Men’s Residential Recovery Care

Trauma-Focused Addiction Treatment for Men in Arkansas

Trauma doesn’t announce itself. 

It shows up as rage that comes out of nowhere. As numbness you can’t explain. As a need to stay busy, stay high, or stay numb so the memories don’t surface. For a lot of men, trauma is the thing underneath everything, and it’s the thing that keeps getting skipped.

At Serenity Park Recovery Center, we don’t skip it. Our trauma-focused program treats PTSD and unresolved trauma as core clinical priorities — not as background context to your ‘real’ treatment. Because in our experience, healing from the trauma usually is the foundation for real treatment.

Why Trauma and Addiction Are Almost Always Connected

The research on this is consistent and significant: men with untreated trauma are dramatically more likely to develop substance use disorders. And men with substance use disorders are far more likely to have a trauma history than the general population.

That’s not a coincidence. It’s cause and effect.

Trauma — whether it’s childhood abuse, combat, loss, violent crime, accidents, or the quiet accumulation of experiences that were never safe to talk about — changes the nervous system. It rewires the brain’s threat-response, alters emotional regulation, and creates a persistent state of internal tension that substances temporarily relieve.

Alcohol slows the nervous system down. Opioids dull emotional pain. Stimulants provide a sense of control or invulnerability. These aren’t random choices. They’re the brain finding what works — until it doesn’t.

This is why treating addiction without treating trauma rarely produces lasting recovery. The relief that drove the use is still there, still unaddressed, still pulling. Trauma-focused treatment closes that loop.

How Trauma Shows Up — Especially in Men

Trauma doesn’t always look like flashbacks and nightmares. In men especially, it often looks like something else entirely:

  • Explosive anger or irritability that seems disproportionate to the situation
  • Emotional numbness — the inability to feel much of anything, including joy
  • Hypervigilance — always scanning for threats, never fully relaxing
  • Avoidance of certain people, places, topics, or memories
  • Difficulty sleeping, intrusive thoughts, or persistent nightmares
  • Feeling detached from your own life — like you’re watching it happen from a distance
  • Using substances to ‘turn off’ your brain at the end of the day
  • Shame, guilt, and self-blame that feel impossible to shake
  • Relationship patterns that keep breaking down in the same ways
Many men who come to Serenity Park have never connected these experiences to trauma. They’ve lived with them so long they’ve become ‘just how I am.’ Part of our clinical work is helping men understand what’s actually happening, and that it responds to treatment.

Types of Trauma We Address in Treatment

Childhood Trauma and Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)

Physical, emotional, or sexual abuse. Neglect. Household dysfunction. Growing up in an environment where safety was unpredictable. Childhood trauma has some of the longest-lasting effects on adult mental health and substance use, and some of the most powerful responses to treatment.

Combat and Military Trauma

Veterans and service members carry unique trauma burdens: combat exposure, moral injury, loss of fellow service members, and the difficulty of reintegrating into civilian life. We treat these experiences with the seriousness and clinical depth they require.

Loss and Grief

The death of a parent, child, partner, or close friend. Loss of a relationship, a career, an identity, or years to addiction. Complicated grief that was never fully processed. Grief is traumatic, and we treat it as such.

Relationship and Interpersonal Trauma

Emotional abuse, controlling relationships, betrayal trauma, witnessing domestic violence, or growing up in a home where love was conditional or unsafe. These experiences leave real neurological and emotional imprints.

Accidental or Sudden Trauma

Car accidents, workplace injuries, witnessing violence, near-death experiences, or the sudden loss of someone close. Single-incident traumas can be just as disruptive to the nervous system as prolonged exposure.

Complex and Cumulative Trauma

Trauma doesn’t have to come from one defining event. Many men carry years of accumulated stress, chronic adversity, microaggressions, systemic exposure, or relational wounds that add up to a significant trauma burden — even if no single event seems ‘bad enough’ to explain it.

How We Treat Trauma at Serenity Park

Trauma treatment requires a specific clinical approach — one that creates safety before asking clients to go deeper, and that addresses both the trauma and the substance use that’s been managing it. Here’s how we do it:

Seeking Safety

Seeking Safety is the evidence-based treatment model we use as the foundation of our trauma work. Developed specifically for people dealing with PTSD and substance use simultaneously, it focuses on building safety, coping skills, and stabilization before processing traumatic content. 

This sequencing is clinically critical: clients need to be stable enough to engage with trauma before they’re asked to confront it.

