James was a star athlete at Campolindo high school and a
student with excellent grades. He
had also started to experience with alcohol and recreational drugs when he was
about 14/15 years old. The problem
got worth when he went to college. After classes were dropped and very
difficult times with his family, James was hospitalized at John Muir in
rehabilitation for 30 days, then his parents suggested he go to Open Sky, a 8 to 10 weeks wilderness therapy program.
The center admits students age 13 to 28 with everything from
depression to substance abuse to eating disorders to ADD. It cuts them off from
their normal life, without any electronics, immersed in nature, in group with
peers and constant supervision.
“This is not a all a bootcamp,” says Dc Jade Wimberley, a local
naturopathic physician who’s a friend of founder Aaron Fernandes and has been
working at Open Sky since 2006, “this is a place for assessment, treatment
planning, and to start healing.” The food is organic, the staff is
experienced and all of them are trained psychologists. The camp has a
psychiatrist on site at all times.
“The schedule was very rigorous, it was not easy,” remembers
James “but I met absolutely amazing people that took us on the journey.” James characterizes Open Sky as a soul
searching experience, “I went in not knowing a lot about myself, shielding a
lot of my feelings with drugs and alcohol,” he said “I got help finding out who
I was, and how to improve my life.”
“Put into nature, they have to do everything for
themselves,” says Victoria*, mother of Ashley* another Lamorinda raised kid who
went to Open Sky a few years ago, “they are surrounded 24/7 by highly qualified
therapists, including an on site psychiatrist, who deal with emotional issues
on the spot.” She adds that the
difference is that as they are in nature, with no other resource than
themselves, confronted with the natural consequences to their actions.
“They are unplugged from society, and stripped of everything
including their clothes (everyone wears the same clothing),” adds James’s
mother Linda*, “after a few weeks,
they become part of nature and let go, and start to understand about
themselves.”
The experience at Open Sky was very dramatic for Ashley. In
her early years, she was a very passionate ballerina, until severe hips injury
ended her dreams. Her parents reacted to signs of depression and she
started seeing a long list of therapists and doctors. “She was diagnosed
with ADD, later with bipolar disorder and was heavily medicated,” said her
mother, “but nothing really worked.”
After failing college, Ashley herself sought Open Sky
because of a Miramonte friend who’s brother had been there and had greatly
benefited. “At Open Sky, people finally saw me for who I was,” says
Ashley, “until then everyone thought that something went wrong with me.
What I needed was to process things that happened to me as a child and
that were missed because I was resilient and had a lot of friends.”
Ashley thinks that the pursuit of perfection and the need to maintain a
positive image drove her to question her self worth.
“At Open Sky the medical staff took the risk to start
weaning her off medication, and they were very careful about it,” says
Victoria. “I learnt so much
there,” adds Ashley, “this is a
very magical place, with such amazing energy, it is so affirming. The staff has a level of
authenticity that is rare, they really relate to the young people.”
When she left Open Sky, the young woman had started to cut
down her medication. “It didn’t happen overnight, it took 2 years,” says
Victoria. For many youth, Open Sky
is just the beginning of the road to recovery. Ashley went to facilities while partly back in school and is
now finishing her bachelor degree. “I am graduating this year, I’m
dancing again. I’ve started my
life over as a different person,” says Ashley.
James also went to a different facility after Open Sky,
where he started taking classes and then went back to college. He graduated this year in
Anthropology. “Before I went to Open
Sky, I wanted to do everything on my own,” he reflects, “there, I learnt about
accepting help from other people, and reaching out. My relationships with others in my age group increased
tremendously, I learnt to communicate.
This has been the most important life changing experience in my life.”
Linda adds that the impact of the program has been huge on
the whole family. “As parents we had to go to therapy every week and
talk to Jame's therapist every week,” she remembers, “it was very
interactive.” She also remembers
the ‘impact letter’ that all in the family, siblings included, had to write. “The impacts letters were
huge,” she says. She went to
therapy with her husband for a year, and Open Sky gave them books to read. “I
became more opened about my feelings, I’m letting myself feel,” she says.
Today James says that he has gained awareness about his
addiction, “we don’t ever get rid of it, it will always be with me,” he says,
“but I am able to pinpoint warning signs and pull myself out of the
situation.” Ashley has found a new
sense to her life, “I feel a sense of duty, I’m driven by something bigger than
myself and I want to go into medicine. I found my light and I want others to
find it,” she says.
“We’re fortunate that we could afford it,” concludes
Victoria, “the insurance does not cover it, but it is your child and you would
do everything.” The cost is about
$485 per day, which translates into $27.000 to $34.000 for the 8 to 10 weeks
program. Some scholarships are
available. For more information
about Open Sky, contact Dr. Jade Wimberley at jade@openskywilderness.com
“The schedule was very rigorous, it was not easy,” remembers James “but I met absolutely amazing people that took us on the journey.” ---- I’m glad that James really appreciates the program he went through. I hope that he and the rest who joined the program really learned some of the most important lessons in their life. I hope that through wilderness therapy, the children, and the people around them, see their transition, from being troubled to being a better person. They may truly once lead their life down the wrong path but they still have the chance to change. Their life would go back to normal, with their good habits, good friends, and good behavior. :)
ReplyDeleteGeorgine Roe
Wilderness therapy programs in Georgia for adolescents and young troubled teens.
ReplyDeletehttp://blueridgewilderness.com/