12/16/2025
Lindsey Ward and Shayla Hoover with Recovery Support Services are teaming up to highlight former clients of PACH who have become our success stories.
Today we highlight Maggie Moor. Maggie is a Recovery House success story and we are so proud of the work she is doing in the mental health field.
Maggie’s story….
Before Recovery House, my life was consumed by survival. I spent my teenage years and early twenties numbing pain with alcohol and drugs, especially Xanax. By 2021, I had confused m**h with love, attachment, and belonging. It stripped me of hope, faith, and humanity. I stayed awake for days at a time, disconnected from reality, chasing a high that cost me my soul. Nothing mattered. Not consequences. Not relationships. Not myself.
I entered Recovery House scared, still high, and terrified of the crash ahead. The unknown felt overwhelming, but the safety and unconditional love I experienced the moment I arrived gave me hope I had not felt in years.
I stayed three months inpatient and then transitioned next door. I rode the bus to a minimum wage job placing saw blades into boxes. It was humbling and uncomfortable, but it was where stability was built. On the days I wanted to leave but stayed, stability was built. When I was diagnosed with a chronic illness, stability was built. When I experienced a miscarriage, stability was built. Recovery House taught me how to sit with pain without numbing it or destroying myself.
Today, I have four years in recovery as of November 16. I worked my way from Ability Works to office jobs, waitressing, hospital switchboard work, and eventually a full time position in behavioral health. I enrolled in college, graduated magna cm laude with a bachelor’s degree in social work and a minor in psychology, and began my master’s program in clinical social work. I just finished finals with A’s and a B while working full time. I am exhausted, but I am aligned. I live by my values. I show up with integrity. I believe in people again.
Recovery House did not just help me get clean. It gave me structure, values, and a future. It showed me unconditional love from people who understand addiction and refuse to give up on those the world has written off.
Every staff member played a role in saving my life. From Jordan at the front desk, who brought light into dark days, to Cheryl, the nurse, who refused to let us sleep through life. To Katrina, who helped turn trauma into strength. To Saless, our house mom and a constant reminder of unconditional love. To Angie, who prayed over us as we slept, Amanda, who brought joy in small moments, and Berrell, who helped us build a foundation through IOP at the completion of the program. Their words mattered. Their presence mattered. Their love restored my faith in humanity.