Who is Jason

Jason Bresnehan is a fixer—of businesses, of broken momentum, and occasionally of entire spiritual frameworks gone sideways. He speaks fluent boardroom and AA, deploys Catholic doctrine with the subtlety of a scalpel, and isn’t afraid to lace his insights with both war-room metaphors and dad-sermon tenderness.

Founder of Evahan, a consultancy built on the idea that legacy and liquidity don’t need to fight, Jason draws on 30 years of commercial grit, tactical leadership, and emotional radar to help people rebuild what entropy took. He works with companies, communities, and recovery misfits alike—often using the same principles to sort both cap tables and chaotic lives.

He’s finalising his first book—a memoir-in-doctrine forged in the trenches of alcoholic recovery, endurance motorsport obsession, and spiritual trench marches. That book, partly teased on his Pursuit of Luck blog, is the cornerstone of a broader movement to connect practical wisdom with satirical grit, spiritual heat, and a recovery roadmap lined with breadcrumbs and tactical grace.

He hasn’t accepted a book deal yet. He’s waiting to find an agent with the right blend of shared craziness—someone fluent in spiritual paradox, recovery warfare, and satire laced with spreadsheet rigor. 

Because Jason’s writing doesn’t sit in a genre.

It accelerates between them. His work echoes with tones of:

  • Liturgical recovery memoirs that swap incense for henna tattoos and serenity for tactical doctrine

  • Fixer theology, where the Four Foundation Stones wear combat boots and surrender is something you fight for

  • Business noir, told through deal sheets, war metaphors, and philosophical whiplash

  • And field manuals for misfits, blending Catholic teachings with AA trench wisdom.

When Jason writes, the reader isn’t just entertained. They’re recalibrated. When he speaks, the crowd doesn’t just listen. They shift posture. When he fixes, the thing stays fixed.

If you’re wondering what he does, the answer is this:

He helps people fix what they didn’t think could be fixed.

Then he points them toward grace—and lets the luck decide the tempo.

Jason undertakes specialist consulting for high-net worth families.