I am an ex-con who desperately needs a job.I am a well educated mother of 3.I have been sober for 7mnths HELP

Friday, July 8th, 2011

I was convicted of 2 misdemeanors in Dec of 2006, served prison time, attended a 21 day rehab and I am currently on probation for the next 2 years. I have been applying for jobs like crazy,go on the interviews,impress my prospective employer but then comes the background check and thats where it goes sour. I was addicted to OxyContins. I am not anymore but I feel that my life is still being negitively effected, which in essence effects my children. I so badly want a normal life and a normal job. I am a good person but I don’t feel anyone sees me as “good” anymore. Any advice???

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how to get my mother sober?

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

Every saturday my mother gets severely drunk. She gets offended and throws ‘tantrums’ at me if I tell that she’s drunk . It’s absolute hell because I get wound up and she starts her violent mood swings. It started in May 2009 when her mother (my grandmother) died. I really don’t know what to do. I want to try and get her to stop but I don’t know. I had an idea of spiking her vodka with tap water but i don’t know if she’d knew I had spiked it.

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My daughter was in drug rehab and sober, I searched in her purse?

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

and found pot last week and confronted her with it. She is angry with me. She is 21…lives with me…. She spent time in rehab and went thru tons of counseling for her addictions……..Was I wrong to look in her purse? I smelled pot a few weeks ago in her room which prompted me to look…she claimed to have kept it in her purse. … single mom

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Stay sober or live with alcoholic?

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

Married 15 years,2 kids(12 and 14). Should mom,a recovering sober alcoholic, stay in marriage with an active alcoholic who refuses to admit he has a problem and drinks at a minimum 4 out of 7 days?
I am am the mom.

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If your mother was an alcoholic who didn’t want to stay sober enough to come see you.?

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Would you cave in and see her everytime, or would you put your foot down and insist that they take some initiative to sober up and come visit the rest of the family.

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is it okay for an alcoholic to drink on weekends if they sober up by Monday morning?

Monday, October 25th, 2010

my moms an alcoholic. she’s been drinking around bed time on the weekends, is this okay for an alcoholic or should I stop her before it gets worse? she seems sober during the day, just drunk at night . .

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I hate my mother drunk and sober. Should I tell her?

Monday, August 9th, 2010

My mother is a working alcoholic. When she’s drunk, she’s stupid and annoying. One one hand I want to smack her because the giggling and ghatoehagohwt funny at parties, not when you have to live with it. And it’s saddening, because she’s such an intelligent woman that reduces herself to a self-respectless… idiot.

But when she’s sober, I can’t stand her either. She’s super self-righteous and will pick fights with everyone on everything. She forces herself on everyone, her fears, her dreams and aspirations, if she wants something then you have to want it that way, too.

I feel like I should be encouraging her to go get help, but how do I tell her? If I tell her when she’s drunk she won’t argue, but she probably won’t retain the suggestion.

If I tell her while she’s sober, she’ll spazz and insist that she’s always right and doesn’t have a problem.

Do I say fuck it and tell my little sister, who woefully has 4 years left at home, that she can come stay at my apartment whenever? Any other ideas? Because I am at the end of my rope here.

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Evanescence imitation of Call me when you´re sober”

Thursday, January 28th, 2010


Third try ** better?? Describes how I felt before my mom passed away and her drug addiction and Alcoholaddiction. All the pain, anger and helplessness…. I love you mom! RIP Mother! We love you! areeyanna.blogg.se

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Sober – Jo’s life without Dean

Saturday, January 16th, 2010


partying. This last for about a month or so, before Ellen sends Sam to find her. When he does, he tells her that she’s not alone and doesn’t need to be living her life like that. He says he won’t force her to go home, but he’d like it if she did. She decides to go home. Her mother gets mad at her for trying to throw her life away. After realizing how she’s hurt her family, Jo enter rehab. I don’t own anything, no copyright infringement intended. All my clips are from Alona-Tal.org Oh and in …

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Staying Sober Can Drive You to Drink-anxiety of Alcoholic Relapse Can be a Killer

