articlehalls.com articlehalls.com articlehalls.com
Index Page About Us Security & Privacy ToS Add Your Link Submit Article
Search:   

 

Computers & Software

 

Companies & Business

 

People & Society

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Self Help

 

Tour & Travel

 

Garden & Home

 

Games & Play

 

Jobs & Careers

 

Research & Science

 

Culture & Art

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Academics & Learning

 

News & Events

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Malls & Shopping

 

Entertainment

 

Children & Teens

 

Government & Politics

 

Banking & Finance

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Fitness & Health

 

Property & Agents

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Index Page › Self Help › Addiction Rehabilitation
 

Drug Addiction Treatment Centers: A Fresh Start

 
Author: David Westbrook

Half a decade ago, I started working on a hotline to help addicts and their families find drug addiction treatment centers. Thousands of calls later, I still remember the first time I picked up the line.

I could hardly make out what the woman on the other end was saying to me. Shelly (not her real name) was sobbing. She had just arrived at her father's apartment and had found him passed out cold on the couch with a needle still sticking out of his arm. Why she called our line instead of 9-1-1 was a mystery. I called for an ambulance and waited on the phone with her until they arrived. She told me how her father had been a construction worker, though his dream was to play guitar in a band. Shelly said her parents split up when she was thirteen because of her dads drinking. He moved away to live in another state for a couple of years and they began to lose touch. He would send the occasional card or make a call on her birthday the first couple of years, but that eventually ended. After college, Shelly decided to find her dad. It turned out that he had moved back and was living just a couple of miles from where she grew up.

Somewhere along the way, he had picked up a heroin habit. Shelly tried to talk him into going to treatment, but he always had an excuse for why he couldn't. Shelly said she visited him weekly, helped him keep his apartment up, bought his groceries and kept after him to quit. She said she they had just talked the night before and that he had, for the first time, agreed to try treatment. On my end, I could hear the ambulance approaching and then a knock on the door. Shelly hung up and I never heard from her again.

Today in America, there are 13 million people in need of alcohol or drug addiction treatment. Fortunately, according the government, there are just over 13,000 drug addiction treatment centers waiting to help these individuals. It may have been too late for Shelly's dad, I don't know, but I do know that it is not too late for anyone who is looking for a drug addiction treatment center today.

Each year millions of people across America, enter treatment centers. For many, this marks a fresh start, a rebirth. It is an opportunity to rebuild broken relationships and broken lives. Those who successfully complete rehab join a recovery community that is already millions strong.

Author Bio:
David Westbrook is a proclaimed scripter. David likes to write articles about this topic.
You can search for this article using: drug addiction, sex addiction, gambling addiction, internet addiction, alcohol addiction
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Pattern of Ripples
 
Transmute Anger and Fear into a Positive New Direction with Passion and Desire
 
Charity - Give To Receive!
 
Intelligent Emotions
 
Why Must I Be Saved?
 
Boundaries: No Bull Allowed
 
The Power of Angels -- An Interview With Rose Ann Schwab, Part Two
 
There is Power in Believing
 
We're Not Just Getting Older, We're Getting Better!
 
Avoid Too Much Stress, Help Yourself To Manage It
 
 
 
Index Page :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehalls.com