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Substance Abuse

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At Relevance Recovery, we understand that the journey to overcome substance abuse is both unique and challenging. We are here to provide you with the support, resources, and guidance you need to find your way to recovery. Our mission is to empower individuals like you to take back control of their lives and rediscover the joy of living substance-free.

At our Recovery Center in Freehold, New Jersey, you’ll find a wealth of helpful clinicians, doctors, treatment options, therapy approaches, and recovery strategies tailored to your needs. We believe in a holistic, individualized approach to substance abuse recovery, and we are committed to helping you achieve a life free from addiction.

Whether you’re seeking help for yourself or a loved one, our dedicated team is here to assist you every step of the way. Explore the resources on this page, and when you’re ready, reach out to us to start your journey toward a healthier, happier, and substance-free life. You are not alone in this fight, and Relevance Recovery is here to support you.

Together, we can make your recovery journey meaningful and transformative. Welcome to a new chapter in your life, where relevance is restored, and recovery is possible.

Types of Substance Abuse:

This is just a general overview of some of the Substance Abuse issues we treat at Relevance Recovery. There are many more issues we treat with personalized therapy programs.

SMART Recovery Self-Management and Recovery Training (SMART) is a science-based mutual-support program to help people overcome addictions. SMART empowers people to assume responsibility for their recovery using a 4-Point Program: 1. Building and Maintaining Motivation, 2. Coping with Urges, 3. Managing Thoughts, Feelings and Behaviors, and 4. Living a Balanced Life. Using the four points as a framework, people create a course of action tailored to their own interests and needs. SMART meetings are led by trained facilitators and are highly interactive, action oriented, positive, and focus on the present and future.

Refuge Recovery is a mindfulness-based addiction recovery community that practices and utilizes Buddhist philosophy as the foundation of the recovery process.

12-Step Fellowships is a twelve-step program is a set of guiding principles outlining a course of action for recovery from addiction, compulsion, or other behavioral problems. Originally proposed by Bill Wilson to Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) as a method of recovery from alcoholism, the Twelve Steps were first published in the 1939 book Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered from Alcoholism. The method was adapted and became the foundation of other twelve-step programs. Some of the largest and most widely used 12-Step fellowships include Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Cocaine Anonymous.

Celebrate Recovery is a Christ-centered program with foundations firmly established in Biblical truth. The 12 Steps with accompanying Scriptures and the 8 Principles based on the Beatitudes offer participants a clear path of salvation and discipleship; bringing hope, freedom, sobriety, healing, and the opportunity to give back one day at a time through our one and only true Higher Power, Jesus Christ.

Recovery 2.0 is a global movement that embraces a holistic approach to recovery from addiction of all kinds. The community honors all effective paths to recovery and emphasizes the importance of mind body practices such as yoga and meditation, athletics, nutrition and community as part of an effective path to recovery and joy in life

 

Visit our Treatment Services page to learn more about our various programs.

In partnership with CFC Recovery, once you've recovered...your journey doesn't just end once treatment does.

Often called ‘self-help’ groups or ‘support’ groups, these groups are small scale community-oriented groups where people suffering from Substance Use Disorders meet and provide support to each other. These groups provide a safe space for people to share stories, talk about challenges, or share personal achievements, often with an overarching framework guiding the group purpose. Mutual Support Groups are often an initial destination for people hoping to find recovery, and also serve to help people maintain long-term recovery. Most mutual aid groups meet face to face, but there are web-based groups as well.

CFC Loud N Clear Foundation offers open and free multiple pathway meetings seven days a week.

Take the first step towards mental well-being – complete the Substance Abuse quiz and embark on a journey to understanding and support.