Wellness

Yoga

A gentle wellness practice that helps clients reconnect with their body and calm their mind, offered as part of the healing environment at our Albuquerque location.

  • Gentle movement paired with breath that eases the tension and restlessness common in early recovery
  • A calm, structured way to reconnect with the body after substance use
  • Support for better sleep and a calmer nervous system without a substance
  • Available across every level of care, from detox and residential through PHP, IOP, and outpatient
  • Offered as part of the healing environment at one Albuquerque location, not a separate billed service
  • Adapted to every ability, welcoming clients who have never tried yoga as readily as those who have practiced for years
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Same-day admissions available. Our team verifies insurance and schedules intake, typically the same day.

Submitted information is kept confidential and handled under HIPAA. This is not a guarantee of coverage.

The Joint Commission National Quality Approval accreditation sealVerified by Psychology Today

Yoga is a wellness practice that combines gentle movement, stretching, and breath awareness to help clients feel grounded and present in their body. At Ascend Recovery Center in Albuquerque, yoga is offered as a wellness activity that complements clinical care. It is part of the healing environment rather than a substitute for treatment, and it is not a billable clinical hour.

Recovery asks a lot of both body and mind, and yoga offers a gentle way to care for both. Substance use can leave people feeling disconnected from their own bodies, and early recovery often carries physical tension, restless energy, and disrupted sleep. Yoga gives clients a calm, structured way to reconnect with themselves while the clinical team handles the treatment work. Clinical hours come from therapy sessions, and yoga sits alongside them to support overall wellbeing.

Why choose Ascend

Care built for lasting recovery

Joint Commission accredited and licensed in New Mexico, Ascend offers every level of care under one roof in Albuquerque, with 24/7 nursing in detox and residential care and admissions handled in one confidential call.

Ascend Recovery Center facility exterior in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Complements clinical care, never replaces it
Yoga is a wellness activity that sits alongside treatment. Clinical hours come from individual, group, and family therapy and from evidence-based modalities like CBT and DBT, and yoga supports that work rather than standing in for it.
Cares for body and mind together
Slow, intentional movement paired with steady breathing helps shift the body out of a stress state, easing physical tension while calming the mind at the same time.
Rehearses staying steady through discomfort
Learning to breathe through a challenging stretch is a small rehearsal for staying steady through a craving or a difficult emotion, which reinforces the coping tools clients build in clinical therapy.
Meets every client where they are
The gentle forms used in recovery are built around slow movement and comfortable stretching, and every movement can be adapted, modified, or skipped, so an injury or a health condition need not keep a client from taking part.
Rebuilds connection to the body
Substance use can leave people feeling disconnected from their own bodies, and stretching and posture work give clients a caring, present-moment way to reconnect with themselves.
Part of a full continuum in one location
Because Ascend offers detox through outpatient care in one Albuquerque location, clients can keep practicing yoga as a familiar wellness tool at every step down in care.

Treatment timeline

A clear path from detox through aftercare

Timing is clinically driven and varies by person; the stages below are a general guide.

StabilizationDays 1-7

1. Medically supervised detox

Withdrawal is managed with 24/7 LPN nursing and CIWA or COWS monitoring, with medication where appropriate. Physical safety is the priority during the most demanding period.

Early treatmentWeeks 1-4

2. Residential care and therapy

Care shifts to structured therapy, group work, and routine, with individual sessions each week and a plan built from a full assessment.

Stepping downWeeks 3-8

3. Day treatment and IOP

A client steps down to Day Treatment and intensive outpatient care, keeping strong clinical support while returning home and rebuilding routines.

AftercareWeeks 8+

4. Outpatient and relapse prevention

Lighter outpatient support, relapse-prevention planning, and coordinated aftercare help protect progress over the long term.

Levels of care

Treatment programs

Every level of care shares one Albuquerque campus, so clients step down without switching providers.

The Ascend Recovery Centers metal sign and a Buddha statue on a blue accent wall in the Albuquerque lobby
01Medical Detox

Medical detox is medically supervised withdrawal with licensed practical nurses on site 24 hours a day and CIWA or COWS monitoring. A provider sees new detox clients within hours, so the hardest early days are managed safely and comfortably before treatment begins.

