Current Enthusiastic Sobriety Group Members
We are here for you.
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We loved The Group.
Had you asked most of us when we were in The Program, we would have told you that we have found our purpose. We had made the closest of friends, had the most fun, laughed till we cried, and finally felt unconditional love and freedom.
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We thought it saved our lives.
We were told these programs are in the life-saving business and no other method or approach to sobriety would work for us. We also became increasingly scared that leaving meant to relapse, and to relapse was to die.
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We didn't want to leave.
Most of us never wanted to leave, because leaving meant complete exile from our only friends, and we watched so many others lose the battle to suicide and overdoses. It made us believe that the program’s threats about leaving were right.
We are here to help.
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How to Make Friends After The Group
One of the biggest reasons why people don’t leave is the fact that they know they will become isolated and alone. Not anymore, there is an entire support system that’s here for you and ready to help when you want it.
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Sober Alternatives
There is no such thing as a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach to addiction recovery. Whichever treatment path you choose, be sure that it has everything you need to help you achieve a successful recovery. Recovery should enable your world to get larger, not smaller.
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Is The Group a Cult?
A cult is a group or movement held together by a shared commitment to a charismatic leader or ideology. It has a belief system that has the answers to all of life’s questions and offers a special solution to be gained only by following the leader’s rules. It requires a high level of commitment from at least some of the members.
Things we wish we knew in The Group.
Parents can’t kick a minor out of the house.
Parents or guardians who care for minor children have a legal responsibility to protect the children and ensure they are not exposed to harm. When such an adult deserts or abandons a child, that behavior is often a crime.
All of the counselors are mandatory reporters.
Counselors need to report incidences of assault, sexual assault, suicide attempts, molestation, and rape. Especially if any of these events occurred when the person was a minor. Giving someone the “option” to report isn’t fulfilling their ethical requirements to report. Putting it on the victim of the abuse to decide whether or not their perpetrator should be kicked out of The Group or reported is not fulfilling their duties by law.
You have client rights.
In your client records, there are a list of rights for receiving treatment. Some of those include: A patient is treated with dignity, respect, and consideration; A patient is not subjected to: Abuse; Neglect; Exploitation; Coercion; Manipulation; Sexual abuse; Sexual assault; A patient either consents to or refuses treatment; May refuse examination or withdraw consent for treatment before treatment is initiated.
A Positive Experience in The Group
Why Some Members Only Have a Positive Experience in The Group
Enthusiastic Sobriety Abuse Survivor and former Staff member explains the spectrum of experiences in The Group and why some people do not consider it a harmful institution.
If you would like help leaving The Program
Please contact us. We will be happy to walk you through strategies, talk with your parents or connect your parents with another parent survivor.
info@esaalliance.org