Finding Peaks

The Benefits and Hardships of Gender Specific Care


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Episode 44
The Benefits and Hardships of Gender Specific Care
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Description

Today we discuss the reasons why we continue to implement gender specific care and the benefits and hardships we face while doing so.

Talking Points
  1. A discussion on societal norms in our culture and how they affect care in our industry.
  2. Going into the effective reasons why we continue to implement gender specific care despite the obstacles we currently face. 
  3. The current hardships and obstacles with gender specific care in our culture.
  4. The detrimental reasons why we don’t use non-gender specific care.
  5. Quotes
    ““Trauma is typically experienced through a gendered lens. I think that a lot of the traumas we see are actually gender specific or gender impacted.”
    – Clinton Nicholson, MA, LPC, LAC, Chief Operating Officer
    Episode Transcripts
    Episode 44 Transcripts

    [Music]

    hello everybody

    welcome to

    another special episode of finding peeks

    i am brandon burns chief executive

    officer of peaks recovery centers chief

    clinical officer

    guru

    clinical officiant

    part-time uber

    driver clint nicholson chief operating

    officer

    part-time lyft driver

    we actually share yeah we share a car

    yeah

    they fight all the time about it

    he steals his uber sticker he steals his

    lip sticker

    here we are here we are you’re a coke

    guy i’m a pepsi guy i mean yeah yeah

    it’s all about the bumper sticker yeah

    kidding and jokes aside folks of course

    we’re just trying to liven it up a

    little bit here be a little bit more uh

    intentional about drawing you in to talk

    about some serious topics that we want

    to speak to the world about

    here at finding

    peaks

    as an episode as me as the host i’m just

    going to continue to talk more about it

    that i am invested in this concept of

    disrupting an industry through our

    company culture and our vision and with

    that hopeful that uh the folks on the

    other side of these cameras and the

    social medias uh and so forth the ones

    emailing us fervently at finding peaks

    at peaksrecovery.com

    do it

    thoughts ideas questions bring it

    forward

    hopefully to give you information for

    which

    if you are pursuing treatment services

    whether it’s substance use disorder or

    mental health primary uh in that regard

    that at the end of the day the

    information that we’re giving you

    empowers you to seek treatment uh to

    find the programs that appropriate for

    you and your loved one and to identify

    where

    treatment centers may fall short and

    actually delivering those services to

    your loved ones so today we are going to

    talk about

    kind of societal norms and culture and

    how that influences substance use

    disorder

    and mental health

    uh for those out there who are like why

    is he using substance use disorder and

    not the word addiction is because our

    prior episode

    we really sort of went after that word

    and got a little passionate about it and

    i don’t want to use the word for fear

    that

    he will he will give me a good punch in

    the face so trying to move away from it

    it’s familiar

    it’s a figurative punch in the face

    figurative punches totally he can’t do

    that it’s an hr issue you are my boss um

    so cultural norms our experience is it’s

    something that we see with an addiction

    treatment it does influence behaviors it

    does cause

    trauma

    for individuals within society i was

    talking um

    a pretty uh famous

    marketing uh

    platform in our industry without using

    their name i was recently talking about

    for example how uh during election

    season right after election season

    addiction treatment experience or

    addiction treatment centers and mental

    health centers experience an increase in

    call volume related to the results of

    elections in that regard so

    something about elections is stirring

    the pot of

    substance use disorder and mental health

    in that regard it’s interesting i don’t

    have much more to expand or gain

    insights into that but that is curious

    there is something about

    the world we live in

    the society we live in that causes

    people to experience

    um suffering in those processes to the

    degree that they’ll reach out to centers

    like ours

    to address what’s going on uh maybe the

    hangover post-election maybe just the

    anxiety about who just took power and

    what that means for the individual

    but really to open this up i’m going to

    take a general direction towards you

    know the benefits in disrupting an

    industry

    or taking a look at what it means to

    disrupt an industry whether you know

    co-ed facilities or gender specific care

    is going to be really important

    especially given the fact that when we

    talk about male versus you know female

    that we’re not really culturally

    nurturing

    um

    these binary terms alone that it is much

    greater than just those terms by

    themselves but from our lens within

    treatment you know it’s kind of at a

    high level what are we seeing on the

    therapist side giving your guys’s

    talents in being therapist

    that

