Looking for recovery?

The House Of Care Wants to Help

It is the Mission of The House of Care to help all those struggling in one of our lived forms of recovery in every way we can.

WHO WE HOPE TO SERVE.

How We Want to Help

People who lived through it Helping People still living in it

Our organization was not founded by a renowned doctor or recovery specialist. Just a regular family who has been through some ringers with a plan to help other people struggling find and achieve an educational tool in efforts to succeed. After all, in recovery they teach us to give back. Service keeps you sober. Right! Well that works for all those struggling. The unique struggles and situations that a person living a life of recovery at any phase has to face can be overwhelming to say the least. We seek to make those struggles and situations easier to manage, thereby, improving chances of success and reducing the rate of relapse. We believe people who succeed have a moral obligation to give back to their community, and it is this spirit of “People Helping People”, we hope to help just one family that goes on to help one more.

Contact Us

Our project development team is constantly working to create more new programs to get more help to more people struggling and their families. If you have a need please let us know if you have an idea let us know, because we really do care. Our organization was not founded by a renowned doctor or recovery specialist. Just a normal family that has lived through some struggles and wants to help others struggle less.

The dark sad reality is, that the disease of addiction affects 46.3 million people directly in America every year. Those are the people we know are addicted its 16% of our population. A record-high 653,104 people experienced homelessness on a single night in January 2023. This is more than a 12.1 percent increase over the previous year. In 2022: 44.2 million people lived in food-insecure households. 11.7 million adults lived in households with very low food security. Then that cascades out by affecting all of their families and then their communities. These very real problem in our communities will only go away with more effort than it took to create them. Strong communities accomplish great things. Join us in the struggle as we aim to beat back relapse and recidivism though continued support services.