If you’re looking to help yourself or someone you love struggling with a drinking or drug abuse problem in Bloomingdale, MI, Rehabs.com houses comprehensive online catalog of inpatient centers, as well as an array of alternatives. We can help you locate addiction treatment facilities for a variety of addictions. Search for an excellent rehabilitation program in Bloomingdale now, and take off on the path to clean and sober living.
I was initailly very pleased with the doctor as well as the company itself during witch I had my first video apt.. However the following week I had missed my video apt. Due to phone issues.only to sign onto my account 2 days later realizing they not only took 75$ witch would have been for the apt that week,without the apt being done and matching the prior weeks 75$,but they also took an extra 15$ off my account. I contacted the conseler woman to inquire about it only for her to say it was being charged as some kind of initial 90$ fee for something else that I never signed up for. I sent her written notice stating I never signed up for automatic payments on my card let alone for them to charge it for an extra amount to begin with however she decided to ignore my pleads!!! I am highly irate. The woman canceled my membership, however my 90$ refund is yet to be seen!!!! I will be taking further action if my issue is not settled being as you are not legally able to take money from my account without my say so!
It’s an amazing thing to know that my son is truly living his life for the first time in 11 years. My son was addicted to crack cocaine for 11 years and it was a pretty rough 11 years for all of our family. It’s hell to have someone you love addicted to drugs. You try to help them but nothing you do really seems to help. You send them to rehab only to have them start using again. You know in your head that you are doing everything you can to help them but in your heart, it always feels like you could do more. For 11 years my son was in and out of rehab and jail and it’s awful to watch and awful to go through. I was always hopeful when my son went to rehab and always relieved when he was in jail. Hopeful when he was in rehab because maybe this time it would be different and he would be able to stay clean. Relieved when he was in jail because for the length of time that he was in jail I knew that he was at least marginally safer. I knew that he was eating and that he was sleeping and that he would be a least a little bit healthier when he got out. When he went to A Forever Recovery he was truly ready to get the help he needed to overcome his addiction. A Forever Recovery was so much different than the previous rehabs he had been to. The building and the property are beautiful. While my son was at A Forever Recovery he had a sort of serenity to him that wasn’t present at any other rehab. He liked the program he was doing and he especially liked the people. He felt that the people working at AFR truly understood him and what he was going through. So, when a counselor or someone said they wanted to help him and they understood what he was going through it didn’t immediately put his back up. He was more willing to listen and learn at AFR and that made such a big difference with his recovery. He went to AFR 8 months ago and has been home for 6 months. He’s been clean before. Was actually clean for an entire year at one point. It’s so much different this time though. It isn’t just that he’s not using drugs. It’s that as a person he’s changed so much. He’s become a really caring person. He and his father have had a much more strained relationship than he and I had and he’s taking action to fix that relationship. When my son went to AFR I expected it to a place much like the other rehabs he has gone to. I wanted him to get the help he needed to overcome his addiction I just wasn’t sure that help existed. AFR is like no other rehab though. It was the only place my son felt like he could be himself and get the help he needed. It was also the first place where I felt like my son was a priority to the staff.
Many of us graduated with a new, hopeful chance at life-once we were able to return to mindful thinking and realities and coping...It changed my life. I need retraining now because because of mental health issues. I need the repetitiveness of ADLs and new habits, along with a medicine reevaluation so I can continue on.