID hit, I started leading an hour-long information group with the patients at the rehab center. Part of my talk, which I always say very clearly, is this: “Belief in God is NOT a requirement to having a happy, healthy, full, and active recovery. If no one has told you this, yet, I am telling you now. It doesn’t matter what you believe. It only matters what you do.”

I know some secular recovery purists don’t care for the sponsorship idea, but I view it as just another beneficial recovery relationship. The rehab’s medical director told me, “Even if you take the 12 Steps and meetings as behavior modification combined with peer support, you will find them to be effective.” I’ve found the Steps to be somewhat helpful, of course with adapted wording. Doing Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth Steps provide a helpful foundation for continued growth and friendship. Many of my most meaningful recovery relationships have come from sponsorship. My sponsees are about 50/50 believers and non-believers.

Today, I go to at least one “secular” recovery meeting each week, as well as three or four in-person “traditional” 12-Step meetings. I remain active in the rehab’s Alumni association, making sure patients hear about my experience as a successfully sober atheist/agnostic. I’ve found that it is enough – it is more than enough – and I am very grateful. I know the 12-Step purists and the dogmatic theists will always be present, and they will always be “Loud and Proud” in the Rooms, but I finally feel comfortable being “Loud and Proud” right back about my secular recovery. My voice doesn’t shake and quake when I share about it, anymore.


Lisa F. was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and raised as a devout Catholic, going to parochial school and receiving Confirmation from the archbishop as a teen – although she was frequently in trouble for asking questions based on her personal reading. In college years, she majored in Ancient Greek and Roman history, as well as a good amount of philosophy and comparative religions. Lisa became an “in-the-closet” non-believer over this time, but it didn’t become an urgent issue until trying to get sober in 2012, in Houston, Texas. After several painful years, in and out of AA, she fully embraced her agnosticism in 2015 and has been sober ever since. She remains active in Houston-area recovery in both secular and traditional AA, and her mostly tolerant traditional AA home groups now steer new non-believers her way. Lisa shares a PDF – Secular Recovery Resources – at her local rehab’s Alumni association, where she also remains active, lending a helpful hand to those in early recovery.


For a PDF of this article, click here: Out of the Closet.


 

The post Out of the Closet first appeared on AA Agnostica.

Documentary: The Crime of the Century on HBO

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – MODERN DAY SOPRANOS – 

Watch on May 10 – Exploring the origins, extent, and fallout of one of the most devastating public health tragedies of our time, with half a million deaths from overdoses this century alone, the film reveals that America’s opioid epidemic is not a public health crisis that came out of nowhere.  

With the help of whistleblowers, newly leaked documents, exclusive interviews, sobering testimony from victims of opioid addiction, and access to behind-the-scenes investigations, Gibney’s exposé posits that drug companies are in fact largely responsible for manufacturing the very crisis they profit from, to the tune of billions of dollars — and thousands of lives.

The Crime of the Century is a Jigsaw Production in association with The Washington Post and Storied Media Group, written and directed by Alex Gibney; produced by Alex Gibney, Sarah Dowland, and Svetlana Zill; executive produced by Stacey Offman, Richard Perello, Todd Hoffman, and Aaron Fishman.

more@HBO

The post Documentary: The Crime of the Century on HBO appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.

A Groundbreaking Groundbreaking – Betty Ford Center’s $30 million expansion

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

by Ahbra Kaye

Yesterday, May 4th, the Addiction/Recovery eBulletin had the opportunity to be part of a groundbreaking, well, groundbreaking

The Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage begins construction of a $30 million addition that will add 66 beds and create a new Day Pavilion for IOP and family groups.  The construction will begin next week and is expected to take four years to complete.

The two-hour car drive from headquarters in Studio City to Rancho Mirage was especially poignant for AREB publisher/editor, Leonard Buschel an alumnus of Betty Ford. “The BFC campus provided me with an atmosphere where I could feel safe to change my life”, Leonard tearfully recollected.  “When I arrived there 26 years ago, I had not taken an unintoxicated breath in 26 years and suddenly freedom was at hand.”

Susan Ford Bales and Leonard Buschel

The event was an opportunity to rub shoulders with the people who are continuing the work that First Lady Betty Ford started.  Susan Ford Bales gave a stirring speech about watching her mother fade and deteriorate under the lash of alcoholism and drug addiction. With the help of an intervention by her family and 30 days at Long Beach Naval Hospital for treatment, Mrs. Ford returned with a renewed vigor and began the journey towards changing the face of addiction treatment forever.

Outgoing CEO and President Mark Mishek was all smiles as he sat behind the dirt and shovels on the dais, but it must have been bittersweet as he is retiring this year. He leaves behind a long and illustrious legacy, as he was instrumental in the merging of Hazelden and the Betty Ford Center in 2014. Dr. Joseph Lee (normie) who is taking over for Mr. Mishek, was on hand.  Dr. Lee has been medical director of Hazelden/Betty Ford’s youth services for the past 11 years and is well qualified for his new title.

Outgoing CEO and President, Mark Mishek, with Leonard Buschel and William Moyers
Dr. Joseph Lee, Ahbra Kaye and Leonard Buschel

Speeches, shoveling and confetti blasts were followed by a delicious lunch and a lot of schmoozing amongst people who hadn’t seen each other for over a year, except on Zoom.  “I am honored and excited to be present for this momentous occasion,” mused Ahbra Kaye, associate editor of the AREB, “especially because I can finally meet William Moyers in the flesh and out of his Zoom square”.  Jerry Moe, renowned child and family expert and director of children’s programs at BFC also made an appearance.

Ahbra Kaye and Jerry Moe

We owe a debt of gratitude to the graceful, sober woman named Betty Ford for helping to found one of the most well respected addiction treatment centers in the world and to those who continue her legacy.

The post A Groundbreaking Groundbreaking – Betty Ford Center’s $30 million expansion appeared first on Addiction/Recovery eBulletin.