Non-clinical honesty
Still Haven is not presented as licensed treatment. It is a hospitality-led environment that may support later mission programming through the right qualified partners.
Veteran-Owned Retreat Project
Still Haven is led by Erin Wyrick, a U.S. Army Reserve veteran, and is being developed with a mission that starts with veterans while staying honest about what Phase 1 can and cannot do today.
Mission clarity
Still Haven exists because environment matters. The long-range vision is to create a restorative place that can serve veterans first, then expand carefully into broader retreat programming if operations, compliance, and partnerships support it.
That mission is meaningful only if the first phase is executed cleanly. The site therefore frames the immediate need as infrastructure activation, two operating silo suites, and a disciplined opening path instead of making promises the project has not yet earned the right to make.
Still Haven is not presented as licensed treatment. It is a hospitality-led environment that may support later mission programming through the right qualified partners.
The project is not asking supporters to fund an entire retreat campus at once. The current goal is two lawful, bookable silo suites and the systems that make them viable.
Permitting, utility coordination, weather, inspections, and early market adoption are acknowledged openly because credible mission work still depends on disciplined underwriting.
Support now
Use the public support link if you want to help fund the two Phase 1 silo suites and the enabling site work it depends on.
Investor path
Review the market logic, forecast assumptions, exit framing, and scalability path if you need the investor-ready version of the story.
Sponsor or refer
Use the contact path if you represent a sponsor, local business, referral partner, or mission-aligned supporter.
Next step
Still Haven reads as grounded and serious: a real mission, a real founder, a real current need, and a review path that gives supporters the packet before it asks them to believe more than the project can prove.