Healing doesn’t stop when treatment ends. Corner Canyon’s alumni community exists to keep you connected, grounded, and supported as you build the life your recovery makes possible.
If something has shifted and you’re not sure how to find your footing again, your Corner Canyon community is still here. One message is enough to start.
You can reach our alumni team anytime at
Sometimes the warning signs are quiet. Noticing them early gives you the best chance to get ahead of them.
Staying connected isn’t about perfection — it’s about having people around you who understand the journey from the inside.
Every Corner Canyon client receives a personal planning system at discharge, designed to support the structure, intention, and reflection that mental health recovery requires.
The planner helps support:
Our weekly gatherings aren’t about performing wellness. They’re a consistent, honest space to reconnect with people who get it
Thursdays
7:00 p.m. EST
Zoom
823 5349 1589
alumni
Throughout the year we create optional spaces for connection, celebration, and community — because recovery is richer when
it’s shared.
For alumni who feel called to it, mentorship is one of the most clinically meaningful things you can do for your own continued growth — and one of the most powerful gifts you can offer someone just beginning theirs.
Through the Corner Canyon Ambassador Program, former clients support newer members of the community as trusted guides who’ve done the work themselves. Reach out to our alumni team if this feels like your next step.
This isn’t a prescription — it’s a map. Your path will look different, and that’s okay.
The nervous system is still re-calibrating. This is the most important time to protect your structure — consistent sleep, therapy, and connection. Resist the urge to make big decisions. The habits you practiced at Corner Canyon exist for exactly this moment.
You’re beginning to integrate. Outpatient therapy or IOP provides continuity if you’re enrolled. Triggers become clearer in daily life and this is when the emotional regulation tools you built get their first real test. Stay close to your alumni community.
Things often feel better — which is exactly when people stop doing the things that made them feel better. Keep your therapy appointments. Consider whether you’re ready to step into a mentorship role. Your stability is worth protecting.
You’re no longer surviving, you’re choosing to live. Reflect on how far you’ve actually come. If symptoms start creeping back, reach out early. Your alumni team is still here and so is your community.