5 Questions To Answer Before Moving From a Halfway House

Written By: Fiona Stockard

Am I Ready To Move From My Halfway House?

delray beach halfway house

As a women in recovery, becoming a productive member of society and growing into a self-supporting human being is important! A Halfway House, or sober-living home, is a safe and structured environment for us in early-sobriety. Deciding when to move out of a halfway house can be stressful!

Here are some questions (and answers!) to help point you in the right direction.

1) Have You Completed The Twelve-Steps?

If you’re in a twelve-step program, completing the steps is the first thing you should do. Wait, I lied. Getting a sponsor is the first thing you should do. After all, you can’t work the steps without a sponsor!

Working the twelve-steps is the main goal of early-recovery. Afterwards, you get to cary the message and help other addicts and alcoholics.

2) Are You Moving With Roommates?

Moving out with roommates can be tricky. Make sure that whoever you move with is responsible! A good way to tell is to ask them these five questions! If you don’t want to do that, try asking some of the questions below.

-Are your potential roommates in recovery?

-Are you at risk if they’re not sober?

-What happens if they relapse while you’re living together?

-Is relapse a risk for you?

-Do they work a good program and help others?

-Are they able to pay their bills?

-Have they had a roommate before?

These are all things you should discuss before moving with anyone. Talk with your sponsor and sober supports. Maybe moving to a three fourths house is smarter than moving into an apartment. Above all, pray on it!

3) Are You Financially Stable?

Having and sticking to a budget is important to recovery. Moving out and being held financially accountable is pretty damn stressful! Add that to all the other stress and maybe you’re better off staying put (at least for a little while!).

Make sure that you’ve mapped out a secure budget and gone over it with someone experienced.

4) Are You Being Honest With Yourself?

Though this probably seems like a hard question to answer, it’s as easy as asking yourself two questions.

-What’re my motives?

-Do I have any reservations?

If your motives are genuine and you’re trying to progress in your life, then it might be time. However, if you have any reservations, it’s not the best time to move and you should probably wait (duh!).

5) What Do Other Sober Women Say?

Ask your sponsor, peers, family, sober supports, and halfway house managers what they think. If you’re doing the right thing, they’ll be encouraging and excited for you to move on. If they suggestion staying longer, then you should follow their suggestions. Those closest to you see you day in and day out. They’ll be able to tell if you’re ready to move or not.

Read testimonials about living in a Sober Living environment!

Why Should I Live in a Delray Beach Halfway House?

Why Should I Live in a Delray Beach Halfway House?

top ten reasons to live in a halfway house

Treatment is just the beginning. I used to hate when people told me that! It didn’t matter if they were therapists, family, or friends. I didn’t want to hear it! Turns out they were telling me the truth though.

Moving into a sober-living house (a halfway or three-quarter house) after treatment is incredibly helpful. Early sobriety is tough. Being in a structured, safe, and sober environment makes the transition from treatment to real-life easier. Simple as that.

Most newly sober women don’t know what to expect from a halfway house. They think it’s going to be dark, dank, and depressing. Or they think it’ll be a place to use without anyone knowing. Or they think something else crazy. I thought all those things and more!

The truth is that living in a halfway house provides strong community support. It’s yet another safety net against relapse.

The Top 10 Things You Should Do in a Halfway House

1) Follow the rules

2) Go to meetings

3) Get a sponsor

4) Make friends with other sober women

5) Get a job and begin to become self-sufficient

6) Get honest – ask for help if you think about using

7) Start praying and building your relationship with God

8) Be grateful for this opportunity at a second chance

9) Be respectful of your roommates – that means clean up after yourself!

10) Become a productive members of society – get in a routine and stick with it

The Top 10 Things You Shouldn’t Do in a Halfway House

1) Don’t use drugs or drink!

2) Don’t continue to act out (on an eating disorder, sexually, excessive shopping, etc.)

3) Don’t sleep all day

4) Don’t relay on everyone else to support you

5) Don’t only hang out with newly sober people – get some old-timers in your life!

6) Don’t be disrespectful to your roommates or house managers

7) Don’t get violent in the house

8) Don’t fall too far behind on rent

9) Don’t continue to do the same things and expect different results!

10) Don’t think you can do this on your own – if everyone else needs help, so do you!

Follow these lists to guarantee your success while living in a halfway house!