02Inpatient Rehab (Residential)

Residential treatment is live-in care in an intimate 18-bed setting, built around evidence-based therapy, group work, and rest. Clients get round-the-clock structure and support while they stabilize and build a foundation for lasting recovery.

03Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)

A partial hospitalization program delivers full clinical days while a client returns home each evening. It is the highest level of outpatient-style care and a strong step down from detox or residential treatment, keeping intensive support in place without a live-in stay.

04Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

An intensive outpatient program provides several clinical hours a few days a week, so clients keep up work, school, and family responsibilities. It continues therapy and accountability while a client rebuilds daily routines at home.

05Outpatient Rehab

Outpatient care offers lighter, ongoing individual and group support for clients further along in recovery. It protects progress with continued therapy, relapse-prevention planning, and a connection to the same clinical team.

A place built for recovery

Take a tour of our Albuquerque facility

A calm, private setting designed for healing, from medical detox through outpatient care.

The Ascend Recovery Center building exterior at 881 Lead Ave SE in Albuquerque, New Mexico, a Southwestern adobe facility under a clear blue sky
Reception lounge with soft grey seating and the Ascend Recovery Centers sign at the Albuquerque facility
The Ascend Recovery Centers metal sign and a Buddha statue on a blue accent wall in the Albuquerque lobby
Community dining and common room with a coffee station and lounge seating at Ascend Recovery Center Albuquerque
Group lounge with blue sofas and a television used for group programming at the Albuquerque facility
Bright residential bedroom with natural window light, a black bed frame, and a navy accent pillow at Ascend Recovery Center Albuquerque

Take the first step toward recovery today

Same-day answers. Confidential insurance verification before a client commits.

Verify InsuranceCall (505) 537-5721

Know the signs

Common signs it may be time for treatment

No single sign confirms a substance use disorder, but a cluster over time is worth a professional conversation.

01PHYSICAL

Tolerance

Needing more of a substance to feel the same effect, a sign the body has adapted to it.

02PHYSICAL

Withdrawal

Uncomfortable, and sometimes dangerous, symptoms when use stops or is reduced.

03BEHAVIORAL

Loss of control

Using more than intended, or being unable to cut back despite trying more than once.

04SOCIAL

Neglected responsibilities

Work, school, family, or activities that once mattered gradually fall away.

05BEHAVIORAL

Use despite harm

Substance use continues even as it damages health, relationships, or finances.

06PHYSICAL

Cravings and secrecy

Strong urges to use, often alongside hiding the extent of use from others.

The Joint Commission National Quality Approval accreditation seal
Joint Commission accredited
24/7
LPN nursing in detox
18
Beds, intimate setting
100%
Confidential admissions

Insurance

In network with most major plans

Benefits are verified before a client commits, at no cost and no obligation.

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From people who recovered here

Ascend Recovery Center reviews

Mildred Hughes
a month ago
Walking through those doors the first day, my hands wouldn't stop shaking. Alcohol destroyed my relationships and left me completely isolated. Thankfully, the counselors here actually listened instead of lecturing. Sitting in these exact group circles changed everything for me. Hearing other people share their raw, real struggles made the loneliness disappear. Celebrating six months sober today. This place gives you your life back.
Terry Davis
a month ago
Coming here felt like a massive leap into the unknown, especially dealing with all that shame I carried around. The team at Ascend Recovery Center didn't treat me like a problem to be solved, but a person worth helping. There were days I wanted to pack my bags and bolt, but the support here kept me grounded. Now, I actually wake up without that weight on my chest. It's hard to put into words, but this place truly changed my trajectory.
Adrian Segura
7 months ago
Had an amazing experience here, one of the most personable groups of people to come to for recovery and truly helped me with developing the tools necessary to start my recovery. Did the 10 day detox and got exactly what I wanted out of the experience: healthy nutrition, great groups, and even your own personal TV in the rooms to help pass the time. If you're serious about your recovery and want a wholesome, worthwhile and safe place to do it, I recommend coming here.
Read more reviews on Google →

For families

How to help a loved one

1

Recognize the signs

Tolerance, withdrawal, failed attempts to cut back, and use that continues despite harm are all worth paying attention to. A cluster of signs over time matters more than any one.

