• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bill Maher, Interventionist

Family Intervention Center of Virginia

  • Home
  • Addictions
    • Alcohol
    • PAWS
      • From Lloyd Gordon, MD
    • Drugs
    • Food
  • Intervention Models
  • Coaching
  • About Us
    • About Bill Maher
    • Our Team
    • Style Weekly Article
    • Testimonials
      • Testimonials—Professionals
      • Testimonials—Families
    • FAQs
  • Contact
  • Events
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • (804) 677-7728

Parents— Don’t Try This at Home

teenage alcoholismIt’s mind-boggling to me that families often try to treat the medical disease of addiction at home. If your teenager broke his arm, would you set the bone at the kitchen table? If he had an asthma attack, would you lecture him about getting his act together?

Of course not.

Still, families grapple with addiction at home for two reasons: First, addiction can look an awful lot like bad behavior, especially at the outset.  And second, parents feel embarrassed that addiction has found it’s way into their family, so they try solving the problem behind closed doors. There is a lot of shame related to this disease— parents feel as if they have failed.

In my 30 years as an interventionist, I’ve come to understand that addiction is one of the most complicated medical diseases to date. Few addicts recover on their own. And when they do, the hidden components of the disease have often gone untreated. An incomplete treatment leaves the entire family vulnerable to relapse. It can fracture families, which is counterproductive to your loved one finding and remaining in recovery.

Addiction treatment is never as straightforward as, say, cutting out a tumor or setting a broken bone. This disease is confusing and crazy-making. In the beginning, addiction looks a lot like a behavior problem. The manipulative behavior and the stealing feels like such a personal assault when in fact, it’s part of the disease process and there is an appropriate way to react to these behaviors that is not what you’d think.

We pull out our parenting tools and crack down with strict limits and consequences. Our intentions are good but, as the disease progresses, families don’t have the tools to deal with it on their own.

That’s why it’s important to seek help from a qualified addiction counselor, preferably one with experience in intervention, so that you make educated decisions and utilize your funds in the best way possible. Sure, I’m biased since that’s what I do.

But consider this. While a specialist costs money, just like a doctor costs money, they can direct your loved one to the best treatment for that individual and also save you money in the end– money that may have been wasted on the wrong treatment option for your child.

At the very least, find support for yourself.

Primary Sidebar

Need Help Now?
Call: (804) 677-7728

William J. Maher

CIP, CADC, ACI
Member of the National Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)
 and former Vice President of The Association of Intervention Specialists (AIS)
More about Bill Maher, Interventionist…

Latest Blog Posts …

Dr. Kevin McCauley Speaking on Neuroscience of Addiction

KEVIN McCAULEY, MD, a nationally recognized leader in research of the neurochemistry of substance use disorders will be speaking in Richmond, VA on Thursday, April 18th. There are 2 opportunities … [Read More...] about Dr. Kevin McCauley Speaking on Neuroscience of Addiction

Growth After Trauma

Positive Growth After Living With Addiction Recovery is Post Traumatic Growth! Post-traumatic growth (PTG) is a theory that explains transformation following trauma. Substance Use Disorders (SUD) … [Read More...] about Growth After Trauma

Dispelling Common Myths About Grief

If you’ve lost a loved one to this horrific medical disease of Substance Use Disorders. Given the amount of overdoses we’re grappling with these days, and a personal loss I recently experienced, I … [Read More...] about Dispelling Common Myths About Grief

Psychodrama Training

We are pleased to sponsor this upcoming Psychodrama Training in Richmond, August 12, 2022. Gain hands-on experience applying the methods of psychodrama, sociometry and group psychotherapy. CE credits … [Read More...] about Psychodrama Training

Parents— Don’t Try This at Home

It’s mind-boggling to me that families often try to treat the medical disease of addiction at home. If your teenager broke his arm, would you set the bone at the kitchen table? If he had an asthma … [Read More...] about Parents— Don’t Try This at Home

Categories

  • Alcoholism
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Family Intervention
  • Featured Post
  • Grief
  • Parenting
  • Recovery
  • Substance abuse
  • substance abuse treatment
  • Training
  • Video

Footer

Latest Post…

Dr. Kevin McCauley Speaking on Neuroscience of Addiction

KEVIN McCAULEY, MD, a nationally recognized leader in research of the neurochemistry of substance use disorders will be speaking in Richmond, VA on Thursday, April 18th. There … [Read More...] about Dr. Kevin McCauley Speaking on Neuroscience of Addiction

Contact Bill Maher

Whether you call, e-mail or write, all information is held in strict confidentiality and will not be misused or replicated in any way.

Contact Us

William J. Maher, CIP(ret.), CADC(ret.), ACI(ret.)
Call: (804) 677-7728

or send an e-mail.

Bill Maher, Interventionist
Family Intervention Center of Virginia
2405 West Main St., Richmond, Virginia 23220

Images used in this website are for illustrative purposes only.
Providing intervention services throughout the country, and especially in the Mid-Atlantic Region including Virginia; North Carolina; Maryland; Washington, DC and West Virginia.
© Family Intervention Center of Virginia, William J. Maher, CIP(ret.), CADC(ret.), ACI(ret.)
Website Development by EJ Communications