"Should I get a therapist or a recovery coach?" is one of the most common questions families ask on the consult. It's also one of the most badly answered ones — usually by whoever they call first, who naturally recommends their own service. Here's the version I'd give a friend.

The clearest distinction

Therapy and recovery coaching are not competing services. They're different disciplines that do different work and most clients in serious recovery benefit from both at the same time. The clearest distinction I can make:

A therapist asks you what you felt. A coach asks you what you're going to do about it tomorrow morning. Both questions matter. They're just different questions.

What a therapist actually does

A therapist is a clinically licensed mental health professional — LMFT, LCSW, PsyD, PhD, or psychiatrist (MD/DO). Their training is in:

Therapy sessions typically run 45–55 minutes, weekly or bi-weekly. The work is structured, clinical, and often slower — you don't necessarily walk out of a therapy session with a list of action items. You walk out having explored something.

What a recovery coach actually does

A recovery coach is a long-term 1-on-1 professional focused on the practical, behavioral, present-and-future side of recovery. The work is:

Coaching sessions typically run 60–90 minutes, often 1–3 times a week, with direct text and call access between sessions. The work is faster, more behavioral, more present-focused.

When you need a therapist

If any of these describe you, a therapist is non-negotiable:

When you need a recovery coach

If any of these describe you, a coach is what you're actually missing:

Why most of our clients have both

This is the part that confuses people who think they have to choose. The honest reality: most serious clients in recovery benefit from both a therapist AND a recovery coach simultaneously.

Here's why:

The most common mistake I see: Clients hire one and try to make it do the job of both. Therapy alone for a complicated addiction case means the daily life never structurally changes. Coaching alone for someone with active PTSD or major depression means the underlying clinical issues never get addressed. Both lead to the same place: things drift back to where they were.

How the two roles complement each other

In a well-coordinated engagement:

  1. The coach surfaces material that needs deeper clinical work and refers it to the therapist. A craving pattern turns out to be linked to childhood trauma — that's therapy territory.
  2. The therapist surfaces patterns that need behavioral change and refers them back to the coach. A processing breakthrough about a marriage needs to become a different way of relating — that's coaching territory.
  3. The coach translates clinical insights into daily behavior. The thing the client realized in therapy on Tuesday becomes a structural shift in their week by Wednesday.
  4. The therapist holds the deeper container. When the coaching work is going well, things get harder before they get easier — that's the therapist's territory to hold.
  5. Both keep the family system visible. The patterns inside a marriage or family aren't going to be solved by one role alone.

How to actually decide

Three honest questions:

  1. Is there clinical work to do? Trauma, diagnosable mental health, medication, active crisis. If yes — you need a therapist.
  2. Is your daily life structurally changing? If you've been in therapy and your daily structure, family system, and behavioral patterns aren't shifting — you need a coach.
  3. Are you in serious recovery from active addiction? If yes — honestly, you should have both. The cost of going halfway is almost always higher than the cost of doing it right.
The right question isn't "coach or therapist?" The right question is "what are the gaps I'm not seeing, and who fills them?"

Epic Journey's actual position

We do coaching. We do not do therapy. For every client we engage, we make sure they have a therapist if therapy is what they need. We coordinate directly with the therapist. We refer to therapists we trust. We do not pretend coaching can replace therapy and we do not engage clients who need therapy without making sure that's in place.

That's not a marketing line. It's how the work actually has to be done if you want it to last.

How we work with your therapist (or help you find one)

  • If you already have a therapist: we coordinate directly with them, with your consent. Same goals, different angles.
  • If you don't: we refer you to clinicians in our trusted network. We've worked alongside many of them for years.
  • If you're not sure if you need one: that's a question we answer honestly on the free 15-minute consult.
  • Preston's background: 12 years operating treatment programs, 3,000+ clients, 200+ interventions, trained with multiple high-level clinicians, author of The Epic Journal (48K+ copies sold).

Boundaries: what each role cannot do

The cleanest way to think about this is by what each role is licensed and equipped to do — and what they explicitly cannot.

What a therapist cannot do:

What a coach cannot do:

These aren’t weaknesses on either side. They’re professional boundaries that make each role safer and more effective. The mistake is hiring one and expecting it to do the other’s job.

The blended model: lived experience + clinical team

Here’s how a good coaching practice actually works at the high end, and how Epic Journey specifically structures the work:

  1. A coach with real lived experience — walked recovery all the way through, built stable life on the other side, owns the long-term relationship with the client. This is the part you cannot credential into existence.
  2. Functional medicine brought in to understand the biology — hormones, gut, inflammation, neurotransmitters, sleep architecture, methylation. The body work most coaching ignores.
  3. Therapists for the clinical side — trauma, processing, diagnosed conditions, medication coordination. We work with your existing therapist or refer you to clinicians we trust.
  4. Psychiatry coordinated when medication is part of the picture.
  5. Specialists for specific work — somatic, EMDR, family clinicians, when each is the right tool.

The coach is the quarterback. The clinical team handles what only credentialed clinicians can. You don’t pay each of them separately at full retail — the engagement is structured so all of it works together, with one person responsible for the whole picture.

The combination of lived experience and a real clinical team is rare. Most coaching practices have neither. Most clinical practices have no coaching layer. The blended model is what actually produces lasting results.

Results: what you should expect

When the structure is right — coach plus therapist plus clinical team working together — here’s the realistic arc:

If you're trying to figure out the right structure for you or your loved one — coach, therapist, or both — that's exactly the conversation the free 15-minute consult is built for.