Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard really great things about an Ascend program short term program, which was in Southern California. I don't have experience with Crossroads short term program (Ogden Utah), but their long term program is amazing (also in Ogden). Is THC the only problem? If not willing to go, a wilderness program might make sense as a first stop
OP no to all of this.
Crossroads is private and zero transparency.
Wilderness programs are same.
Ask qualified medical professionals.
My kid went to wilderness program. It was life changing in a good way. There are good ones. You need to use a consultant to find the good ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard really great things about an Ascend program short term program, which was in Southern California. I don't have experience with Crossroads short term program (Ogden Utah), but their long term program is amazing (also in Ogden). Is THC the only problem? If not willing to go, a wilderness program might make sense as a first stop
OP no to all of this.
Crossroads is private and zero transparency.
Wilderness programs are same.
Ask qualified medical professionals.
Anonymous wrote:We heard really great things about an Ascend program short term program, which was in Southern California. I don't have experience with Crossroads short term program (Ogden Utah), but their long term program is amazing (also in Ogden). Is THC the only problem? If not willing to go, a wilderness program might make sense as a first stop
Anonymous wrote:We heard really great things about an Ascend program short term program, which was in Southern California. I don't have experience with Crossroads short term program (Ogden Utah), but their long term program is amazing (also in Ogden). Is THC the only problem? If not willing to go, a wilderness program might make sense as a first stop
Anonymous wrote:What does their doctor say? If it’s THC alone I might look for a therapeutic school rather than rehab-while thc is terrible for teens it doesn’t require “rehab” the same way alcohol, cocaine, or opiates would (because it’s not physiologically addictive nor subject to dangerous withdrawal) and sometimes kids end up coming away with NEW substances they use ( or at the very least new friends who use them.)