Design for Recovery Los Angeles Sober Living and Mentoring Program

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Los Angeles, United States

designforrecovery.com
Halfway house· Life coach· Mental health service· Addiction treatment center· Alcoholism treatment program

Design for Recovery Los Angeles Sober Living and Mentoring Program Reviews | Rating 5 out of 5 stars (5 reviews)

Design for Recovery Los Angeles Sober Living and Mentoring Program is located in Los Angeles, United States on 6467 W 83rd St. Design for Recovery Los Angeles Sober Living and Mentoring Program is rated 5 out of 5 in the category halfway house in United States.

Address

6467 W 83rd St

Phone

+1 3105546884

Open hours

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Herbert Wood

Design for Recovery was the safe haven I needed. I don’t think I could have gotten sober living where I did before. Pretty much all my friends had problems just as bad if not worse than I did. Design for Recovery offered me a safe space where I wouldn’t be triggered to use. Best of all, I actually fell in with the community right away. I actually had sober friends for the first time in my life. I won’t say the process of recovering from years of active addiction was easy, because it wasn’t, but it was well worth it. And the staff, facility, and other residents at Design for Recovery made the process joyful and meaningful to me in a way I didn’t think possible.

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Stacy Holland

After trying therapy for my son for a while, the therapist had the integrity to level with us. He explained that no amount of talking or medication would stop my son from drinking. He recommended Design for Recovery, a sober living home near us in West LA. Design for Recovery was exactly what my son needed. The facility itself is a comfortable living environment that allowed my son to distance himself from the lifestyle he’d previously had. More importantly, though, the people in charge had a solid understanding of what drove my son to drink the way he did. More than I had, even though I tried to understand. They helped him get through what I can only assume was a painful period of alcohol withdrawal, and they worked with him to develop the skills he needed to stay sober.

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Darlene McCollough

I work at an outpatient treatment center where I work daily with individuals struggling with substance abuse. A number of the clients that I’ve worked with come from Design for Recovery. I can safely say that the residents of Design for Recovery have an advantage that others who are not so lucky don’t have. Treating an addiction is hard work. But each resident of Design for Recovery I’ve met had been absolutely committed to the process. Not only that, but they’ve astounded me with their diligence about bettering themselves. Design for Recovery builds character as much as it prepares people for sober life. The program and support system they have there set residents up to make rapid progress toward sobriety and any other goals they may have.

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Roger Washington

My brother’s drug and alcohol problems didn’t change with his circumstances. He drank a lot in highschool, got into harder drugs in college. Then he ended up on Skid Row near downtown Los Angeles. My parents and I tried to help him find a place and I think they even helped him with rent. I’m sure that money just went to drugs. When he moved back in with my parents a few years ago, we expected things would change. It continued. My brother’s addiction didn’t happen because he was unhappy or because his life was bad. Opportunities came his way. Design for Recovery was the first place he lived where he didn’t use drugs. But it wasn’t just because he was away from them. He could have left whenever he wanted. But he didn’t… The people there have figured out how to stay sober. That was what my brother wanted all along, but it took Design for Recovery’s sober living program to show him how.

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Jesus Perry

Design for Recovery was where I learned I could actually have fun in sobriety, odd as that sounds. I actually withdrew from opioids a few weeks before coming there, but I was absolutely miserable. I was drug-free but I wasn’t happy. What I realized when I came to Design for Recovery was that I can’t just quit drugs and expect to be happy. I was still obsessed. I’m sure I would have relapsed if it weren’t for them. I’m grateful to the sober friends I made there, people I could laugh with even when we were both discussing something miserable. If that isn’t recovery I don’t know what is.