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Google the word Alcoholism and you will get 25,400,000 search results. Addiction of Alcohol and Symptoms of Anxiety Depression can reduce the toughest person to a babbling wreck. Anxiety of Alcoholic relapse is a real factor in your quest to remain sober. Stop anybody in the street and ask them what they associate with the word Alcoholism and the answers will more than likely include the replies, hitting rock bottom,detox, down and out, addiction, messed up life, homelessness, crime blah blah blah. Pay a little more attention and do your research and you can find out that when you drive at night one out of seven drivers on the road are legally drunk. The Medical Research Council states that alcohol abuse costs the South African economy around R9 billion a year and half of all murders are the result of drunkenness. The stats are never-ending and cover all aspects of South African society from child abuse to pedestrian deaths, home violence and the tragic cases of childbirth defects. Almost all events that you consider bad news probably have to a certain degree alcohol involved somewhere or other.

However on the inevitable other side of the coin, studies have found that the use of alcohol has significant advantages in the general treatment of stress, heart disease and related illnesses. Add to this the economic benefits of a massive industry contributing to the nations wealth and job creation and we almost have a stalemate.

Into this balancing act comes the plight of the individual. Somebody once said, and the name escapes me now, that there are stats, more stats and then there is damn lies. But there is no doubt in my mind that this is a problem that has to be looked at very carefully. The general consensus is that approximately 1 in 17 people over the age of 15 years are predisposed to the potentially fatal illness of Alcoholism. Another frightening stat holds the premise that only 1 in 37 diagnosed Alcoholics ever make a full recovery over the long-term. Food for thought indeed.

A few years ago I went through the ordeal and horrors of acute alcoholism. I was one of the fortunate ones. I survived though the grace of God, the love and compassion of my loved ones and friends and the skill and care of the medical profession. I went on to write a feature article for Mens Health which turned out to be my heartfelt account of my spiral into a dark world of despair, desperation and depression.The article itself contained nothing new for students of this silent killer disease. Started drinking. drunk more, made excuses, raged at the world in general, got drunker, screwed up everything dear to me, approached death, ruined my body and my mind and finally thankfully collapsed and went to hospital and dried out . The reaction to my “Unhappy Hour” article was overwhelming. I was soon to realize that this was an epidemic spinning out of control. I was definitely not alone.

I went on to regain my self-esteem and rebuild my life. A close call that many people do not make it out of and then have the luxury sitting and looking back as I have.So now there I sat congratulating myself on beating the odds. Now what?

Well to be brutally honest “now what” involved a new phase of my life that would require me to bite the bullet all over again, except this time this was not going to be solved with a 10 day detox and sleep therapy, in some overpriced private hospital. My Doctors words started to resonate in my brain. ” It’s simple Alan, do not drink again and you’ll be fine. Drink, you’ll die”

That was it in plain English. The only problem was that I was having a problem coming to terms with that concept. Let me get this straight. I was 45 years old and let’s say I lived until 80. 80 minus 45 gives you 35 years. A long, long time in anybodies world. That’s a hell of a lot of braais, weddings, celebrations, bad days, shit bosses, traffic jams, disappointments, closing deals and watching the Boks beat the All Blacks and Chuck Norris 50- nil. Maybe the medical guys had made a mistake. Maybe I was not an alcoholic. Maybe, maybe, maybe. Time was to prove them right. I had not beaten the odds. Eighteen months later on one particular bleak July day in a not so sunny Margate I sunk a bottle of my favourite hard tack and ended up in the emergency room waiting for a stomach pump. For some obscure reason only known to the big guy upstairs I made it out of the hole again. As my relationship, business and health were back on the line once again, I finally made the decision. My version of mothers milk had to part company and this time for good.

I had now became a member of a club that nobody in their right mind wants to join. Serving a life sentence with no parole. The medical advice now became quite specific. Not a drop of alcohol to pass my lips. The 6% or so of us who have this defective gene are advised to not take the chance of alcohol entering our system in any form whatsoever. This unnamed and undetectable gene sends us types dilly and as a result we cannot have a few dops after work or at the weekend just in case we go berserk and drink ourselves into an early grave.

