Monday, April 29, 2019

My Renascent Experience

Renascent is an addictions treatment centre in my neck of the woods. It's coming up to it's 50th anniversary and they asked people to submit stories of their experience with them. Here's the one I submitted.


I heard about Renascent at my first meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous on January 7, 2005 (also my sober date). As I was a newcomer the people at the meeting swarmed me afterward offering help. I mentioned that I was thinking of going to treatment and some of the guys told me about this great place called Renascent. A few days after that I was booked for my assessment. Back then you did the assessments at one of the houses and so I went to Sullivan House. The counsellor who was carrying out my assessment asked me what previous treatment centres I had gone to. I shared that I had been to Donwood and Pinewood and the counsellor wisely stated that, “once you come out of the woods you come to Renascent!” How right he was! I would actually use that line myself many times when I worked for Renascent’s Access Centre a few years later. I was given an entry date for treatment and told that if I attended AA meetings regularly, and checked in every day by phone, I may be able to get in early. I did just that. One of the guys who were at my first meeting also volunteered at Renascent. We became fast friends and he took me up there one day for an Alumni meeting where I got to meet some of the counsellors. Eventually, after a few weeks of calling on a daily basis, I was let in a month or so early.



My Dad dropped off at Sullivan Centre later that March and I began my 21 days of treatment. The counsellors were all great guys each with their own unique style of counselling. There was George who knew the Big Book verbatim. There was Gerry who would end up speaking at my one year medallion. There was Rod the enforcer, he told it like it was. Mike the 12 Step enthusiast. Jimmy who was as hilarious as he was kind. John another straight shooter. Ken the Start Trek fan who told us that when it came to the 12 Steps resistance was futile. Plus the manager John and assistant manager Graydon who both would be mentors to me a couple years later. There was also the great cooks Lilian and the gang. All these people would have a big impact in my recovery. I’d be remiss if I didn’t also mention the house dog Floyd. He was a great big Newfoundland Labrador. Every day I would wake up and give him a big hug to. Sadly Floyd was getting up there in age and was nearing the end of his life. One night I had a dream that I was walking along the sidewalk and Floyd’s head kept popping out of the clouds to watch me. The next day Floyd had to be put to sleep. I interpreted that dream to mean that Floyd would be looking out for me from the beyond during my recovery journey.



One of my favourite things in treatment was boarding the big yellow school bus each. Each evening it would take us out into the community to attend 12 Step meetings. As I had already been going to meetings daily, for around two months, I knew a lot of the people there. I got to know the Fellowship even better during my tenure in treatment.



Once a week every client would have a meeting with a counsellor. It was during one of these meetings where a simple conversation would change my life. I was meeting with Mike and he was talking to me about what I planned to do for work. I had been in the public relations field for several years prior to entering recovery and did not want to return to it. He asked me what I wanted to do in life and I said, “I’d love to do what you do but I’m way too old for that”. His reply was, “Are you kidding. I’m way older than you and this is my student placement”. I was amazed and inspired and left that meeting with a new goal in life. Following treatment I would begin my journey into becoming an addictions counsellor.



I graduated treatment and started going to meetings with a small group of guys who were in Renascent with me. Our small group began to dwindle as the months passed by until I was the only one left still going to meetings. I continued to go to meetings daily (twice if I could), went back to Renascent once a week for the Alumni meetings and was even briefly part of the Alumni committee. While all this was going on I entered into Durham College’s Post-Grad Addictions Counselling Program. I was surprised that out of around 25 people only two of us were in recovery. As part of the Addictions Program one had to do a student placement. Luckily for me mine would be with Renascent. At first it was a bit weird for me being on the “other side of the table”, so to speak, because the people I was working with were all my counsellors when I was in treatment. During my placement I learned a ton – way more than I learned by sitting in class. Following my graduation I began to volunteer at Sullivan Centre throughout the week and eventually was asked to become a relief worker. That relief worker job turned into a fulltime job at the Access Centre in Toronto. There was a slew of people I met working there, most notably, Charles and Tony, who’s daily conversations helped me a lot in my personal recovery. I still quote Tony to this day, “I can’t have serenity until my acceptance is higher than my expectations”. I worked at the Access Centre for around a year then went on to work at a different treatment centre. Several years later, during a rocky working year, I was given the privilege to work as a relief worker once more at Renascent splitting my time between Punanai House and the Access Centre where I met a whole new gang of great people.



As a result of my experience with Renascent I’ll always have a warm spot in my heart for it and those who work there. I’m no longer solely in the addictions filed but work as a Mental Health Crisis Intervention Worker. However, there are lots of people with addictions I deal with addictions often goes hand-in-hand with mental health. Whenever I talk to someone wanting treatment I make sure Renascent is at the top of my list of suggestions. I can honestly say that when it comes to my recovery my renaissance began with Renascent.

Dave the Dude