
Private Recovery Coaching for Professionals in Vancouver
Why am I so hesitant to accept that I have a problem?
You’re not unaware. You see the pattern. You notice the consequences building.
You’ve probably tested a few ways of managing it on your own. The hesitation usually isn’t about honesty. It’s about what you believe honesty will require.
Meetings.
Treatment.
Public disclosure.
A label attached to your name.
You don’t want to disrupt your work.
You don’t want to step away from your family.
You don’t want this to define you.
So you negotiate with yourself.
Sometimes you win. Sometimes you don’t.
But if you’re asking this question — even privately — you may be closer than you think.
Most men don’t reach out at collapse.
They reach out when something feels unstable.
That’s where I work.
What This Is — and What It Isn’t
This isn’t rehab.
It isn’t a group.
It isn’t public.
It isn’t a program you’re required to adopt.
It’s not about labelling you.
This is a private, one-to-one working relationship.
We look clearly at what’s happening with alcohol, cocaine, or other substance use — and we decide, deliberately, what your next step should be.
No drama.
No declarations.
No surrendering your life.
You’re not blowing things up.
You’re stabilizing them.
Who This Is For
This work tends to fit men who:
• Are still functioning professionally
• Value discretion and privacy
• Don’t want their identity reduced to a diagnosis
• Prefer direct, intelligent conversation
• Are uneasy with their current behaviour
• Are ready to look honestly at what’s happening
If you’re looking for a large program or a community-based approach, there are excellent options for that.
If you’re looking for private, focused, one-to-one support — this may be a good fit.
What Happens Next
We start with a conversation.
One hour. Confidential.
No obligation beyond that.
You don’t have to decide everything.
You don’t have to commit to a long plan.
You simply decide whether you’re ready to speak honestly with someone who understands addiction from the inside — and recovery from the long road out.
From there, we take the next deliberate step.