If you’re looking to help yourself or someone you love struggling with drinking or drug abuse issues in East Haddam, CT, Alcohol.org houses massive Internet database of inpatient programs, as well as a host of other options. We can help you locate drug and alcohol treatment clinics for a variety of addictions. Search for a highly-rated rehab program in East Haddam now, and set out on the path to sobriety.
Alcohol.org is owned and operated by American Addiction Centers (AAC). AAC is a leading rehabilitation provider, offering all levels of care from detox to sober living, including 9 inpatient facilities nationwide.
I found High Watch Recovery Center to be a genuine place of refuge in what I now know was the darkest and most painful period of my life. Broken and emotionally numb I arrived to a warm, loving and patient staff of real people that would in very short order become every bit as important to me as my biological family. Please know that it wasn't easy or fast or even a task that I would have thought realistically reached. HWRC doesn't "make you sober". You don't get a "magic wand" waved over you. No "snake oil", hypnotism or "parlor tricks"..... The work is done by you with the expert guidance of a staff of diverse individuals that have been where you are - fighting for your life! I am alive and getting better each day with the tools, knowledge and self respect that High Watch Farm can help you find for yourself or loved one. If you are in pain, take the same step I did and reach out to High Watch, I don't have a single regret - you won't either.
I was a client at turnbridge from January 2017-January 2018. I came in with over a year of sobriety voluntarily. I am now discharged and living independently in Florida. I am sober two and a half years. Inpatient rehab taught me how to get sober, Turnbridge taught me how to live sober. I was lucky to be placed in the care of world class staff. They were professional, treated me with kindness and respect, wanted to see me succeed, listened to my needs, and helped me through the normal anxieties that come with re-integrating into life after getting sober. I am still in contact with many of the staff and administration at Turnbridge. They don't just discharge you and not keep in touch. They genuinely want to see how I am doing and wish for my continued success and sobriety. I found that most of the staff I regularly interacted with were doing what they did because they personally in some way were either affected by this disease or knew who someone who was and genuinely wanted to make a difference in the lives of the women they worked with. I have very fond memories of this place.