

Recovery Planning is where we slow things down, put everything on the table, and design a path that actually fits your life. Instead of handing you a generic checklist, we sit with you and ask the questions that matter: What does a good day look like for you? What are you afraid of losing? What would feel like real progress in the next 30, 60, or 90 days?
From there, we build a written plan together that is clear and realistic. It includes your own goals - sobriety, housing, employment, repairing relationships, managing mental health - and the specific steps needed to move toward them. We consider your strengths, your supports, and the risks in your environment, so the plan is both hopeful and honest.
We use a stage-of-recovery approach, recognizing that early stabilization looks different from rebuilding long-term. If you are just out of treatment or incarceration, the plan may focus first on basic safety, structure, and follow-up care. As you gain stability, we expand into education, employment, family work, and long-term wellness.
This is not a document that gets filed away and forgotten. We revisit it frequently, track progress, and adjust it when life changes - because it will. Every update becomes a chance to notice what is working, learn from what is not, and keep you moving forward.
For professionals, our recovery plans provide a clear, shared roadmap. With consent, we can coordinate around that plan so everyone - courts, providers, peer supports - is pulling in the same direction.
If you are tired of drifting from crisis to crisis, recovery planning gives you something solid to hold onto: a step-by-step path that reflects who you are and where you want your life to go.