Recovery Coaching

Steady support for psychosocial disability and mental health

What Recovery Coaching involves

Recovery Coaching at HHWSS is an NDIS service for people living with psychosocial disability. It focuses on building everyday structure, confidence, and stability through regular contact and practical support. We work alongside people to understand what’s getting in the way, strengthen routines, and make changes at a pace that feels manageable over time.

HOW RECOVERY COACHING WORKS

Recovery Coaching focuses on consistency, predictability, and supporting people as things change in life.

Regular, predictable contact

We keep contact steady and predictable, helping people feel anchored rather than responding only when things reach crisis point.

Working with real-life patterns

We look at what’s happening day to day — sleep, routines, appointments, motivation, and stress — and work through practical adjustments together.

Staying involved through ups and downs

Mental health isn’t linear. When things improve or dip, we stay involved and adapt support rather than stepping back or starting again.

HELPFUL TO KNOW

Questions about Recovery Coaching

These answers reflect how Recovery Coaching is delivered at HHWSS.

How is Recovery Coaching different from Support Coordination?

Recovery Coaching focuses more closely on mental health, routines, and daily stability. While Support Coordination looks broadly at plans and services, Recovery Coaching stays closer to how psychosocial disability affects everyday life.

What does Recovery Coaching look like in everyday life?

It might involve working through routines, planning appointments, building confidence to engage with services, or breaking things down when everything feels too much. The focus is always on what’s happening day to day, not abstract goals.

What if my mental health changes or becomes unstable?

That’s expected. We don’t withdraw support when things become harder. We adjust pace, simplify where needed, and stay involved as things change rather than waiting for everything to be “back on track.”

Do you push people to make progress quickly?

Not at all. Progress happens in small, steady steps. Repeating the same step over several sessions is normal if that’s what helps it stick.

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