Therapy is essential and it is one hour out of 168. For active addiction and serious co-occurring conditions, weekly sessions often cannot match the dose of the problem: insight grows while behavior…
Outpatient care has a ceiling. Weekly therapy and even standard IOP assume the person is safe and functional between sessions. When use continues despite engagement, when withdrawal is medically risky, when mental…
Recovery mentor and recovery coach describe the same family of service: paid, one-on-one professional support for building and protecting recovery in daily life. The titles are used interchangeably across the industry, and…
A family intervention is a planned, clinician-guided process, not a single dramatic meeting. In our Houston practice it runs in three phases: preparation (assessment, team building, treatment arrangements, rehearsal), the conversation itself…
Weekly therapy is powerful, but it is one hour out of 168. When addiction or a co-occurring condition is active, the other 167 hours often need structure too. The signs below tell…
Executive recovery mentoring is private, one-on-one recovery support designed for professionals whose career, license, or reputation cannot absorb a public stumble: executives, physicians, attorneys, founders, and energy professionals. It fits around a…
Enabling is any action that protects a person with an addiction from the natural consequences of their use. Supporting helps the person; enabling helps the addiction. The line between the two is…
A professional intervention is a planned, clinically guided conversation in which the people who love someone with an addiction come together to help them accept treatment. It is not an ambush, a…
A recovery mentor is a trained professional who works alongside you in daily life, building the skills, structure, and accountability that keep recovery going between therapy sessions and after formal treatment ends.…