When I finally sought support, I didn’t need judgment — I needed direction.
I needed someone who understood what it felt like to hide in plain sight — dependable on the outside, but exhausted and unsure on the inside.
Recovery taught me that real change doesn’t come from shame or force. It comes from clarity, values, and small, consistent steps that rebuild trust from the inside out. That’s the work I do with clients: helping them move from secrecy and exhaustion to connection, direction, and hope.
You don’t have to hit rock bottom to ask for help. You just need a moment of honesty — and a safe place to start.
I’m Tom — a recovery coach trained in the Core Values Recovery model. My approach is steady, compassionate, and rooted in personal experience, including work I’ve done at Cirque, Hanley, and Blanchard. I don’t give orders or “fix” people. I help them slow down, listen inward, and uncover the direction they’ve known all along.
I started this company because I’ve lived the experience that many of my clients face. I know what it feels like when addiction begins to take things from you — your peace, your confidence, your relationships, and even your sense of identity. I’ve been there, wondering how I drifted so far off course and how to rebuild what I’d lost. That journey taught me two things:
Recovery is absolutely possible. Real recovery means rebuilding your life with structure, accountability, honesty, and support from people who understand the fear, the confusion, and the courage it takes to begin again.
This work became my mission. Today, I help individuals and families find clarity, rebuild trust, and create stability from the inside out. My role is to guide clients through the same transformation I went through — from chaos and isolation to confidence,
To guide individuals and families through the uncertainty of addiction toward clarity, stability, and renewed connection — using structure, accountability, and compassionate support to build lasting recovery.
A world where honesty, resilience, authenticity, compassion, and self-respect shape the recovery journey — allowing individuals to heal, families to reconnect, and professionals to thrive.