Most families work with three different people — an interventionist, a treatment center, and then later a coach — and the handoffs are where everything falls apart. Epic Journey is built around one practice that stays with you through every phase.
The intervention goes well. The treatment center is good. Three months later, the loved one comes home and there's no one. No structure. No advocate who knows the whole picture. No one tracking the family system. The treatment center already moved on to the next client. The interventionist's job ended the day the loved one walked into rehab.
This is where most relapses happen — not during treatment, but in the months after when nobody is steering. Epic Journey was built specifically to be the person who's still there at day 90, day 180, year two.
The work that determines whether everything that follows actually has a chance.
We stay engaged inside the facility, advocating, translating, holding the family through the silence.
Where Epic Journey was built to live. The first 18 months out is where life actually gets rebuilt.
Treatment is an event. Recovery is a life. When a treatment program ends — and they all end — the family is often left holding a fragile person and no plan. The relationships built inside the facility don't follow them home. The clinical structure dissolves the day they walk out the door.
Epic Journey doesn't have a discharge date. Most of our clients stay engaged with us for 12-24 months after treatment, some for years. Same person. Same practice. The continuity is the point.
The handoff is where recovery falls apart. We don't hand off.
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