    you know whether it’s trauma or drive

    something that’s driving

    the substance use disorder or disrupting

    them from an anxious depressive state

    what are we seeing kind of through the

    lens of our

    patients

    that

    you are seeing where culture is actually

    playing an influence on how they feel

    about who they are

    i feel like there’s so much to unpack in

    what you just said truthfully

    um and i i appreciate you mentioning

    that obviously gender specific care is

    automatically binary uh

    and we and we can do things variable

    things uh

    to try to bridge that gap but but it’s a

    binary decision i just want to

    acknowledge that and

    however that being said

    you know having spent a lot of time on

    both of our campuses our men’s campus

    and our women’s campus

    the the culture that whether or not it’s

    from well it’s certainly from society

    but the culture of both of our campuses

    are very different i um

    you guys have probably visited both our

    campuses i assume yeah done the tour

    that once i’ve done the tour um online i

    did it to work yeah but i do think um

    you know like at the

    just in general like during groups that

    are at our men’s campus we talk

    clinically about

    um

    really helping men truthfully like it’s

    an excavating process of like helping

    men

    gain insight into themselves and um

    maybe even allowing themselves to

    release some

    difficult emotions that they haven’t

    been able to release

    and

    the women’s house tends to be a lot

    about containment where the women have a

    lot more access it seems like

    to be expressive and being open and are

    a lot more in touch with their trauma

    um

    and it’s about kind of helping them

    kind of make sense of it and then also

    contain it um

    and

    combining these cultures in a primary

    care setting

    um i i think would be a lot like trying

    to combine water and oil is that that’s

    not a thing right you can’t do that very

    well they don’t even do it just not well

    yeah you can do it but they don’t they

    don’t mix very well um

    and i think uh i think that’s why

    that’s the appeal i think of of a gender

    specific program is that um

    it’s just having that ability like it’s

    just a different skill set if i’m just

    gonna be totally honest with you and i

    think

    um and we see it too clinically like we

    have clinicians that are drawn to work

    more with the men and clinicians that

    are drawn to work more with the women

    because

    um just of their their skill set and

    approach uh

    fits better in one side or the other and

    not good or bad but just simply a fact

    is what i notice

    i think that you said something really

    important um

    like

    i do think that there is uh the level of

    care is actually important when you talk

    about gender specific treatment um when

    you’re doing the residential sort of

    stabilization model

    uh safety is is vital towards because

    what we’re again trying to do is help

    people access vulnerability and so in

    order to establish safety uh i think

    what i’ve recognized over the years and

    i think what we see in our programming

    is that gender specific programs

    actually do foster a sense of safety

    that

    maybe a

    co-ed program would actually create

    barriers to

    and so by providing these sort of

    gender-specific

    approaches we allow people to be able to

    explore

    in a way that is um

    helps them actually kind of bypass

    the uh

    the shame and expectations and

    um

    that that the sort of like binary model

    actually imposes on people um

    now i think as you sort of progress

    through your treatment

    the integration of men and women

    actually becomes really important and i

    think it becomes uh really helpful and

    really beneficial because in the end we

    don’t live in these sort of like

    vortexes you know we we live together um

    with one another and so being able to

    sort of uh kind of re-establish and help

    people develop that sense of safety

    within a coed environment is also really

    important so

    yeah in

    into that point uh

    and i think it’s worth mentioning to the

    viewers that you know challenge me of

    course go to the google

    search engines whatever and you know and

    ask google you know in relation to

    addiction how

    google the data and you’ll see that

    women and men experience addiction for

    example differently than one another

    generally you’ll see that men are using

    higher quantities of the drugs and

    they’re using it more often where

    women are generally using

    less quantities and less often in that

    regard but both experiencing

    frustrations around that addiction and

    of course that’s not going to be true

    across the board

    but when we think about you know

    stabilization and vulnerability coming

    into a setting if we’re

    if our experiences are different

    on one side of the equation coming into

    another experience i think in ways that

    makes us vulnerable to the people that

    we’re around in a in a pretty

    significant way but with those you know

    touches of differences for people

    entering treatment i think it’s

    interesting from a residential

    standpoint you know

    that

