Current Crisis – They said he was disruptive. He said he was dying.
They said he violated the “peaceful environment” policy.
Because he was sobbing.
At 2 a.m.
On the floor.
With a photo of his daughter pressed to his chest
and six months clean rotting in his throat like it wasn’t enough.
He didn’t throw anything.
Didn’t yell at staff.
Didn’t relapse.
He just cried.
Loudly.
And they told him:
“You’re triggering the others. You have to go.”
They called it a wellness decision.
He called it a death sentence.
Because that was the first night he’d let it out.
The first time he hadn’t swallowed the ache.
The first time he didn’t fake calm for the sake of everyone else’s recovery brochure.
They told him to “use his coping skills.”
But grief doesn’t come with a workbook.
And childhood trauma doesn’t respect quiet hours.
So he left.
Back to a borrowed couch.
A job interview he wouldn’t make.
A trigger-heavy neighborhood.
A pack of cigarettes and the phrase “too much” echoing in his ears.
You want to know what’s wrong with the system?
It calls crying a liability.
And silence a success.
He never used again.
But he stopped asking for help.
Stopped talking in meetings.
Stopped being honest with therapists.
Stopped trusting anyone with the volume of his pain.
You don’t recover in a place that only loves your progress photos.
Recovery is messy.
Ugly.
Noisy.
Inconvenient.
Human.
And if your definition of “safe space” excludes raw emotion?
It’s not safe.
It’s curated.
He didn’t relapse.
But he did break.
Quietly, this time.
Just like they wanted.
💥 The crisis isn’t the crying.
It’s the world that keeps punishing people for expressing pain in a way that isn’t palatable.
Because if your healing can’t be monetized, minimized, or muted—
you’re out.
He wasn’t disruptive.
He was in despair.
He wasn’t dramatic.
He was dying out loud.
And we kicked him out for it
