Recovery Coaching
One-on-one guidance for the months after — when the urgency has faded and the work of building a life is just beginning.
How the work actually goes.
Recovery does not end when treatment ends. It begins. The first months back home are the hardest part of the year, and they are the part with the least support built in. A recovery coach is the steady weekly presence that bridges treatment and a life that holds on its own.
I work with people in early recovery — and with the families learning how to live alongside them — on the practical questions of how to do a Tuesday. Meetings, sponsorship, sober support, work, sleep, money, relationships, the things that quietly relapse a person who has done all the clinical work right.
This is not therapy and it is not a substitute for it. It is closer to having an experienced guide on the trail with you — someone who has watched many people walk this exact path, and who knows where the hard turns are.
The shape of the engagement.
- 01Weekly one-on-one coaching, by video or phone
- 02Practical work on routines, meetings, sponsorship, and sober supports
- 03Family touchpoints when helpful and appropriate
- 04Coordination with therapists, psychiatrists, and treatment alumni programs
Start with the situation as it is.
You do not need to know whether your family needs intervention, coaching, treatment navigation, or long-term support before reaching out. That is part of the work.