Once I had heard my sentence I now had to work out how to serve it. I’ve read that real prisoners talk about “hard and soft time”. It was at this time that I had an “Oprah” moment. I got it. Regret is too mild a description. I had screwed up big time and now was going to have to pay for it. Big time. Hospitalization had ridden me of my withdrawal symptoms but now I had to deal with the mind games.

The public at large are no doubt familiar with Alcoholics Anonymous and the sterling work that they do to help those unfortunates stricken with this potentially fatal disease. Day by day is their anthem. Most of us initially fight against this prognosis dished up to us and truly believe that we will beat the odds. We start to think that maybe they had got it wrong. Maybe I can have a break and start again. Here came those dam maybes again. So, for many, starts the so-called falling off the wagon and then having to pick yourself up again. But the awful reality is that ” they” were more than likely right and you have to make a plan. Somewhere,sometime I came across a quote from one of those old guys in the good old days. I think it was the American poet Robert Frost. As he sat in the countryside he came up with something that, for me summons up this whole fight with alcoholism -

“Two roads diverged in the woods. I took the one less traveled, and it made all the difference.”

The difference here is to stay sober even if it kills you.

After leaving the hospital my body gradually began to heal. It desperately needed to. For all those out there who want to hear a few good reasons to not reach the chronic stage of alcoholism and what I like to call the ” last legs” phase, here are a few. They are not pretty but they are a reality. They will happen eventually. If you are strong, lucky or just have an angel looking after you you might one day survive to talk about it. If not, have a nice trip.

This phase lasts a few days, weeks or months, depending on your constitution. It is a slide into hell rendering you powerless to prevent an existence on the edge of a gaping black hole. I kid you not. The blood vessels in my eyes started to implode. My legs were uncontrollable and went on a mission of their own. I had no visible veins left. To this day I can only guess what the green gunge spewing out of me was. Medically my liver and kidneys had almost called it a day . There seemed to be no difference between my sleep and my waking hours. I drifted between paranoia, hallucinations and voices in my ear. The phrase “dead man walking” definitely springs to mind.

Within a month or so from leaving the hospital my body started to get it’s act together. Every day I got stronger and began to look human again. I rediscovered the glory of food. During the last 20 days prior to my treatment I had eaten nothing at all. It was impossible to keep anything down. I went back to work and generally lived a normal life. Initially I was pre-occupied with just getting my life back in working order but in time that dreaded word for alcoholics, craving, reared it’s ugly head. They creep into your life at the most innocuous times and can be the ruination of many good intentions. Coupled with this new threat was a new idea slowly forming that basically questioned the fairness of this whole ” new normal” for me. Why me? Was there something wrong with me? Unfortunately these questions have the same meaning as asking how long is a piece of string? Your Anxiety of the future and your Addiction of the Mind and Body can be real threats to your sobriety. The stories of Alcoholic Recovery are statistically possible. Keep a close watch on the cravings and those deadly symptoms of anxiety depression and you can make it.

If you sat down with 10 Doctors and Psychologists you might get 10 different answers to why some of us are alcoholics and others can get vrot drunk from time to time and continue living a normal life. The bad news is that medical science is divided on the answers. There could be a defective gene, it might be hereditary, neurotransmitters in the brain have got their wires crossed or it could be due to an addictive personality. What is a known fact is that there is no simple test to determine your risk of developing full blown alcoholism. The medical guys have a nice expression which basically says that you have crossed the line. You will not even know that you are approaching that line and you cross it oblivious to the fact that you are about to turn your life upside down. Realistically it is a subjective call that finally condemns you to carrying the label, “alcoholic” around with you for the rest of your life. That call is mostly based on your alcohol intake and your general functionality in your day to day activities. Not a full-proof system and one that has no appeal to the alkie contesting their life sentence. But in the hands of an experienced practitioner you can be sure that they have, for all intensive purposes called it right.

It is probably this uncertainty that leads many of us to question our label and in most cases to chance your arm with a few dops. Bad idea guys. You will create history if you do manage to beat the odds. A blind acceptance of your fate is probably a good start to a long lasting “cure”. Falling off the wagon is another phrase that we are all familiar with. It happens. In fact the majority of labeled alkies will fall off at some point. The trick is to pick yourself up. I have had the privilege and pleasure over the last few years to consul others and the “fallen hero” syndrome is never far away from your thoughts.Today I can help you but tomorrow is another day.