    it feels good and first and foremost to

    break it up and move them apart but

    that’s interesting to think of course

    that well at some point there has to be

    this integration um maybe interesting is

    the wrong word because it is the world

    we live in uh in that regard but the

    world that we live in prior to coming to

    p you know to a place like peaks uh is

    scary and we’ve been mistreated in a

    variety of different ways and we have

    different experiences within that you

    know maybe it’s trauma uh maybe it’s

    mental health maybe it’s a female in the

    way her dad treated her versus a male in

    the way that his dad treated him and out

    of those experiences it seems best to

    create that separation so that that

    vulnerability and the ability to bring

    that forward

    can thrive but also where where do we

    where do you guys think we have blinders

    on in this moment because we operate a

    gender specific you know uh

    culture of course and i think those

    experiences for us are uh really

    important but

    um challenging you guys to think about

    maybe in a gender specific setting maybe

    it’s around the binary language of just

    men and women where we’re not really

    seeing that being fully efficacious

    i mean i think

    i’m not sure it’s a blinder like or

    maybe it is like i’m aware of the

    blinder that like

    creating gender specific program it

    serves

    a significant portion of the population

    but it doesn’t serve another part of the

    population i think that’s very much true

    um

    and then i do think like another course

    correction we’ve had i think just in the

    last month or two is

    we kind of had a lot of our residential

    staff

    matched the gender of the program they

    were working in

    and it

    and it wasn’t the best idea necessarily

    i think it it’s helpful to have

    um well boundaried healthy people

    of both genders interacting with our

    clients and and we had kind of began to

    isolate our programs into very specific

    camps almost from a staff perspective

    and um

    and i’ve run plenty of uh programs in

    our

    plenty of groups and individual sessions

    in our women’s program and there is

    there is some uh i think there is some

    power to having like a a healthy well

    boundaried um

    compassionate person

    providing some care in that women’s

    program and then at the same time like

    you know we have a lot of really

    successful uh

    staff members that are women working in

    our men’s program that provide an

    element of care and compassion and

    concern

    that um that has been really help

    helpful i think

    i don’t know what other blind spots do

    you think we have i mean i i do think

    that when we

    you know anytime you sort of like

    separate out um

    into categories or groups you you are

    reinforcing some of the stereotypes that

    go along with those so they’re

    in in a way that we um

    having gender-specific programming does

    further entrench some of those

    uh kind of variables and i would say um

    kind of

    beliefs about self and experiences of

    shame and victimization i think it kind

    of can reinforce that sometimes rather

    than

    helping to break that up which is

    i mean we live in

    a diverse world you know like we are

    like

    gender is a spectrum you know everything

    is a freaking spectrum really and to

    when when we

    reinforce that the world is black and

    white we we miss all of the gray and in

    the ends i mean the gray is where we

    heal and so

    i think that it’s uh

    i believe pretty firmly in gender

    specific programming to a point but i

    think that it has its limits like there

    is a ceiling that you hit at which point

    uh it’s kind of run its course and now

    it’s time to fully engage with the world

    around you you know these these sort of

    like um

    i don’t know kind of like

    self-manifested little worlds that we

    try to live in and i think that and

    maybe that’s hark that kind of goes back

    to the election

    era right like i think that we do we get

    we kind of

    find our own little cloister of our own

    little beliefs and our own little circle

    of people that feel and believe the same

    thing that we do and when that gets

    disrupted it is

    extremely um imbalancing yeah but

    um

    in the end that’s what we’re trying to

    learn how to do is to to balance and

    stay still in chaos rather than try to

    avoid or ignore it

    yeah and and you know and and to catch

    it really in terms of you know to bring

    outside societal norms in you know

    america has had many discussions about

    it and about non-binary bathrooms in

    that regard and that somebody who

    identifies

    as a female

    for example with male genitalia wants to

    use the female bathroom and there’s a

    lot of tension about that within society

    but at the same time we’ve had

    individuals come in who are

    male per their genitalia in that regard

    transitioning into

    womanhood and going through that

    experience and we’ve

    placed those individuals into our

    women’s program at time and

    out of that once it’s become aware

    through the whispers of culture a parent

    finds out or something and seems to be

    you know dysregulated at some level in

    the same way that culture is out there