Seeking Safety covers 25 topics including trauma and addiction education, boundary setting, coping with triggers, taking good care of yourself, and rebuilding a life that feels worth living. It’s practical, structured, and deeply effective.

PTSD Therapy

For clients with diagnosed or suspected PTSD, our clinical team provides dedicated PTSD therapy as part of the individualized treatment plan. This includes psychoeducation about how PTSD works neurologically, skill-building for managing symptoms, and structured therapeutic work at a pace that the client can handle safely.

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT)

DBT is a natural fit for trauma treatment because trauma and emotional dysregulation are deeply linked. DBT’s distress tolerance and emotional regulation modules give clients concrete skills for managing the moments when trauma symptoms spike, without reaching for substances.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT addresses the trauma-linked thought patterns that drive both PTSD symptoms and substance use. Catastrophizing, negative self-belief, hypervigilance, and shame-based thinking are all targets of CBT work in our program.

Grief Therapy and Morality Behavior Therapy

Unresolved grief and moral injury are two of the most potent trauma-adjacent experiences we treat. Many men carry guilt and shame about things they’ve done, witnessed, or survived. Our clinical team addresses these directly — not as spiritual questions, but as clinical ones with evidence-based treatment approaches.

Individual Therapy

Trauma work happens in individual therapy sessions with a primary therapist who knows your history and earns your trust over time. Group therapy has a role, but the deepest trauma work happens one-on-one. Every client at Serenity Park has dedicated individual therapy built into their treatment plan.

Peer Support from People Who Understand

Six of our staff members are Peer Support Specialists who are personally in recovery — and many have their own trauma histories. The value of being in a room with someone who has genuinely navigated what you’re navigating cannot be clinically overstated. It changes what’s possible in treatment.

Safe, Structured Environment

For trauma survivors, physical and emotional safety is a prerequisite for therapeutic progress. Serenity Park’s 20-bed facility is intentionally small, stable, and structured. You know your clinical team. They know you. The environment itself is part of the treatment.

What Trauma-Informed Care Actually Means

The term ‘trauma-informed’ gets used loosely in the treatment industry. At Serenity Park, it has a specific meaning:

  • We never require clients to disclose traumatic experiences before they are clinically ready to do so
  • We train all staff — not just therapists — to understand the behavioral and emotional expressions of trauma
  • We structure the treatment environment to minimize potential triggers and maximize predictability and safety
  • We understand that resistance, avoidance, and emotional reactivity in treatment are often trauma responses, not character problems
  • We recognize that healing is not linear and that setbacks during treatment are part of the clinical process, not failures
Trauma-informed care isn’t a specialty service we offer on the side. It’s the lens through which we deliver all of our care.

Is Our Trauma-Focused Program Right for You?

This program is designed for men who:

  • Have a history of trauma — whether or not it’s been formally identified or diagnosed as PTSD
  • Use substances to manage intrusive thoughts, emotional pain, nightmares, or hypervigilance
  • Have been through addiction treatment before but feel like the underlying wounds were never touched
  • Carry persistent guilt, shame, or self-blame that sobriety alone hasn’t resolved
  • Struggle with anger, emotional numbness, or relationship patterns they can’t explain or change
  • Feel disconnected from themselves or their lives in ways that go beyond the substance use
You don’t need a formal PTSD diagnosis to benefit from trauma-focused treatment. If trauma is part of your story — even if you’ve never called it that — this program was built for you.

Why Men in Arkansas Choose Serenity Park for Trauma-Focused Care

A Team With Both Clinical Credentials and Lived Experience

Our staff includes Ph.D.-level clinicians, a PMHNP, Licensed Professional Counselors, LADACs, and Peer Support Specialists. 

Many of our team members carry their own recovery histories and some carry their own trauma histories. Clinical training combined with lived experience creates a therapeutic environment that is both clinically rigorous and genuinely human.

Small Program, Deep Relationships

Trauma treatment requires trust. Trust requires time and consistency. At 20 beds with 30 staff, we have the structure to provide both. Your therapist isn’t rotating through a 60-person caseload. They are present, consistent, and genuinely invested in your progress.

Seeking Safety as a Core Clinical Model

Not every program uses Seeking Safety. We do — because the evidence for it is strong and because its approach to sequencing trauma work is clinically appropriate. We don’t push clients into traumatic material before they’re ready. We build the foundation first.

