Being True To You
Deanne Adamson has a diverse work experience. Deanne founded Being True To You Transformational Recovery, a company that offers addiction recovery, psycho-spiritual integration coaching, online courses, and coach certification training. Deanne also holds a Masters Degree in Mental Health Counseling from Capella University. Additionally, they worked as a Miss at Southwest Behavioral Health Services for a year.
Deanne Adamson earned a Bachelor's Degree in Humanities, with a major in Psychology, English, and Philosophy, from Fort Lewis College from 1999 to 2003. Later, they pursued a Masters Degree in Mental Health Counseling at Capella University from 2006 to 2010.
This person is not in any teams
Being True To You
Being True To You is a network of our own certified instructors and coaches trained in our recovery and integration coaching model to coach clients through a transformational process. Our certified-coaching-alumni-community services our clients, our partner’s clients, and assists in group coaching, various workshops and trainings, and special events for our community. Being True To You has many offerings- Transformational & Integration Coaching, Family & Supporters Coaching, Travel Coaching, Coach Training & Certification, Sitters & Companion Training, Staff & Retreat Training, Preparation & Integration Coaching for any Program. We are mostly virtual, with the exception of travel coaching or onsite staff trainings. Our services are accessible, affordable, convenient, and highly effective. Coaching is like insurance for investments in personal growth and healing. We started coaching in 2010 helping people prepare and integrate around ibogaine treatment for addiction- we learned and offered recovery coaching for years to 1000’s of people to include family members. This grew to working with people through all kinds of psychedelic experiences and alternative treatments and holistic retreats. We have learned about many healing modalities and various technologies to understand what people are using, although we value the inner work one must do for themselves the most and help people “integrate” what they get from these experiences.