    you know so for me i you know went

    around and i always found myself in the

    marketing stance of like oh we’re gender

    specific and that’s really great and

    then people would say well what if they

    are non-binary in that regard and what

    are you guys doing about that

    and how does that blur these norms of

    you know gender specific care at the end

    of the day and we’ve also done it the

    other way women

    or or individuals with female genitalia

    identifying as male and making that

    transition who went into our men’s

    program as well too and

    um and then tension occurs throughout

    that as an experience but uh i think

    those are you know the types of things

    that are playing roles within this that

    for which you know treatment centers

    such as ours mental health treatment

    centers and so forth integrated care all

    have to be accounting for in real time

    because these individuals uh across the

    board in the spectrum are all suffering

    in their own you know unique way uh in

    that regard so

    so having a gender-specific camp is you

    know good to a degree but at the same

    time uh really requires um an ability to

    be

    more relational and you know less

    transactional from those those terms

    absolutely yeah it’s complicated yeah

    and you have to allow it to be

    complicated i think if you try to keep

    it simple

    um

    it’ll fail what do you guys think is the

    biggest like concern men and women early

    stages of recovery in the same room

    group room together what do you think is

    the the the sort of liability there for

    which this industry might fear most you

    know within those moments

    i mean there’s the obvious

    things of people struggling

    people

    who are maybe having some difficulty or

    haven’t regulated their impulses in a

    long time

    providing them

    an opportunity

    um

    to become distracted by either uh

    trying to attract people of the opposite

    sex but don’t get me wrong it happens um

    even in gender specific programs so i’m

    not

    that right

    that isn’t the only reason by any

    stretch of the imagination but just

    having sat in in i don’t know countless

    men’s and women’s groups it is

    men when they’re in groups with other

    men they do share about their shame in a

    different way or they share about their

    stories are they sure about their

    struggles in a different way than if

    women are introduced to the room and

    it’s the same with the women like i i do

    think

    um for a period of time i think that’s

    just really important and i think even

    you know even in the aftercare setting

    um you know i don’t think it’s

    necessarily a bad idea for people to

    still attend um gender-specific either

    groups or support groups or just have a

    friend group that’s gender-specific

    where they can talk about these things

    without kind of some of that other

    distraction but i mean it’s the same

    reason why we you know in some ways we

    don’t

    uh

    intentionally try to trigger people or

    tempt them with things or or have

    liquor bottles laying around like

    there’s no value in that creating that

    safety is just to me about removing a

    lot of

    um

    a lot of temptations maybe for people to

    that

    so they can just really dial in and

    focus on themselves and and

    having done this in both settings i can

    just tell you the the

    depth and the quality and the safety

    um in in the group setting certainly is

    just different when it’s gender specific

    it’s it’s

    for sure for a period of time to your

    point well and i think i mean

    to your point jason like whether you

    like it or not um

    trauma is typically experienced through

    a gender a gendered lens you know i

    think that

    a lot of

    um of the traumas that we see that we

    address are actually gender specific or

    gender impacted i guess maybe would be a

    more appropriate way of saying it so

    when you are

    bringing people especially who are sort

    of like early in this process who are

    just starting to access these feelings

    who are processing shame who are

    experiencing vulnerability who are still

    working on establishing a sense of felt

    and internal safety bringing those two

    worlds together can be um cataclysmic to

    a certain degree so it just has to be

    done very mindfully

    and um they are

    there are

    certain ways to approach it and um

    i think that there are also ways in

    which you can talk about it directly you

    know to to not try to avoid it actually

    but to really engage in it and and speak

    to the fact that you know um

    the way that men and women i think

    experience uh being a victim in our

    culture is really different

    and um i think that there’s a lot of

    really interesting dialogue to be had

    around that

    um so that would be like just an example

    of one way that you can kind of open

    that door but in the end you’ve got um

    you know

    when you when you’re bringing these

    traumas together you always have to be

    really careful

    yeah it in

    this is just the the kind of i’m going

    to go out on a limb here and trying to

    describe something that

    is just coming to mind as we have this

    uh conversation but uh you know in

    consumerism for example in america like

