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Treetop Women's Recovery House in Oakland

293 Country Club Road, Oakland, ME-04963 Visit Website
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Treetop Women's Recovery House is an intimate environment in which women struggling with addiction can receive comprehensive, holistic treatments in a peaceful, residential setting that prioritizes compassionate care. Spirituality and self-examination are emphasized as fundamental tools for fostering personal growth and lasting recovery. Meditation, yoga, 12-Step work, prayer, and contemplation are just a few of the tools utilized to guide clients into attaining self-awareness and achieving their recovery goals.

 

  • 12-Step
    12-StepThe term “12 Step Program” describes a way to recover from addiction that is based on the model developed by Alcoholics Anonymous. Many drug and alcohol treatment centers base their treatment on 12 steps – the first three of which are situational, the next four addressing the practical issues created by the addiction, followed by two steps focused on making amends for hurting others. Steps 10 and 11 involve a deeper examination of the previous steps and the final step is focused on helping ...
  • Mountains
  • Beach Community
  • Residential Neighborhood
  • Average Location/Amenities
  • Oceanfront
  • Wilderness
  • Private/Secluded
  • Resort
  • Luxury
  • Pool
  • Lake Side
  • Executive
  • Desert
  • Detox Services
  • Behavioral Disorder Treatment
  • Dual-Diagnosis Treatment
  • Outpatient Services
  • Sober Living Home
  • Day School
  • Private Rooms
  • Pet Friendly
  • Exceptionally LGBT Friendly
  • Men Only
  • Women Only
  • Men/Women Both
  • Teen and Adolescent
  • Alcohol Addiction And Abuse
  • Drugs Addiction And Abuse
  • Sleep Disorder Treatment
  • EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)
Peter Wohl, MA, LADC, CCS Recovery House Director
My personal path of recovery has included such things as three decades of martial arts practice, several episodes of psychotherapy and participation in 12-step programs. It also included a lengthy period of spiritual searching, which culminated with my beginning Buddhist meditation practice in the early 1980s. Finding deep rewards in Zen Buddhism, I have continued practice to the present day. Zen has become one of the major foci of my life, and I am now a senior priest and teacher. While living in Arizona for several years, I also studied and practiced Native American spirituality with two teachers and participated in numerous spiritual ceremonies. That too has been an important influence, particularly on my close affinity with the natural world.
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