There is a wide range of support groups out there who are only too willing to come to your aid. The well known AlcoholicsAnonymous exist solely to help those battling with this killer disease. And a huge bonus is the fact that they are free. Staffed by men and woman who have beaten this monster, this is a good start to cleaning your act up. Like many support groups dedicated to this illness their counselors have been there, done that and got the T-shirt. Listen to them and they will pull you out of the black hole that you find yourself in.

After almost coming to terms with your label we come to the crux of this whole sad scenario. How in the hell am I going to not drink ever again? Four words. IT IS NOT EASY. We live in a world surrounded by alcohol. Just look around you. Unlike illegal drugs there is a bottle store on every corner. Hell nowadays when you pop in to buy your bread and milk net on die hoek you are confronted by rows and rows of bottles of my favourite poison. Newspapers, T.V. radio and magazines bombard you the whole time. Smoking has become a no-no but alcohol has crept into our nations psyche. I mean our national sports teams are financed by the giants of the liquor industry. Oh look there’s Graeme Smith, he’s definitely the king of the “castle”. In their effort to sell the product they go to great lengths to glamorize life with a dop by your side. Our basic socialization teaches us from a very early age that no event is complete without the requisite alcohol intake. When did you last go to a wedding, promotion party, simple family braai or just plain get-together after work and you all drunk mineral water. You could probably count them on one hand.

And these are the happy events. What about the fight with the wife, the retrenchment, the death of a loved one, losing that big deal or just feeling pissed off with life. Alcohol used and not abused is a feature of our fast and modern times. To sit and consider that it is no longer part of your life requires a 360 degree turnaround in your way of thinking. It is no help to try and demonize alcohol. Sure it is probably responsible in one way or other for much of the carnage on our roads, our ridiculous crime levels and the ever increasing women and child abuse in the new South Africa. But there is another side of the coin. Who can deny that a couple of cold ones after a bad day at the office rests the brain. That warm comfortable feeling at the family braai so that even Uncle Flip’s nonsense starts to make logical. That awkward corporate do when suddenly Mr. Jones from Regional office does not seem such a prick after all. In all these instances it does not matter that the whole lot of you cannot sentence two strings together. You are relaxed, feeling good and life is not so bad after all.

Besides the physical presence of alcohol around you all the time “club members” have to have eyes in the back of their heads. There are many side-shows that can trip you up. Days after coming out of hospital my better half Mary out of the goodness of her heart decided to buy me an extremely expensive vitamin boosted drink. The object was to get my wasted body back on track. A couple of days later I started to feel as though I needed a drink badly. On investigation with my pharmacist I was informed that it contained elements of ethanol. Enough to make my recently sodden brain recognize that this was an old friend calling again. A close call. As a recovering and sober alcoholic there are many instances when you are tested. Alcohol is a sneaky bastard and pops up in the most unusual places, usually unannounced. Christmas Day and as the restaurant clientele get stuck into their much awaited Xmas pudding , you have to take a rain-cheque. Sorry too much brandy in that one. Mouthwash, sports vitamin drinks, low alcohol beer, even some deodorants can get those brain cells craving all over again. It is very much a case of treading softly and making sure that you avoid even the smallest amount of alcohol. Modern psychology has more or less worked out that the brain is like a camera and records many of your memories. It is like a computer with 100,000GB of memory. The memory of your drunken stupors are recorded and are easily activated. So watch it.

Every sober alcoholic has to find his own individual way to deal with his life sentence. I took the middle road of evasive action. I buy wine for my better half. I will feel comfortable in small groups of friends and family who are drinking at a social event. I draw the line at large gatherings. Later in the evening I feel alienated and isolated. As the brews flow I do start to feel uneasy. It is just my way. It is for the individual to work out what works best. For me in a world swimming in alcohol I made the decision to have it around in small doses. A s they say in the classics- whatever floats your boat. Nobody starts out with the intention of becoming an alkie and that magical line creeps up on us unannounced. Beware though once you are labeled your life takes a definite downturn. It is really best to try and head off that day. You all know if a problem is developing. Deep down you now need alcohol rather than want it. The body and mind now require just to give you a shot at getting through the day. What started out as a fun way to relieve tension and stress or just to have a good time is now a preoccupation. Without it you become one sick camper. Body sweats, nausea, shaking, mental confusion and generally one screwed-up constitution are the byproducts of even a few hours abstinence. Take it from someone who has been there, do not go there. Stop it before you wake up one day and suddenly your daily dop is your master. Stop it before your every waking moment revolves around the next drink. It happens so fast and the next minute you become a member of that “club” that nobody wants to join. Have fun with your drink but do not let it become your everything. Take advice from family, friends and work colleagues. They will be noticing your slide way before you will admit to a problem.

