First Visit with My Son in Rehab: When Recovery Meets Real Life

We had a long and exhausting week of calls with our insurance company, the recovery facility, and the court. Finally, the arrangement was made: PHP with room and board. My son—Hawk—had officially begun his court‑ordered path toward recovery.

This weekend marked my first visit.

I drove an hour to see him. The visit was part relief, part heartbreak. Hawk is only 18—technically an adult, but still such a kid. The other residents looked decades older, with hollow eyes and jittery hands. The heavy bleach smell hung in the air like a warning. Everything felt gritty, like nothing could ever get truly clean again. It reminded me of visiting my grandmother’s coal‑mining town in Pennsylvania—covered in invisible soot.

When I asked Hawk how he was doing, he said he didn’t believe he had a problem. “I just wanted to make money,” he said about the drugs he sold. His words didn’t match the reality—the vapes and bottles we found at home told a different story. Even here, he finds ways to justify small rebellions. The staff watch him bum cigarettes from older patients and look away.

He showed me a video that still haunts me. It featured his old friend Ivan, who was arrested for vandalizing a local college. The reel ended with Ivan’s mugshot and an “RIP Ivan” caption. Hawk said he’d seen his own mugshot online too and casually scrolled through the comments. “Didn’t bother me,” he said. That scared me more than anything he could’ve confessed.

After our visit, I hugged him goodbye and drove home to take his sister to a theater show. Halfway through the performance, my phone started buzzing.

“Call me now please. It’s an emergency.”

When I called back, Hawk was sobbing. “They’re accusing me of using Cash App to buy a drug delivery. They said I’m being discharged tonight.”
Minutes later, he calmed down. “They realized it wasn’t me.” I heard a quiet female voice in the background saying, “This happens all the time.”

So, I guess it was okay—or maybe it wasn’t.

Later that night, I researched if Cash App misunderstandings like that really happen in rehab. Turns out, they do. In some facilities, innocent residents get flagged because a name, transaction, or phone gets mixed up. I even found cases where Cash App was used legitimately for recovery‑based incentives—small rewards for clean tests or therapy attendance. One misunderstanding can ripple through everything.

During my visit, I noticed Hawk’s hands shaking. I asked if he was eating enough or just drinking too much coffee. He said people sneak in drugs all the time. “There are so many drugs in here.” His voice was small when he said it. That moment—his hands trembling, his honesty wobbling—hit me hard.

I told him my hands used to shake, too, back in college after long nights of drinking. He knows those stories, the ones I’ve never sugarcoated. Maybe he needed to hear that you can get lost and still find a way back.

Recovery isn’t a single yes or no. It’s a thousand choices, made again and again, even when no one’s looking.

If you want to understand the exhausting fight we faced just to secure Hawk’s court-ordered care, check out my previous post. It is titled When Compassion Meets Bureaucracy: Fighting for Hawk’s Right to Heal. It dives deeply into the battle with insurance and rehab systems that many families endure silently.

When Motherhood Doesn’t Go as Planned: A Journey From Hope to Healing Through My Son’s Addiction

Mother supporting her teenage son during addiction recovery journey

No mother ever imagines that one day she’ll be arranging for her 18-year-old son to be transferred directly from jail to an inpatient rehab facility. No “good mom” envisions that her beloved firstborn—the baby she once held with such hope—will struggle with addiction.

Yet here I am, a mother who never dreamed this life for her child or for herself, sharing our story because silence only deepens the pain.

The Girl Who Was Afraid to Become a Mother

When I was a freshman in college, standing before my Journalism 101 class of 300 students, I remember declaring something that shocked everyone:

“I don’t know if I ever want to have a family. I’m afraid of what the world will be like.”

The entire lecture hall gasped.

As a child, I loved playing house and Barbies—but as I grew older, the thought of pregnancy and childbirth filled me with anxiety. I spent most of my twenties chasing fulfillment through work, moving from job to job, making friends through my career rather than dating. My standards were sky-high, my fears even higher. I told myself I’d only marry someone like Dean Cain.

From Corporate Life to Teaching Dreams

By my early thirties, corporate life felt hollow. I remembered how much I had enjoyed teaching Junior Achievement lessons years earlier—and realized I wanted to make a difference. I left my job, got certified in elementary education, and accepted that I might never marry or have children.

My friends even joked that I’d become a “cat lady,” and I leaned into it so much that I researched hypoallergenic cats—despite being allergic!

But life had other plans. My sister and a close friend set me up on a blind date, and everything changed. He wanted a big family; I wasn’t so sure—but love moved quickly. We got married, and soon I was expecting our first child.

A High-Energy Beginning

Pregnancy terrified me. I nearly lost my son in the first trimester, but he was a fighter even then. Nurses commented that he was the most alert newborn they’d ever seen. He kicked constantly in the womb and entered the world wide-eyed and ready to go.

