RedChair

Addictions Counselling & Treatment

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Tag: intervention

  • Understanding the Crucial Difference Between Enabling and Helping in Family Interventions

    Understanding the Crucial Difference Between Enabling and Helping in Family Interventions

    Helping is doing something for somebody who can not to this for themselves right now

    Enabling is doing something for somebody who could and should do this for themselves right now

    By Bill Stevens, RedChair Recovery Addiction Intervention Therapy Service

    At Red Chair Recovery Specialist Therapy Service, we’re committed to providing top-notch intervention services to families and individuals across the UK, especially in the beautiful Northwest of England. We understand that when it comes to family interventions, it’s essential to comprehend the subtle yet impactful difference between enabling and helping. In this blog, we’ll break down this vital distinction and offer practical insights to guide you through this challenging process.

    Enabling: What You Need to Know

    Enabling refers to the inadvertent or conscious support of harmful behaviours. In the context of addiction and complex issues, enabling can take several forms:

    1. Financial Support: It’s when you provide money to someone with an addiction issue, and they end up using it for their harmful behaviour.

    2. Covering Up: This is about concealing the consequences of their actions, shielding them from facing the harsh reality of their behaviour.

    3. Excusing Behaviour: Enabling often involves making excuses for their actions, which prevents them from acknowledging the problem at hand.

    Helping: The Path to Positive Change

    Helping, on the other hand, focuses on providing support with the intention of encouraging positive transformation. Here are the fundamental aspects of helping:

    1. Express Concern: Communicate your worries and fears about your loved one’s behaviour. Make it clear that you genuinely care about their well-being.

    2. Set Boundaries: Define the limits of what you’re willing to tolerate and what you expect in return. This establishes a framework for change.

    3. Suggest Treatment: Encourage your family member to seek professional help or therapy to address their issues and embark on a journey of recovery.

    Practical Examples: Applying the Knowledge

    Let’s put this knowledge into practice with some real-world examples:

    1. Enabling: Imagine you’ve been repeatedly bailing out a family member who’s been spending their money on their addiction, neglecting essential needs.
    Helping: Express your concern, set the boundary that you won’t provide more money for their addiction, and strongly encourage them to seek treatment.

    2. Enabling: You’ve been consistently cleaning up after a family member’s mess caused by their addiction, protecting them from the consequences of their actions.
    Helping: Allow them to face the consequences of their actions. Offer to clean up together and engage in a heartfelt discussion about the need for change.

    3. Enabling: During family gatherings, you’ve been making excuses for a loved one’s addiction to maintain appearances.
    Helping: Confront the issue openly, expressing your love and concern. Suggest seeking professional help to address their addiction and start the journey to recovery.

    Understanding the distinction between enabling and helping is paramount for families contemplating intervention. The ultimate objective is to offer support that fosters recovery without inadvertently perpetuating destructive behaviour. If you’re in the Northwest of England and need professional intervention services, don’t hesitate to reach out to us at Red Chair Recovery Specialist Therapy Service. We’re here to support you in your journey towards healing and transformation.

    For more information about our services, please visit our website or get in touch with us. We’re here to help you every step of the way.

  • They said “No”, and are still out there, using.

    They said “No”, and are still out there, using.

    They said “No”

    This happens. You gather, you offer love, you offer treatment and nothing. However, Family Intervention is about Intervention on the family illness as well, the fear, the pain, the enabling that alleviates these feelings. This is part of an email to a mum who is in day 3 of waiting whilst the loved one continues. 

    Dear Family Member,
    You are so worried that she is lonely, but talking to others in the group has helped.
    We may or may not be able to project exactly how she feels, rarely do we know the true extent of another’s person’s feelings. Our own needs to feel proactive, or helpful, or to relieve our own discomfort of having to wait, often means we will project a thought in order to justify our own actions.
    So, I really appreciate the power you and the other group member have, to talk about this and not act out on the urge. That is not easy.
    A using drug addict does and will need family, so as you wait, they will come to you. Maybe in anger, or sadness, humour or distress, but they will come to you. By phone or in person, text or email, they will come to you and will try to make you take care of her problems. 
    So, be patient, and always talk to them where everything comes second to him/her putting down the drugs, and the offer of help you have for them. 
    Unless there is a very real risk of harm, (always call the emergency services), then be loving, firm and resolute. 
    I suggest you all meet and read a chapter out of Love First together soon, discuss it in the way we met and were able to listen to each other, to process our fears and hopes. Do invite him/her to the gathering, regardless of the response, meet anyway.  Offering treatment to a lonely person is not wrong, but with drug or alcohol addiction, how you do it is crucial.
  • Intervene

    intervene

    verb

    1. 1.

      take part in something so as to prevent or alter a result or course of events.

      Family Interventions by RedChair.

    UK Based Certified Intervention Professionals.

    We help clear the way for recovery to take place. With vision, experience, compassion and dignity we can help your family move out of the problem and into the solution.

  • Nalmefene

    Nalmefene

    Nalmefene Reduces Alcohol Consumption

    Update: 2015

    Nalmefene is rarely used or recommended by RedChair, however, sometimes it appears this is the best course of action. Recently a client who had struggled with abstinence concepts only had one drinking pattern, that was extremely damaging chronic alcohol intake, or nothing when health or rehab intervened. Nalmefene with some puposeful therapist, life coaching, goal setting input appears to have rescued this dire merry go round. Client hardly drinks. Body, mind and soul are clearly benefitting.

    Client needs to be motivated for this process. Assessed by a qualified clinician. Willing to engage with therapist. Honest and willing to take Nalmefene as prescribed.

    We watch this process with interest.

    Will a new drug help intervene with individuals alcoholism? Nalmefene is a drug, being launched in the UK, which professionals state could reduce alcohol intake by up to 61%. Nalmefene can be prescribed by doctors with the patient receiving counselling alongside medication. The drug aims to, essentially, make alcohol consumption less enjoyable for those suffering from alcoholism.

    New Drug could Reduce Alcohol Consumption by up to 61%

    Could this work? Intervention from specialised counsellors is a sound solution to attaining recovery. The success of coupling therapy with another substance is however more ambiguous. Drug and alcohol interventions are seemingly most effective when a person is abstinent, whether that be from alcohol, drugs or prescribed drugs. As Dr. Garret McGovern, an Addiction Specialist at the Priority Medical Clinic, drugs like Nalmefene aren’t ‘wildly successful.’ Indeed, there needs to be serious action taken to help those suffering from alcoholism but is Nalmefene really part of the solution? We at RedChair are not so sure.

    Manchester was recently reported as having the highest rate of deaths in the UK relating to substances. Therefore, debates about possible ways forward, with the likes of Nalmefene, are warmly welcomed. Yet substituting one substance for another does need to be carefully thought out. Our team recognises, time and time again, the benefit of working with a person who is abstinent. Abstinence is good for a number of reasons, one being that people are able deal with core emotional issues where substances can prolong recovery. Abstinence is not however encouraged alone, there needs to be guidance from specialised interventionists and 12 step programs.

    If you’d like to talk about this further, please feel free to give our office a call, we love to chat!0800 530 0012

    To read about Manchester having the highest death rate in the UK, in terms of substance misuse, take a look at – http://mancunianmatters.co.uk/content/09039166-depth-why-does-manchester-have-highest-rates-drug-related-deaths-uk-and-what-going-