My Bio
I am a grateful recovered alcoholic, blessed with the gift of sobriety since March 14, 2012. But addiction was only one symptom of something deeper. Long before I ever picked up a drink, I was spiritually sick: restless, afraid, resentful, self-reliant, exhausted from trying to control everything and everyone. Alcohol eventually became the symptom that forced me to look at what was really wrong. When I got sober, I did not know God. I was not searching for Him. I was searching for relief.
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Alcoholics Anonymous introduced me to recovery one day at a time. It did not demand belief. It asked for honesty, willingness, and action. Through working the program (slowly, imperfectly, sometimes crawling), I began to experience something I couldn't manufacture on my own. God was introduced to me gently. Through people. Through change. Through freedom from the obsession. Through the lifting of resentment and fear. Recovery did not make me perfect. It made me honest.
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Over the years, I have also walked through trauma, grief, loss, codependency, broken relationships, and the sudden death of my husband. Recovery principles and a growing relationship with God have been the foundation that kept me standing when everything else shook.
I do not speak about addiction and spiritual healing as an observer. I speak as someone who survived it.


Why Purpose Driven Sobriety?
Purpose Driven Sobriety exists for the spiritually sick. For the woman who is tired of managing symptoms. For the person who feels angry, disconnected, overwhelmed, or numb. For those who have tried harder and only grown more exhausted. This work is not about religion. It is about spiritual health. It is about learning that addiction, resentment, fear, control, anxiety, depression, and self-centeredness are often symptoms of a deeper disconnection.
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Through recovery principles, honest self-examination, and a relationship with God that develops naturally, not forcefully, and healing becomes possible.​ Purpose Driven Sobriety creates a safe place to:
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• Be honest
• Question without shame
• Heal slowly
• Grow spiritually without pressure
• Learn how to live differently
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No pretending, No spiritual performance, Just recovery lived out in real time.
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"I didn’t study spiritual sickness. I survived it.
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Recovery didn’t make me religious, It made me honest. And honesty is where I met God."
The 21-Day Soul Detox is a powerful starting point. But sometimes you need someone who understands spiritual sickness to walk with you personally. If you're ready for deeper work tailored to your specific symptoms, story, and struggles. I offer one-on-one spiritual direction. Not therapy. Not coaching. Just honest, grounded support for your recovery journey.
Your Anger Doesn't Scare me
Most people who are spiritually sick are angry, sometimes at life, sometimes at themselves, and often at God.
That anger doesn’t scare me.
It didn’t scare the people who walked with me either.
Here, you don’t have to believe anything.
You don’t have to clean yourself up.
You don’t have to call it God if you’re not ready.
You just have to be willing to look honestly at what isn’t working anymore.

