West Stanly The Magazine Winter 2020 | Page 8

Locust Pastor opens sober houses in Locust to better help community By Chris Miller A fter about seven years serving as pastor of a non-denominational church in Albemarle, Larry Wilkins decided to change paths in 2017. He wanted to find a more substantive way to help those in the community-- especially those struggling with the opioid epidemic that has already affected so many. “As a pastor you deal with a lot of demographics, a lot of different people and situations,” Wilkins said. The people struggling with substance abuse in the county “needed more than an occasional counseling session or an occasional sermon. These folks needed a place to live. There was actually a need in our community to have a greater impact with these men than what the current church model could provide.” Originally from Kalamazoo, Mich., Wilkins, 40, left his full-time position as pastor in Albemarle and became a certified substance-abuse counselor, which he described as “new territory.” He 8 still is a pastor and gathers with a small congregation for worship in a private home each Sunday. He spent two years as a lead counselor at Bridge to Recovery’s treatment program in Monroe. Bridge to Recovery is a faith- based, clinical addiction resource center that has short-term sober housing facilities in Oakboro and Stanfield. During his time at Bridge to Recovery, Wilkins met in small groups with men in treatment. He taught them the clinical and spiritual aspects of recovery. He said despite his lack of technical training, becoming a substance-abuse counselor involves “understanding human behavior which is a broader field than just addiction” and includes “hearing what people are saying and sometimes hear what they are not saying” and being empathetic. Wilkins said his time as a pastor--where he met a variety of people and often provided counseling--also helped him in his new profession as a substance-abuse counselor. WEST STANLY – THE MAGAZINE | WINTER 2020 After receiving enough hours of supervised work experience with Bridge to Recovery, Wilkins became a certified substance-abuse counselor. He created his own non-profit group Gateway of Hope Addiction Recovery Center, with plans to eventually open a long-term rehab facility for people in Stanly County currently in treatment for drug addiction. In November of 2018, Wilkins opened his first sober house in Locust. About six months later, he opened his second also in Locust. He said they are the only two sober houses in the county. Though Gateway of Hope doesn’t own them, the houses were were given to the organization to use rent- free. He officially left Bridge To Recovery at the end of August when Gateway of Hope received roughly $250,000 of a $1 million federal grant awarded to the health department from the Health Resources and Services Administration, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human