By nine months, he was walking. By two and a half, he was talking nonstop and climbing everything in sight. His YMCA nursery teachers gently told me, “He’s… different.” They recommended an evaluation. I had no idea what that meant.

Early Signs of Neurodivergence

From age two and a half on, my son had some form of early intervention or IEP. He was incredibly bright—once testing near a 130 IQ—but his energy overwhelmed teachers. He was “too much.”

He was kicked out of preschool on the first day for playing with fire trucks instead of sitting still. His teacher sent home a single-spaced, two-sided letter listing every “offense.” He needed a behavioral therapist just to stay in class. He bit until age five, and every day was a challenge.

By kindergarten, around the time of the Sandy Hook tragedy, dropping him off became heartbreaking. He would cry and beg not to go. But like many parents, I listened to the professionals who said he needed structure. I pushed him forward, even when my gut whispered otherwise.

The Labels Begin

By age six, he was diagnosed with ADHD. Later came Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD)—a name that only partly explained his storms of emotion. He had explosive tantrums, broke skin when he bit, and struggled to connect socially.

By nine, he was exhausted by rejection—from peers, teachers, even administrators. The breaking point came when police knocked on our door one night. A classmate had misunderstood him: he’d talked about wanting a BB gun to practice shooting, and it was reported as a school threat.

At ten o’clock that night, officers searched our home. The trauma of that moment—seeing strangers go through his things—changed him forever.

When Childhood Breaks Under Pressure

Days later, he faced back-to-back substitute teachers who knew nothing about him. He melted down, shouting, “I hate you! I hate school! I want to die!”

The call from the school still haunts me. I picked him up to find him sobbing, trembling, screaming that everyone was mean to him. At home, he threw everything from the pantry shelves and said again, “I don’t want to live anymore.”

That night, we made an impossible decision: we admitted our nine-year-old to an inpatient mental health facility.

A week later, he began daily one-on-one therapy. And that was only the beginning of our long road toward understanding, treatment, and—eventually—addiction recovery.

A Mother’s Ongoing Hope

No one hands you a manual for parenting a neurodivergent child—or for watching that child grow into a teen who self-medicates his pain. You just do your best, guided by love, guilt, faith, and fear.

If you’re reading this because your family is walking a similar path, please know this: you are not alone. Your child is not “bad.” You are not a failure. And even in the darkest chapters, there is still room for hope, healing, and redemption.

Where We Are Now

Today, our son is in jail—words no mother ever expects to say. It’s not the first time we’ve sought help; he’s already been to rehab several times, each stay offering moments of clarity that eventually slipped away. Now, we’re doing everything we can to make sure he’s transferred into an inpatient treatment program again—hopefully one that can finally help him begin to heal for good.

This chapter of our story is the hardest yet, but also the one that feels most necessary to tell. In my next post, I’ll share what led us here—the repeated cycles of rehab and relapse, the gaps in the mental-health and justice systems, and how we’re learning to hold on to hope even when everything feels impossible.

🕊️ Coming Next: When the System Fails Our Kids

In my next post, I’ll open up about what came after — the three rehab stays that couldn’t keep our son safe, the moments of hope that vanished too soon, and how we found ourselves navigating a justice system that wasn’t built for kids like him. It’s a story about broken systems, impossible choices, and a mother’s refusal to give up on her child.

Life Update: Beginning a New Chapter in Our Journey

Hello, and thank you for finding Fierceboy’s little corner of the internet.

It’s been a long stretch of silence here—over a year. The truth is, this path has been harder than I ever expected. For anyone who stumbles across this blog in the future, here’s where we are now: our son Hawk turned 18 earlier this year and is now in adult jail. We are facing the difficult realities of the adult criminal justice system alongside ADHD, substance abuse, and the ongoing fight for healing and hope.

I’m a 55-year-old mom, born and raised in Pennsylvania, now living in Florida. Music and pop culture have always been a large part of my life and have quietly helped carry me through tough days. My background in communications shapes how I tell our story here, hoping it can bring light to the challenges families face.

This blog started as a place to share our family’s struggles with ADHD and addiction. Now it’s evolving into a daily journal where I’ll write more frequently about our son’s court cases, the legal system’s impact on families, and the personal exhaustion that comes with it all. I plan to keep us anonymous for privacy, but my hope is to shed light on the challenges many families endure in silence.

Though this blog doesn’t have followers yet, my aim is to reach thousands eventually — parents, caregivers, and anyone touched by addiction, mental health struggles, and the justice system. To show that behind every case number is a family holding onto hope, wearing their pain on their sleeves, and searching for a way forward.

Thank you for stopping by. More updates are coming, and I hope you’ll find something here that speaks to your heart.

With fierce love and steady hope,
Fierceboy’s Mom