Breaking News
Posted: Dec 21, 2009
Spokane MountainElk, WA
Spokane Mountain Program OpensContact:
Beth Ragland
256-682-8690
Bethragland08@gmail.comDecember 21, 2009
Spokane Mountain, a new addiction program for 18-28-year-old males, opened in December 2009. The program is a minimum seven-month stay and works with all types of addictions. Two accomplished veterans of the mental health industry, L. Jay Mitchell and Dennis Thompson, created Spokane Mountain. These individuals also created the SUWS Adolescent Program in the early 1980's, the longest-lived program of its kind in the U.S. with thousands of graduates. For several years SUWS and the Milam Recovery Center in Seattle, WA collaborated to create a residential treatment program for substance addictions. Mitchell has founded and directed two other programs, which have successfully and innovatively helped thousands of other young people and their families struggling with addictions of various kinds.
Spokane Mountain is the culmination of their combined 50 plus years in the industry. Recognizing that addiction consists of multiple complex factors, they have designed a program to use a plurality of interventions coherently combined under a common working framework called "Relationality". This framework allows Spokane Mountain to rationally integrate psychological, neuro-physiological, relational, and spiritual components. Essentially, it is an effort to accomplish the objectives of eclecticism without the inherent theoretical and practical inconsistencies of combining interventions from different psychological theories.
The 180-acre Spokane Mountain complex actually sits in the shadow of Spokane Mountain in Washington State. Only 50 minutes from the Spokane International Airport, the complex consists of a 7,500 square foot facility including an extensive work out gym and protein shake bar, a seven-acre swimming/boating/fishing lake, a 2,400 square foot shop with multiple tools for various projects, 10 acres of wild wetlands, 25 acres of pasture for horses, and acres of forestland full of hiking, biking, and running trails. The area is full of wildlife including moose, bear, deer, elk and mountain lion. The environment feels private and even remote while being only 30 minutes from Spokane, WA.
Spokane Mountain has master level therapists who not only provide one on one therapy and group therapy for residents, but they guide each resident through important programmatic components. Thompson and Mitchell have extensive background in wilderness therapy, and Spokane Mountain incorporates some of those elements in its "rite of passage" indigenous village, taking young men from victims of addiction to free agents. Additionally, under Thompson's tutelage residents will spend three months working on a creative project of their choosing based on their interests and innate talents. The project will encourage critical thinking and problem solving with stages of planning, preparation, execution and absolute completion. During this project period residents will experience living in small personal cabins, which collectively create an interactive community responsible for their environment and cooperative activities.
An important feature of Spokane Mountain consists of caring for the body, particularly the nervous system. Many residents experience discomfort and downright pain as they overcome compulsions to use substances or engage in addictive activities like pornography, computer games or codependent relationships. A nutritional and supplemental program is established for each resident to reduce their pain and cravings while building up their nervous system. This regimen can continue for life after they leave Spokane Mountain and make the transition from addiction to freedom less painful.
Spokane Mountain has taken important features of the 12-step program to encourage spirituality and quality relationships. Much of this takes place in the indigenous village, which is creatively designed as a challenging existential journey. Residents explore the "meaning" of their addictions while engaging in cognitive practices that decrease the conflict between the sober and the addicted self. Simultaneously, residents can discover spiritual connections, which are healing in and of themselves. Ultimately, Spokane Mountain works with each resident to discover purpose and meaning in life beyond the hedonistic objectives of comfort and sensation.
Copyright © 2009, Woodbury Reports, Inc. All Rights Reserved.