Then again the whole question of how to get treatment is fraught with difficulties. A good starting base would be your family G.P. Try and choose somebody who regularly deals with this type of problem. It really does help to actually like the individual. Another base to touch is a Psychologist. I went through numerous Psychologists until I finally found one that I felt comfortable with. Alcoholics by the very secretive nature of their illness are very convincing liars and spend most of their time in self-denial. Modern research has concluded that alcoholism and acute depression co-exist in most cases. The burning question to sort out is” are you drinking because you are depressed or are you depressed because you are drinking”. A tricky one but the type of issue a compassionate and experienced G.P. and Psychologist can get to grips with. I will never forget coming out of a session with a Psychiatrist, climbing into the car and proclaiming to Mary that the guy was a nutcase who needed help more than I did. Sad but true. In my confusion I had started to lose the plot.

The range of treatments depend on how long you have been on the slide and your mental and physical state. From simple counseling, anti-depressants to sleep therapy and if the depression is severe and life threatening, the last resort treatment of Shock Therapy. But ultimately the day will arrive when you are on your own and it is time to bite the bullet. Total, absolute and never-ending abstinence is the only route to go. Statistically the odds of you beating the odds are for all intensive purposes, one big fat zero.

Some days are worse than others. The usual and normal day to day activities of everyday life present you with many occasions when a couple of cold ones seems like the answer. Your slide into acute alcoholism followed by your treatment phase will eventually become a distant memory. The days,weeks, months and years of trying to stay sober will be your new reality. Once again I would like to quote another old guy who probably knew what he was talking about. During the dark days of World War Two when his island was been threatened by the ever-growing menace of Nazism, Winston Churchill, who by all accounts liked the odd dram, declared,

“If you are going through hell, keep going”

Better advice was never given. Anxiety of relapsing and your Addiction of Alcoholic substances can increase your potential vulnerability. Add in the symptoms of anxiety depression and you have a lethal combination. Turn your greatest weakness into your greatest strength. As I wrote in my article a couple of years ago, you are definitely not alone.

 

 

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mom used to be an alcoholic and had seizures. Sober for a few years but spaces out and repeats u sometimes…?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

My mom used to be an alcoholic and had a few seizures in the past when she was coming down. She has been sober for a few years but once a year or so she will have these episodes where she spaces out, and can’t talk. When she is able to talk she will repeat you if you say something to her. She eventually clears up but it is extremely scary. It’s almost as if she is about to seize, but doesn’t. She doesn’t remember doing it and repeating you. Has anyone had any experience with this?

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Make Your Life Perfect With Sober Living at Malibu

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Cliffside Malibu has every amenities and luxuries that a treatment center can offer rather it has exeptional ambience paired with perfect setting. The location of Cliffside Malibu overlooking the pacific ocean is an exotic view and can cure any and every patient going through addiction disorder. Getting into the habbit of drinking and drug intake is easy but it is very tough to get out of it. It is like carrying a huge mountain on your shoulder and walking uphill. Getting back into the sober life though may appear to be a easy task but the will power and strength required to get back into the normal life is quite tuff. At Malibu Rehabilitation center you are offered the best of care and treatment so that the process becomes an epilogue of a sober and happy life. Before the process of rehabilitation starts you have to understand as how the technique works. Drug addiction or alcohol addiction or any other addiction is a psychological disease and to cure the disease from grassroot level the patient will have to understand the origin of these roots in order to get healed properly.Most of the people think that those who gets addicted to drug or alchohol have done it by their own will but it is wrong. They get addicted to drug and oter sources because they are sick and they need proper clinical treatment under the supervision of professionals.Drug addicts needs love,care and support to get back into sober living, and that can only be provided expert docters and therapist at Cliffside Malibu rehabilitation center.

