Invitation-based Interventions
When Immediate Change is Needed
Watching a loved one struggle with addition is painful. Loved ones feel completely powerless and offer suffer mental effects as a result. The truth is, families often wait too long, hoping things will shift on their own. But waiting rarely helps. That’s where we step in.
Our family-centered intervention process is not about confrontation or ultimatums. It’s about invitation. We create a structured, compassionate space where loved ones can share their experience with the person of concern and the addiction that they struggle with. We strive to create a space where families feel supported, and where the next step toward care becomes possible.
What You Can Expect:
Initial Consultation: We begin by listening. Together, we review your family’s history, patterns, and current challenges so we can understand the full picture.
Collaborative Family Mapping: Using a genogram (a family diagram built with your input), we explore inherited beliefs, recurring cycles, and the impact of addiction and mental health across generations. This helps everyone see that addiction is not a moral failing, but a family issue that can be addressed together.
Intervention Planning: With input from key family members, we design a plan that emphasizes dignity, choice, and accountability.
Structured Family Meetings: The intervention itself is invitation-based, not confrontational. Sometimes the person of concern joins right away. Other times, they don’t show at the first meeting — and that’s okay. We still hold the meeting with the family, because those conversations matter. In fact, many interventions take more than one session before a loved one accepts help.
Care Coordination: When your loved one is ready, we help with treatment placement, logistics, and safe transport.
Ongoing Support: The process doesn’t end once treatment begins. We remain connected with both the individual and the family for six months, helping to sustain change and strengthen relationships.
Who We Serve:
Families who feel like they’ve tried everything and don’t know what else to do
Loved ones who are resistant to treatment, ambivalent, or not ready to accept help
Providers seeking a trusted partner to extend care beyond the clinical setting
You don’t have to face this alone. Reach out today to start the conversation.