Rehab felt like one long group project with people you didnāt choose and couldnāt escape.Ā Youāre all crammed into this weird little bubbleāsitting shoulder to shoulder at mealtimes but emotionally on different planets. Everyoneās eyeing each other like weāre trying to crack a code, but no one speaks for the first few days. Too dissociated. Too twitchy. No one knows the rules.
It used to be a retirement home, but honestly, it looked more like a motel. Beige walls. Low ceilings. That stale, carpeted silence. The kind of place where time stretches out weirdly and nothing ever quite smells clean. The air buzzed with everything no one was saying: withdrawal, shame, caffeine headaches, legal drama, the occasional spiritual awakening, and yeahāprobably a ghost or two.
They monitored our caffeine like it was contraband. One cup, maybe two, and they acted like we should be grateful. The only real recreational activity was watching DVDs on stiff, upright chairs that somehow made your spine feel worse. No couches. Nothing soft. Nothing to collapse into, physically or otherwise.
Eventually, people started talking. Not in some bigĀ āI hit rock bottomāĀ monologueāmore like casual trauma over scrambled eggs. Half-sentences in group. Muttered confessions between smoke breaks. One guy called an Uber and just left. No warning. Vanished mid-morning meditation. (Yes, that actually happened.) Another guy kept blaming his wifeāfor the drinking, the rage, everything. The therapists kept gently nudging him toward self-awareness, and he hated it. Eventually, he stopped showing up to group. Then he left. No goodbye.
Honestly, we were all full of shit in small ways. But we were trying. Or pretending to. Sometimes it looked the same.
It felt fake at first. Like one long, awkward icebreaker. Everyone playing it coolābut notĀ tooĀ cool, because being too guarded got called out in group. But something shifts when you eat every meal with the same 50 people whoāve all seen you cry or shake or rageāwhatever your particular flavor of broken is. When someone gives you their cookie without a word because they remembered you like it better than the ice cream.
Itās not friendship. Not really connection eitherānot in the usual sense. Itās this strange kind of survival bond. Not built on shared hobbies or vibes. Built on wreckage. On being cracked open at the same time, in the same room. And maybe thatās stronger. Or maybe itās just Stockholm Syndrome in grippy socks. Hard to say.
There arenāt many places youāll see a 17-year-old high school dropout hosting a talent show with a 54-year-old rancher and a 40-year-old lawyer. And no oneās laughing at the pairing. Because it makes sense here. Nothing makes sense, so everything kind of does.
Some days I miss it. Not the placeāgod, not the walls or the chore charts or the 7am medication announcements. But the honesty. The way no one was pretending to have it together, because none of us did. We couldnāt fake itāweād already unraveled. There was nothing left to perform. Just this stripped-down version of survival: tired and twitchy and real. Like birds on a wire. All a little fucked up. Just waiting out the weather together.