If abuse of medication or alcohol is negatively affecting your work and home life, New Fairfield has a variety of great drug abuse facilities to help you or someone you care about. Whether addicted to Methadone, opiate drugs, pain pills or alcohol, we can help you connect with rehabilitation to get the perfect help available. You can even find executive or exclusive treatment in New Fairfield to make rehabilitation as easy as possible.
Drugabuse.com 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.
Our son went to Turnbridge and has very recently been discharged after 11 months. He has come a long way and appears to have turned his attitude and lifestyle around from nonproductive to productive and hopeful. The length of this program gave him the time to rediscover himself and his talents. It takes more than 30 days to remove the negativity that the use of substances creates, and replace all of that with good habits and positive thinking. This facility isn't perfect, no place is, but the environment really benefitted our son. The town of New Haven adds to the program's success because its hard to walk around town without running into a successful Turnbridge alumni or current client. The guys seem to watch out for each other. Our son became friends with some very cool men who choose sobriety. There are many factors that contribute to success, including the work that the client and his/her family are willing to do. We are very hopeful that our son will successfully carry on with his life. He has learned coping skills that he did not previously possess. The staff at Turnbridge was impressive. They invested in him, taught him how to create a sober network and reinforced his value as a human being with great potential. Ultimately it is up to the client to do what he is asked to do.
The Westport House saved my life - it’s something I say to myself almost every day, and I now know it to be true. I entered the program (with significant hesitation) at the suggestion of my rehab therapist after completing a 28 day inpatient program. I felt I was ready to return to normal life after 28 days clean… nothing could have been further from the truth. The Westport House program was exactly what I’d needed, probably since the day I graduated from high school. While the first few weeks were tough, it soon became clear it was the best decision I could have made to get my life back on track. The staff was nothing but supportive and caring. The structured Phase 1 schedule allowed me to receive the clinical care I needed, while learning self-care & life skills under the guidance of residential staff at the house. The turning point in my recovery came about as a result of the relationships I’d built with my case manager, residential coordinators and peers at P1. When I began to feel joy and happiness again during recreation activities with them, the progress I’d been making truly began to grow. Today, my best friends include staff members and fellow residents that I met in the first few weeks of my journey at the WH. 11 months after walking into 9 Fragrant Pines, I have a full-time job, hobbies that I love and the type of people in my life I always wanted when I was active in my addiction. I look back now and understand the importance of all the little things that are a part of the program - A sober part-time job to get started, waking up early & making my bed, being honest with the staff, moving through the phases of the program and finding new ways to enjoy life as a sober person. It all added up to where I am today. To that end, I would recommend the Westport House without hesitation.
It feels almost impossible to express my gratitude and love for Eden Hill--the program, the staff and the house. I went to Eden Hill convinced I would leave after 30 days, but within a week I knew I was going to stay longer and ended up living there 5 months. Before arriving at Eden Hill I had spent the last decade of my life in a hopeless and unmanageable state. I was debilitatingly depressed, unemployable, and incapable of functioning even on a basic level. When I was doing my intake, the director, looked at me and told me I was going to be okay. And I believed her. I arrived there in January of 2016, and this coming January I will be celebrating three years of sobriety. At Eden Hill I learned that I was worthy of recovery, and that my past does not need to define me. I learned that I could have fun in sobriety and form the meaningful relationships with women that I had always craved. In making my bed everyday, I got to begin each day with an accomplishment, which I would build on throughout the day in the groups. I have never felt more safe and loved anywhere in the world. It changed my life, and helped me become the version of myself I always wanted to be. Eden Hill will always be a home to me. I know that any time I need, I can simply show up at the door there will be someone to welcome me in lovingly and tell me that I'm going to be okay, just like my very first day there.