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Meet Our Team

 

Founder

 

Shane founded Men’s Tribal House Recovery Residence to help men struggling with Substance Use Disorder. Shane overcame his own battle with addiction and now he sees it as his mission to lift and build fellow men in recovery. Shane believes that hard work and service are a crucial component to meaningful lasting recovery. Shane is following a model of sober housing and a work program to create unity, positivity, training, and funding source for the program. Tribal House has helped hundreds of men get off parole, get back with their families, and re-enter society as productive hard working men.

House Manager


Joshua Liberator came to Men’s Tribal House over four years ago as a resident and has been sober ever since!  During the past four years he excelled, and achieved some major mile stones like becoming house manager,  completing parole successfully, and re-uniting with his family.  He now works closely with clients to help them change there lives too! He is a licensed Peer Support Specialist and he finds great joy helping addicts start new lives clean and sober. Josh spends a lot time mentoring in our program to help them find jobs, stay sober, live happy healthy lives and return to there families!

Peer Support Specialist

Michael is a successful graduate of the Men’s Tribal House program.  He is one of our peer support specialists and helps design our website. Michael struggled with substance abuse for many years and after many interventions has finally been able to achieve happiness and success thanks to this program. He has completed parole successfully and currently works as a software programmer. He lives at the Men’s Tribal House as one of the peer support specialist and loves hanging out with the guys. He enjoys going on adventures with them, talking to them, sharing his personal experience about enduring/over coming trauma, finding ways to cope with life without drugs and alcohol, managing triggers, identifying behavioral issues, forgiving self and other and living a wholesome life. 

Quinn

Peer Support Specialist

My story starts off from a young age bc I think it’s important to understand the mind state I was operating on. I came to the states from France at age 4. I was raised by a single mother who married into an abusive domestic violence and substance abuse relationship. I was sexually abused by my neighbors from ages 5-7 and bc I was the foreign kid I was often bullied and ignored. I craved some stability and security but felt empty and alone most of my childhood. Especially when my older brother got deported for selling drugs and gta. I discovered opiates after a shoulder surgery and found relief from the torment in my head. My rock bottoms were about as bad as it can get. From home invasions and robbery, to selling my body and helping women sell their bodies for me. In 2011 I was heavily into my addiction and had to go into surgery for some complications in my groin ( a testicular torsion) I ended up blowing out my coronary artery and going into cardiac arrest. I was in a coma for 5 days. The doctors told my family to come say good bye bc I wasn’t going to make it. I woke from that coma on 11/11/11 and they said I’d be dead in 6 months. I’ve tried various forms of recovery and found that I took the pieces that worked for me. Everyone’s recovery is as unique to them as their fingerprints. I tried abstinence and it didn’t work for me in the beginning bc I had ptsd, anxiety, depression, adhd, and the list goes on. Once I stopped using, I realized I had a lot of healing to do but I didn’t know how. I came across some articles on ibogaine and ayahuasca and the benefits of microdosing ketamine and psilocybin. I did some research on how they helped my specific mental health conditions and decided I wanted to explore this world of plant medicine for addiction treatment. I’m no longer on traditional Medical assisted treatment such as methadone but I do use medical marijuana for my mental health at times which is better for me personally instead of being on the list of pharmaceutical medications they want me taking. I want to tell people it’s ok to recover with Mat or through plant medicine if the goal is actually sobriety and we truly want a life better than what we know. I don’t have all the answers, I just know what works for me. I think showing people that we can recover differently and still help lift each other is a message a truly support.