My why
Lived recovery, then professional training.
I came to this work the long way. Decades in sales and music taught me how to read a room, how to keep a commitment, and, eventually, how badly I needed help. My own recovery is the foundation everything else sits on.
After getting sober, I went looking for the practical, human-scale support I had needed myself: someone to ride to treatment with, someone to pick up the phone in the first uncertain weeks, someone who had been there. That's the role I now fill for other people's loved ones.
Early recovery is less about insight and more about structure. Most people don't need a sermon; they need a ride, a meal, and a steady person at the door.
How I practice
As a recovery coach and sober companion, I provide one-on-one support across the most fragile transitions, from home to detox, from detox to treatment, from treatment back into ordinary life. I run safe-transport for clients who shouldn't travel alone, and I'm available to families who need someone trustworthy on the ground.
My approach is plain: show up on time, do what I said I'd do, and let lived experience meet professional training. Accountability is the gift, not the punishment.