What Is The Role Of An Addiction Interventionist?

I do not tell anyone what they must do or stop doing; that is not my mission. That “hidden” objective that a large part of society wants that people do not abuse or use substances is inaccurate. I’m not here to end consumption. My role is to make the person who is addicted and wants to stop see that there is a way to achieve it, to achieve it.

But what happens most of the time that I meet addicted people? They don’t know anything about recovery. I tell them: “There is another new life, and if after half a year or a year after trying it, you want to continue consuming, you can, but do not harm at least those next to you. Because you are free, you can do what you want, but allow yourself to know there is a way to stop and then decide”.

I think that everyone should do what they want with their lives. Still, it hurts me that many people are suffering without knowing that there is an alternative, a way out, and that addiction can be stopped: you can prevent consuming and build a new way of living, and then you decide. Now, not everyone knows how to help the person who drinks. I propose: “This is something new that no one has explained; you can stop, and it’s done this way. Once you know and try it, do what you want with your life.

In most cases, the person who has used it and sees that there is a solution decides to try it. No one is so highly foolish or crazy not to want to do it. Even so, the result is only sometimes that the person stops because not everyone stops using. But my first goal is to let you know that there are alternatives and to try the recovery process. Then, do what you want with your life.

Just as addiction intervention works with the addicted person so that they understand that they cannot harm the family, it also prepares this environment to prevent the addicted person’s habits from harming or harming them.

What Are The Steps Of An Intervention?

– The first step in the intervention is to contact the family and tell me about the situation they are currently experiencing, in general, and particularly about the addicted person. As a Professional interventionist, I need to know how this moment has been reached and in what situation each member concerns the person suffering from the disease.

In that meeting, they talked to me about what they see, the addicted person, and their day-to-day experiences regarding their family member’s illness.

Once I have put myself in the situation, the second step is to start the intervention work. I create a dialogue with the person who suffers from addiction. First, I listen to her to understand what is happening in her life. Once it is expressed, I directly move towards awareness.

I work on aspects such as what are the ideas that place them in a situation of consumption, and I stop to analyze with the person where the flaws of those ideas lie: why they are not having a happy life with all that process of addiction, of compulsive consumption.…