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Whether you’re taking your first steps into sobriety, transitioning home from treatment, or starting to question alcohol’s role in your life, you don’t have to find your direction alone.
Our one-on-one coaching is grounded in the Core Values Recovery model — a values-based framework that helps you rebuild with clarity, honesty, and a clear sense of direction.
Coaching isn’t a substitute for therapy or 12-step. It works alongside them, adding structure, accountability, and steady support that strengthen long-term sobriety.
This isn’t therapy, and it isn’t a 12-step program. It’s meant to work alongside the support you already have. Meetings matter, and Tom often recommends them. Coaching adds the structure, accountability, and steady guidance that strengthens long-term sobriety and helps you move forward with confidence.
Some situations call for more hands-on or structured support alongside coaching. To provide additional structure, accountability, and a steady, values-based presence, also offer:
Coordination of care, resources, and next steps to help reduce overwhelm and ensure nothing falls through the cracks.
This can include travel, daily routines, or navigating early recovery in real-life situations.
This can include working alongside families, treatment teams, and other professionals.
In-Person support during high-risk or transitional periods to provide structure, accountability, and a steady presence.
This can include travel, daily routines, or navigating early recovery in real-life situations.
Safe, supportive transportation to and from treatment, sober living, or other recovery environments.
This is not just a ride - it is a calm, structured transition with someone who understands the process.
Wondering if our coaching program is right for you? Reach out to schedule a complimentary consultation.
Tom doesn’t speak from theory — he speaks from experience. His honesty, empathy, and lived insight create a level of support that feels real and grounded. Anyone navigating recovery would benefit from his presence and guidance.
Peer support from someone who has completed the 12 Steps
Unpaid and informal, grounded in mutual aid
Focused on step work, meetings, and fellowship
Flexible availability with fewer formal boundaries
Professional, paid support that extends beyond AA alone
Short-term and goal-oriented with high-touch availability
Broader scope: travel or event support, family communication, and coordination with therapists or clinicians
Structured and customized: routines, coping skills, triggers, transitions