    there there are there’s specialization

    of services there is you know peaks

    recovery is an addiction treatment

    center to resolve you know in it you

    know mental health issues and uh

    substance use disorder and then there’s

    the the doctor to help you know manage

    pain and then there is the restaurant

    that specializes in serving food that

    you can’t necessarily cook yourself or

    whatever the case might be

    what i’m getting at here is that

    oftentimes we experience things that we

    need as an internal frustration hungry

    externalize it go to a restaurant i’m

    got an addiction externalize it i go to

    this place can’t sleep externalize it

    get on these meds

    as an experience at the end of the day

    and so for me

    in the seven and a half years or so now

    that i’ve been doing this and just you

    know witnessing this within addiction

    treatment cultures and uh integrated

    care as well too is this immediate

    externalization to create that internal

    wellness and the individuals that we

    treat and serve are so disrupted

    generally speaking when you take the one

    externalization feature drugs and

    alcohol away from them or the

    environments which it was more

    comfortable to be depressed in or

    anxious in or those sorts of things now

    they’re in these new environments and

    we’ve talked about it before it becomes

    about the pillows and the couches and

    you guys tvs are only 70 inches and it

    should be 85 and you know

    couching the silliness aside from it it

    feels like in a in a in a co-ed facility

    we start wanting to feel internally well

    and

    because culturally speaking of course

    we’re

    largely a heterosexual population

    there’s a significant potential for

    conflict there in the externalization of

    i don’t feel well in here they’ve just

    taken this i mean i can’t think of a

    greater dopamine kick on the other side

    of losing all that dopamine kick from

    drugs and alcohol that sex as an

    opportunity provides now it doesn’t

    as you guys are pointing out discourage

    externalization and gender specific

    cultures because

    people can be sexual in multiple ways

    than just being heterosexual in that

    regard i think the world has taught us

    that

    in a big way as we have more and more of

    these conversations and bring it to

    light but

    it seems to be that conflict that is

    most uh

    as an experienced dire within thinking

    about whether to cross that bridge into

    a coed facility

    and if we’re not disrupting that then it

    leaves this major external

    externalization and distraction in front

    of us and if i’m motivated by that i’m

    not going to talk about how you know my

    dad smacked me around maybe culture has

    taught me to be strong and big and now i

    see wounded you know female on the other

    side as a male heterosexual and i think

    oh i’m just going to be tough man and

    i’m going to save and now i’m being you

    know maybe codependent all these sort of

    features out of it and i think that’s

    the rub

    that um

    to the core of this that we’re not

    thinking about in terms of business

    models but it’s a cheaper business model

    in our industry to invite the model in

    to have them all on one site and yeah

    they’re housed together here and here

    but we’re running groups in the middle

    here and then we have two or four you

    know staff members at night time trying

    to keep all the kids apart and in

    between but the reality is with

    intentionality and once that external

    external hook takes place it’s nearly

    impossible to do productive work um

    am i wrong am i no i don’t think you’re

    wrong at all and i do think

    i think people

    i mean you’re mentioning substance use

    like when when people are struggling

    with substance use

    issues

    they

    uh

    yeah

    um

    but i will say it is it’s challenge like

    they’re used to feeling an uncomfortable

    feeling and i have to do something about

    it and that something provides immediate

    relief from it

    and so

    when somebody is four days sober that

    impulse doesn’t go away like i’m feeling

    uncomfortable i need to do something

    about it

    call the craving right

    um

    but okay now i don’t have access to my

    what i would prefer to do so i’m going

    to access a variety of other things and

    sex is a really powerful one to your

    point

    you know eating issues like we’re not

    going to set up like a gambling parlor

    in a rehab either because that would be

    appealing too like if i could go get

    lost

    in the gambling way provide the rush and

    all of that but

    but i do think like that’s part of this

    early process and stabilization is

    saying okay you have these feelings that

    feel intense and overwhelming but can

    you recognize that

    they don’t last forever in fact they

    don’t last very long at all if you kind

    of let them what lasts a long time is

    ruminating about them and telling

    yourself i have to do something about

    this rather than just like

    letting it come through and being

    mindful about it um

    so providing gender-specific care to me

    takes away one very dramatic thing that

    people can

    do often times or would be drawn to do

    and there’s an intensity too that like