Men’s-Only Environment

For men with trauma histories — particularly interpersonal or relational trauma — a men’s-only environment often enables more honest engagement in treatment. Gender dynamics that complicate trauma work in mixed settings are removed. Men talk differently, and often more openly, with other men.

CARF Accredited · LegitScript Certified

Independent accreditation means our clinical practices and facility standards have been externally verified. These aren’t self-reported quality claims. They are third-party evaluations that we invite and are held accountable to.

Trauma and PTSD Treatment Is Covered by Most Insurance Plans

Trauma treatment, PTSD therapy, and integrated mental health care are covered under most commercial insurance plans. Under federal mental health parity laws, insurers cannot provide meaningfully lesser coverage for mental health treatment than for physical health treatment — which means PTSD and trauma therapy are generally covered benefits.

We accept Anthem, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna/Evernorth, Ambetter, QualChoice, and other major commercial plans. We do not accept Medicaid, Medicare, or supplemental policies.

Our admissions team will verify your coverage at no cost and walk you through exactly what your benefits include. Fill out the form below or call us directly.

From Men Who’ve Been Here

Hear from individuals and families whose lives have been transformed through compassionate care, personalized treatment, and ongoing support at Serenity Park Recovery.
“This place not only saved my life by teaching me how to live again, but they also have an amazing cook so amazing food , the counselors are not just capable but also kind and actually care. The admin staff is always helpful and friendly, and the medical professionals and doctors are good and efficient.”
Aaron W.
10 Months in Recovery
“The facilities and food are great but the people make the place. This place goes in depth with the 12 steps as well as behavioral therapy. Lots of exciting things going on with the expansion in the near future.”
Adam F.
05 Months in Recovery
“In 30+ years in the mental health and substance abuse field I’ve never worked with a more committed, competent and compassionate staff. They truly care about each client we serve. And if we aren’t the place for a caller, we do everything we can to get the caller to the right place.”
Mark W.
08 Months in Recovery

Frequently Asked Questions About Our Trauma-Focused Program

Do I need a PTSD diagnosis to enter the trauma-focused program?
No. Many clients arrive with a trauma history that has never been formally evaluated or diagnosed. Our clinical team conducts a comprehensive assessment at intake. If trauma is present and clinically significant, it becomes part of your treatment plan — with or without a prior diagnosis.
No. We use Seeking Safety as our primary trauma framework, which is specifically designed to build stabilization and safety skills before asking clients to process traumatic content. We do not push clients into traumatic material before they are clinically ready. The pace of trauma work is guided by you and your therapist together.
Seeking Safety is an evidence-based treatment model developed specifically for people dealing with PTSD and substance use at the same time. It covers 25 structured topics focused on safety, coping, and rebuilding a life that doesn’t require substances to be livable. It has been studied extensively and has strong clinical evidence for effectiveness in both PTSD and addiction outcomes.
Engaging with trauma history can bring up difficult emotions — that’s a normal part of the process. This is precisely why we sequence trauma work carefully, why we start with stabilization and coping skills, and why every client has a primary therapist and a full clinical team supporting them. You are not doing this alone, and you are not unsupported when difficult things surface.
Yes, in most cases. Mental health parity laws require commercial insurers to cover PTSD and trauma treatment at the same level as physical health treatment. We accept most major commercial plans. Call us or submit the insurance form and we’ll verify your specific benefits for free.
Trauma-informed care means the entire clinical environment and all staff are trained to understand and respond to the effects of trauma. Trauma-focused treatment means trauma is an active clinical target — with specific evidence-based interventions designed to address PTSD and trauma symptoms directly. At Serenity Park, we provide both: the entire program is trauma-informed, and trauma is treated as a clinical priority within individualized care plans.
Residential treatment typically runs 28–45 days. For clients with significant trauma histories, longer stays sometimes produce better outcomes. Your treatment length is determined by clinical progress, not a fixed calendar.

You Don’t Have to Carry That Weight Forever

Trauma doesn’t have to be a life sentence. It doesn’t have to be the thing that keeps you stuck, keeps you using, or keeps you from the kind of life you can picture but can’t quite reach. 

At Serenity Park, we treat trauma with the same clinical seriousness we bring to addiction — because in most cases, you can’t fully resolve one without addressing the other.

Our admissions team is available right now. The conversation is free, confidential, and comes with no obligation. If you’re ready to talk, we’re ready to listen.