2

Start the conversation

Choose a calm, private moment. Lead with care and specific observations rather than blame, listen more than lecture, and offer a concrete next step.

3

Avoid harmful approaches

Skip shaming and ultimatums delivered in anger, and never encourage a person to stop a substance abruptly on their own, since some withdrawals are dangerous.

4

Connect them with care

One confidential call to Ascend covers education, options, and insurance. In a crisis, call 911, or call or text the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.

How admissions works

Getting started takes one confidential call

1

Call our confidential line

One conversation covers a first screening, insurance verification, and scheduling. Support begins with the first call, and nothing shared is used against the person who reaches out.

2

Clinical assessment

Evidence-based screenings, including PHQ-9, GAD-7, the Columbia Suicide Screening, and an ASAM level-of-care assessment, match each client to the right program.

3

The right level of care

If medically supervised detox is needed, the team coordinates a safe arrival with 24/7 nursing. If an outpatient level fits, care starts there instead.

4

Start treatment

Once a plan and coverage are confirmed, treatment begins, with therapy and medication where appropriate carrying through each level of care.

The team behind every client's care

Meet the leadership team

Ascend is led by an experienced behavioral health team focused on quality care and strong outcomes.

Ian Treacy, Chief Executive Officer & Managing Partner at Ascend Recovery Center

Ian Treacy

Chief Executive Officer & Managing Partner
CEOManaging Partner16+ Yrs Behavioral Health

Ian Treacy brings more than 16 years of experience in behavioral healthcare leadership and program development, guiding Ascend's vision, growth, and standard of care.

Samantha Hewett, Chief Operating Officer & Managing Partner at Ascend Recovery Center

Samantha Hewett

Chief Operating Officer & Managing Partner
COOManaging Partner18+ Yrs Healthcare Ops

Samantha Hewett brings more than 18 years of experience leading high-performing healthcare organizations, driving operational strategy and scalable growth across Ascend's facilities.

Lindsay Seslar, National Director of Admissions & Communications at Ascend Recovery Center

Lindsay Seslar

National Director of Admissions & Communications
National Director8+ Yrs Behavioral HealthAdmissions Strategy

Lindsay Seslar brings more than 8 years of experience in behavioral health outreach, admissions strategy, and client engagement, leading admissions and communications across Ascend's network.

Brett Stewart, Director of Business Development at Ascend Recovery Center

Brett Stewart

Director of Business Development
Business DevelopmentReferral PartnershipsCommunity Engagement

Brett Stewart leads business development at Ascend, building the strategic partnerships and referral relationships that connect people to care.

Meet the full team

Frequently Asked Questions

Is yoga a clinical therapy at Ascend?
No. Yoga is a wellness activity that complements clinical care. It is part of the healing environment and is not a billable clinical hour. Clinical hours come from therapies such as individual, group, and family therapy.
Do clients need experience to join yoga?
No. Yoga sessions are gentle and adapted to different abilities. Clients do not need any prior experience or a certain level of flexibility, and they can rest whenever they need to.
How does yoga help in recovery?
Yoga helps ease physical tension, supports better sleep, and offers a healthy way to manage stress. It helps clients reconnect with their body and practice being present, which supports the work they do in clinical therapy.
What happens in a yoga session?
A facilitator guides clients through gentle movements and breathing at a comfortable pace. Sessions usually settle in with simple breathing, move through gentle stretches and postures, and close with a quiet period of rest.
Can a client still do yoga with an injury or a health condition?
Often, yes. The practice is adapted to different abilities, and the facilitator can offer alternatives or modifications so clients can take part comfortably. Clients are always free to rest or adjust any movement.
Is yoga covered by insurance?
Yoga is part of the wellness environment, not a separately billed clinical service. What insurance covers is the clinical program, such as detox, residential, PHP, IOP, and outpatient care. We verify benefits for the clinical program before clients commit.

Care for the whole self in recovery.

Our admissions team can explain how wellness activities support clinical care. Call for a confidential conversation.

Start With AdmissionsCall (505) 537-5721