    okay

    people are sharing things that maybe

    they haven’t talked to anybody about and

    and it’s being well received it gets

    really easy to conflate

    um empathy with love right like if

    people are understanding what you’re

    saying it’s easy to feel like oh my god

    this is the most important person in my

    life that i met

    yesterday right right so i don’t know

    that’s where i see it yeah

    yeah i mean

    i agree i think

    that

    really

    i guess for me treatment

    and recovery is

    the process of sort of reconnecting to

    self

    and you’re talking about externalization

    right um

    we there’s there’s still that tendency

    early on to to believe that you’re

    that your answers and your connections

    lie outside of you and i think that you

    can create environments like a co-ed

    program especially at that like early

    residential stabilization period

    in which you start to reinforce that or

    at least i don’t know it’s almost like

    you’re kind of setting people up you’re

    tempting fate really at that point and

    when in reality what

    you really need to be doing is getting

    people to go inside go inwards right

    and anything that you can do early on in

    the process of treatment whether it’s

    for

    substance dependence or mental health

    is help people reconnect to themselves

    because they people come in completely

    detached you know they i’ve most people

    come in can just completely lost and i

    mean that’s why

    identity and purpose is one of our our

    primary program weeks you know that’s

    one of our intensives because people

    have completely lost that sense of self

    so

    um and i think that anything that we can

    do as a program anything that we can do

    as therapists

    to

    help people

    remain

    focused on what’s going on inside as

    opposed to outside

    the better

    the job that we’re doing essentially

    that makes sense

    to me yeah to me hopefully the viewers

    uh in this regard and i think we’ll just

    we’ll take it out from there this is a

    uh

    this is a topic that is uh interesting

    and it’s uh it’s got tones of

    combativeness in it uh the way that

    culture probably experiences addiction

    and what it is and how addiction

    treatment centers substance use disorder

    centers integrated care mental health

    should be

    behaving in this world

    but there are internal conflicts within

    our industry and the services that we

    provide each and every day and these are

    things that whether co-ed or gender

    specific facility that we have to be

    thinking about in real time and how are

    we going to disrupt that and you know in

    our experience i think i would prefer to

    be generous if it feels like you we do

    away with a lot by separating that out

    from the very beginning but if we’re not

    thinking thoughtfully about these things

    and the business model is just to push

    them all in one room and think like

    here’s the group therapy go but yeah

    they sleep in separate places that’s

    just not being thoughtful about how this

    works

    at the end of the day because

    individuals who are receiving our

    services are hollow within and looking

    for

    largely anything to fill that space in

    that void within

    and sometimes these

    simple you know primitive features of

    our existence are the things that they

    will quickly move to fill those in and

    it’s just something to be mindful of so

    over the next few weeks uh jason

    friesman i and clinton as well too will

    be joined by dr ashley johnson uh our

    president chief medical officer at peaks

    recovery and we’re going to be talking

    about major dis major depressive

    disorder

    in a variety of different ways how it

    connects with or

    more innovative care how that connects

    with treatment

    the limitations of medication management

    in that regard the complexity of what

    takes place within treatment episodes

    around this um

    so uh for my next hosting position i’ll

    be joined by clinton and dr aj as we

    call her at the office and jason will

    have another person and dr aj i suppose

    to talk about uh what they’re looking at

    so stay tuned for that

    i think we’re going to learn a ton about

    that

    and you know especially around the whole

    notion there are slogans around there

    that say keep recovery simple and with

    major depressive disorder it is just not

    simple it is quite complex and really

    difficult to navigate in real time so

    stay tuned for that in the meantime the

    tick tocks the facebook back to tick

    tock follow chris burns

    you know screaming at it whatever he’s

    passionate about recovery it’s energized

    he brings a lot of people into it they

    do squatting and all kinds of

    interesting things that have me just

    reeling for more so check it out uh

    facebook finding peeks at

    peaksrecovery.com

    questions inside thoughts ideas concerns

    whatever it is give it to us we want to

    bring future episodes to you that are of

    value to you

    the consumer of these types of services

    uh in that regard so until next time

    signing off

    [Music]

    you

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    Finding PeaksBy Peaks Recovery Centers

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