
What Long-Term Alumni Learn After an Anxiety Therapy Program
You graduated the program. Maybe you were all-in. Maybe you just wanted the panic attacks to stop. Either way, you did the thing. And for a while? It worked. Life
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You graduated the program. Maybe you were all-in. Maybe you just wanted the panic attacks to stop. Either way, you did the thing. And for a while? It worked. Life

If you’re here, it probably means your child is struggling—and not in a way that can be shrugged off as just “having a rough patch.” Maybe it started subtly: a

You wouldn’t believe how many times I’ve heard this: “I’m afraid sobriety will make me boring.” “I write better after a few drinks.” “Without alcohol, I’m not sure I’ll be

You sit in the intake office and hear the words out loud for the first time: alcohol use disorder. The room doesn’t spin, but something in you does. You nod.

Walking into a drug treatment program for the first time feels a little like transferring schools mid-semester. Everyone seems to know the rules but you. There are inside jokes, routines,

Sometimes, the hardest part isn’t starting treatment. It’s coming back after you’ve stopped. Maybe you dropped out of IOP a few weeks ago. Maybe it’s been longer. Maybe you’re not

You’ve seen your child work so hard. Therapy. Medication. Maybe even treatment. And for a while, they seemed okay. They were coming to family dinners. They looked you in the

You’ve pulled back on drinking—not because you hit a wall, but because something deeper was stirring. A question. A curiosity. “What would life feel like with fewer numbing agents and

They come to us successful, articulate, and burned out in a way that no one else sees. They’re still showing up at work. Still posting photos of family dinners. Still

The first time I sat in an alcohol treatment program, I felt like an imposter. Everyone around me seemed either all-in on recovery or in a fog of denial. I