But unfortunately most of the American population believe that going through drug treatment and rehabilitation process is shameful and embarassing on ones part and that it is a moral failure in result of which an individual looses all the rights of a sober living.But on the contrary the addicted population who take up the courage of getting into a rahab center is worth acknowledgement and admiring as well.You take the first step and the remaining task will be done by Cliffside Malibu rahabilitation center.So we can well understand though at Rehab Malibu you get every possible help and care from the professionals the initiative has to be taken by you,accompanied by a little pain along the detox programme.So if you want to get into sober living you will have to work hard for it. But it should be kept in mind that the most competent rehabilitation center cannot cure you if you don’t into account the after care programme.At Malibu rehab center you are not only treated during the process but follow up programmes also form a vital part of the treatment. Most of the patients get cured during the process but as soon as they enter the real life they slid back into past addiction and the whole process results into a great failure. The happiness of sober living can only be enjoyed if the patient is responsible enough to understand the peace and harmony of a sober life compared to the dark hours of the addicted life. Cliffside Malibu is the ultimate rehabilition center which lightens up your present and secures your future from any addiction disorders. The aim of Malibu rehab is to promote individual development which may have been dwarfed by the impending curse of addiction disorders Thus sobriety is all yours if you offer a little toil and diligence,amalgamated with proper guidence from professionals.

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How do I act sober on the phone to my mom when I’m drunk?

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

The house is gonna be empty and I’m planning on drinking with some friends in a few days but I know my mom will check in. How do I act and sound sober over the phone?

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Sober Environment in Drug Rehab Centers

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

A clean and sober environment can act as a catalyst in a drug rehabilitation process. Moreover, it is considered as the best way to bring an addicted person back to the normal life. Use of medicine during drug rehabilitation may be important, but all an addict needs is care and love. Withdrawal symptoms of drugs are painful and grueling. Many addicts even run away from rehabs when they are incapable of tolerating this after effects. There is no point in going to a rehab if a person gets the same environment as that where he used to live in. A rehab should have totally different environment which can be soothing for that person’s body and mind. A surrounding which can make him feel that he can live without drugs is the most important requirement.

There is just one such rehabilitation center which can fulfill all these requirements- Cliffside Malibu Rehab center. Malibu Rehab is situated on a private beach overlooking the Pacific Ocean. It covers an enormous 2 acres of land surrounded by beautiful eye-catching garden. Apart from the highly experienced medical staffs and the treatment programs conducted by them, it is the natural beauty of the place and comfort they provide which helps the patients to recover quickly. There are other well known rehabs which provide this type of environment. But, Cliffside Malibu Rehab Center is the best of them all. They take each and every measure, medical and psychological that is suitable and required for a drug rehab.

Life in a drug rehab is not usually pleasing or comforting. The withdrawal effects can drive a person mad. Few of them even get to the level of committing suicide. And that is not what is wanted. Family members or friends admit the drug addict in the rehab with a hope that they will return back to their normal healthy life after the rehabilitation process. But if such accident occurs in a rehab, then people will lose their trust on rehabs. That is not at all good news. Keeping that grave situation in mind, Malibu Rehab Center provides the patients with luxurious and comforting life. This is done so that the patients find a little bit of comfort and happiness during the prolonged treatment process.

World class luxurious quarters with private bedrooms, well decorated bathrooms are provided for the inmates. There are sun decks, where the inmates can take sunbath, meditate or even pass their free time and enjoy the scenic beauty of the surrounding. Such a peaceful environment of the Malibu Rehab Center can surely sooth the mind of a patient, who has reached the level of madness due to grueling withdrawal process. Addicts usually fear the life in a rehab. But, when it comes to a rehab like the Malibu Recovery Rehab, drug addicts are eager to get admitted and continue with the treatment. Many of them have done so, and obtained success. Being successful many people have left the Malibu Recovery Rehab and continued with the sober life that they experienced in the rehab.

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