Enthusiastic Sobriety: 101

Enthusiastic Sobriety is an umbrella term for a methodology used in specific substance abuse treatment programs. As cited from The Crossroads Program:

In our drug and alcohol program, teens and young adults are shown a life that is fun and exciting without the use of mind-changing chemicals. Our enthusiastic approach caters to the natural fun loving tendencies of teens.

It’s main component is that it believes that people (especially children) must be having more fun sober than they were when they were abusing substances. While that may sound like common sense, the way Enthusiastic Sobriety ends up being implemented is destructive, dangerous, and sometimes deadly ways.

These programs have various names but commonly center around titles like The Insight Program, The Pathway Program, The Crossroads Program, The Cornerstone Program, FullCircle Program, Step One Residential, Step Two Recovery, Palmer Drug Abuse Program (PDAP), Cornerstone Team Counseling, and most “Alternative Peer Groups” have roots in Bob Meehan programs.

Enthusiastic Sobriety was pioneered by Bob Meehan. Meehan is defined by the American Addiction Foundation as:

“an ex-con who operates as a master con-artist…targeting vulnerable parents for decades.”

Meehan began attending AA meetings at a the Palmer Episcopal Church in Houston, Texas in the 70s. He was hired at the church as a janitor, and after gaining a following of teenagers who were enamored by his drug abuse “war stories” and how he since sobered after spending time in a federal penitentiary, he was promoted to “youth counselor” and eventually created the Palmer Drug Abuse Program. PDAP was the feature of an episode of 60 Minutes with Dan Rather. The episode exposed numerous issues within PDAP and Meehan was asked to step down from his role in the organization. He then began other programs in California and continued to develop his ideas about Enthusiastic Sobriety.

While Meehan was eventually pushed out of California under threat of criminal charges, he continued to open more substance abuse treatment programs for teens and young adults. Meehan began to spread Enthusiastic Sobriety across the United States and eventually established a cult following of supporters, most of which were teens and their families that he had “treated” with his problematic methods.

While Meehan stepped down from his leadership role in the Enthusiastic Sobriety Programs after a 2005 media blitz with ABC15 Arizona, his son-in-law, Clint Stonebraker, took over his position as the leader of Enthusiastic Sobriety programs. Several other members of “The Family” who were closest to Bob Meehan, work as Directors or individual owners of the Programs. These owners are: Josh Azevedo, Mike and Amy Weiland, Frank Szachta, Steve Winkelmann, AJ Creswell, Glenn Schendel and Kirk Campbell.

To date, we estimate that there are 30 programs currently using Enthusiastic Sobriety methods in the US.

What makes an Enthusiastic Sobriety program different from other sobriety programs? The ideas of Enthusiastic Sobriety appear to take the common belief that children should have fun to an illegal and deadly extreme. Meehan’s book, Beyond the Yellow Brick Road, explicitly explains how Enthusiastic Sobriety and “Fun Felonies” should work.

The main points in this book are making sure group members cut ties with the outside world, drop out of high school, participate in “fun felonies” and make the group of peers a Higher Power, or God.

The Programs advertise themselves as an “Outpatient” model, that is typically meant to allow clients to maintain a normal schedule in their daily lives and that the program is only an eight to twelve weeks long. However, most clients remain in the Program for one to five years, if they aren’t selected to be recruited onto staff.

Staff members are predominately former clients and a few of them are adult children of staff members or from families who have been intimately involved in the program. The requirements to become staff are relatively simple. You must be 18, have a high school diploma or equivalent, and a letter of recommendation from a Director of an Enthusiastic Sobriety Program. With these bare minimum requirements, clients are allowed to go through The Meehan Institute for Counselor Training, but only if they can afford the $5,800.00 tuition and cover living expenses for the six-week program. At the end of the training course, employment is not guaranteed and the certification they receive could have been obtained online for less than $500.

If you would like to know more about the history and formation of Enthusiastic Sobriety Programs, you can read The Atavist: The Love Bomb by Daniel Kolitz and watch The Group Documentary by Jacob McEndollar.

  • Teen drug and alcohol rehab cult

    The Love Bomb

    For 50 years, Enthusiastic Sobriety programs have promised to help teenagers kick drugs and alcohol addiction. But former followers say Enthusiastic Sobriety doesn’t save lives - it destroys them.

    - By Daniel Kolitz, The Atavist. July 2021

  • Jacob McEndollar - The Group

    The Group Documentary

    The Group is a feature-length documentary that retraces the director's five year journey through the world of adolescent drug abuse programs. Through interviews with former members, archival photographs and expert witnesses, The Group tells the often personal story of the young people affected by the organization, their struggles with addiction and life after The Group.

  • Bob Meehan Group Dictionary

    Group Dictionary

    The use of loaded language can be an early sign that the indoctrination process is taking hold of the individual. Early detection is key in preventing someone from fully committing to membership within a cult, or other group that exerts undue influence over individuals’ lives.

  • Active Programs

    A list of active Enthusiastic Sobriety Programs throughout the country and affiliated organizations.

young adult outpatient drug rehab

Visit our Substance Abuse Support page to see how Bob Meehan’s 12 Steps compare the original 12 Step Program.

Enthusiastic Sobriety’s 12 Steps for Teens and Young Adults

Written by Bob Meehan, in his self-published book, Beyond the Yellow Brick Road: Our Children and Drugs.