Faces and Voices of Recovery
organizing the recovery community

Trainings and Events

Connecticut Community Listening Forum on Young People in Recovery on
May 19, 2012

2 Days Left to Register!

Los Angeles Community Listening Forum on Housing on June 9, 2012
Register Today!

Young Peoples' Recovery Messaging Training in St. Paul, MN on August 11-12, 2012
Register Today!
Click here for the flyer

The Science of Addiction & Recovery Training in Cheyenne, WY on August 11, 2012
Register Today!
Click here for the flyer

Rally for Recovery 2012!
Click here for more information

Recovery Community Centers in New England: Where We Are Now
Click here to find out!

Developing an Accreditation System for Organizations and Programs Providing Peer Recovery Support Services
View or download it here
Download the PowerPoint here

Association of Recovery Community Organizations (ARCO)
Learn more and apply for membership

Faces & Voices Celebrates 10th Anniversary!
Read the remarks of the people that help make it happen

International Resources Guide
Check out the Recovery movement around the globe

The Congressional Addiction, Treatment and Recovery Caucus
Click here to find out if your voice has representation

Faces and Voices Membership

Ways of Giving - click here

Donate Now - click here

Organizational
Membership - click here

Our Donors - click here

Our Organizational
Members - click here


Our Regions

Map of the United States

Get Active

Store

Recovery Resources

Our Stories

Share the power of long-term recovery. If you are in recovery, a family member, friend or ally of someone in recovery, we want to hear your recovery story!
Learn more...

 

Faces & Voices of Recovery's book page

has information on many of the growing number of recovery-related publications. It’s a work in progress, so please let us know of other books that you think we should include. Check it out!
Register to Vote at Rock the Vote

Recovery in the News

Public comes together for recovery

Matthew Reed
The Daily Targum

September 24, 2009

The Tree of Hope was in full bloom Wednesday night during an annual ceremony for National Addiction Recovery Month, sponsored by the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence.

For the ceremony, NCAAD presented a live evergreen tree that celebrated growth, life and recovery, said Jennifer Smith, a level two preventionist for NCAAD of Middlesex County.

Members of the public and those in the recovery community purchased ornaments for the tree in the name of someone who has gone through recovery, in the process of recovery or in honor of someone who didn’t make it through recovery, Smith said. All of the donations from the ornaments went toward NCAAD’s Information/Referral Helpline.

“Many people think they know about addiction. When they think of somebody who is addicted, they think of somebody at the end of the line. People don’t think about recovery. Recovery happens each and every day all around us. For those folks in recovery, they’ll tell you, it’s absolutely worth celebrating,” said NCAAD of Middlesex County’s Executive Director and CEO Steven Liga, who also served as master of ceremonies for the evening. “An addict is a sick person who can get better and an addict is a sick person who deserves to get better.”

Every year, NCAAD awards a treatment agency for the work they do for county residents, and this year they honored Oxford Houses of New Jersey, he said. The tree was planted in front of the Oxford House in Edison.

“Oxford Houses are [about] one addict helping another addict through recovery. Oxford Houses are homes for people,” Liga said. “In many cases, this is the first safe and sober home that people have had in years. Fifteen years ago, there were just three Oxford Houses in Trenton. Now there are 17 in Middlesex County.”

Oxford Houses encourage individual development and recovery within a community instead of treating them as forgotten patients, he said.

“Here, a landlord says, ‘I’ve got a house for rent in this neighborhood. You’re welcome to live here in this home and it’ll be your home too,’” Liga said. “It’s a very different and respectful model where we can send our family and friends and say, ‘Hey, this is a good place.’”

Randy, a former resident of an Oxford House in Kingston, N.J., who declined to give his last name, said his experience at the House revolved around structure and respect.

“It’s formed around structure. When people come into an Oxford House, their lives have no structure. They’re used to craziness, insanity and they need somewhere to go to take away the insanity,” he said.

“Oxford House turned my life around. It showed me how to respect other human beings and it showed me how to start to respect myself. … When you’re sitting in a place full of addicts who have all different behaviors, attitudes and thoughts about life, you have to learn how to live together. … For me it was a transition of learning how to live life again.”

back to top