Sober Support
Substance Use Disorder Therapy & Recovery Support

Substance Use Disorder (SUD) is not a moral failure—it is a complex, treatable condition shaped by trauma, emotional pain, nervous system dysregulation, family patterns, and life stressors. Our private practice offers high-touch, trauma-informed substance use disorder treatment designed to support long-term recovery, emotional regulation, and identity rebuilding.
We work with individuals navigating active addiction, early recovery, relapse cycles, and long-term sobriety, especially during major life transitions.
Our Approach to Substance Use Disorder Treatment
We treat addiction as more than behavior—we treat the person, their story, their nervous system, and their environment.
Our Approach to Substance Use Disorder Treatment
We treat addiction as more than behavior—we treat the person, their story, their nervous system, and their environment.
Evidence-Based Modalities Include:
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Motivational Interviewing (MI) to strengthen intrinsic motivation
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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for triggers, cravings, and relapse prevention
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Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for emotional regulation and impulse control
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Trauma-Informed Therapy to address root emotional wounds
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Family Systems Therapy to heal relational patterns that sustain addiction
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Attachment-Focused Recovery Work to rebuild safety, trust, and identity
We Support Clients With:
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Alcohol Use Disorder
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Opioid Use Disorder
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Prescription drug misuse
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Stimulant or cocaine use
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Cannabis dependency
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Behavioral addictions (when co-occurring)
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Dual diagnosis / co-occurring mental health disorders
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Trauma-related substance use
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Chronic relapse cycles
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Shame, secrecy, and identity collapse in recovery
What Makes Our Recovery Treatment Different
Trauma-Informed, Not Shame-Based
We prioritize compassion, nervous system safety, and dignity, rather than confrontation or punishment.
Family & Relationship Integration
We address codependency, enabling, attachment wounds, generational patterns, and family healing as part of relapse prevention.
Identity & Life Rebuilding
Recovery is not only about stopping substances—it’s about rebuilding purpose, self-worth, emotional resilience, and direction.
Concierge-Level Care
We offer personalized recovery planning, collaboration with treatment centers, psychiatrists, and sober supports, and intensive support during vulnerable life phases.
Recovery doesn’t happen in isolation. Alongside therapy, many clients benefit from hands-on sober support from someone who has lived through addiction and recovery firsthand.
Our Sober Support Services connect clients with a trained recovery support person who provides mentorship, accountability, and real-world guidance—helping bridge the gap between treatment and sustainable community-based recovery.
This service is especially valuable for clients in early sobriety, post-treatment reintegration, relapse-risk periods, or major life transitions.
What Sober Support Looks
Like in Practice
A sober support companion can:
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Accompany clients to AA, NA, or other 12-step meetings
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Help reduce anxiety about attending first meetings
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Support clients in building comfort, consistency, and routine
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Introduce clients to healthy recovery fellowship and community
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Help clients meet safe, sober peers
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Encourage connection with sponsors and accountability partners
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Support clients in building a sober social network
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Reduce isolation, shame, and withdrawal in early recovery
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Offer hope through lived experience
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Normalize struggles, cravings, and ambivalence
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Model real-life coping, boundaries, and sober living
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Reinforce that recovery is possible, human, and sustainable
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Assist with creating recovery schedules and goals
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Encourage consistency with meetings, therapy, and self-care
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Provide check-ins during high-risk moments
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Help clients navigate triggers, cravings, and emotional waves
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How This Integrates with Therapy
Sober support services are not therapy—they complement it.
While therapy focuses on trauma, mental health, emotional regulation,
and deeper psychological healing, sober support focuses on:
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Real-world recovery structure and community integration
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Accountability in daily life
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Fellowship, belonging, and peer connection
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Building a sober identity outside the therapy room
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This creates a wraparound recovery model that supports both internal healing and external lifestyle change.