Addiction does not only impact the individual, but it also ripples outward, affecting partners, children, parents, siblings, and even close friends or colleagues. Watching someone you love struggle with addictive behaviours can be painful, confusing, and exhausting. Feelings of fear, anger, helplessness, or betrayal are common, and many families describe walking on eggshells, not knowing how best to help.
This page is designed to offer guidance, reassurance, and a way forward for loved ones. Whether you are a partner, parent, sibling, or part of a wider family network, my practice in London’s Harley Street Medical Quarter, St Pauls in the City of London and online offers a safe and confidential space where your experiences are taken seriously, and where you can access specialist support tailored to families and loved ones of those struggling with addiction.

Addiction can isolate not only the person affected but also those around them. Loved ones often carry the weight of secrecy, shame, and responsibility, while neglecting their own emotional needs. It is common to feel:
In my professional opinion, support for partners and families is as important as support for the individual in addiction. Without it, loved one’s risk burnout, emotional distress, and even developing their own maladaptive coping strategies.
I offer confidential therapy and guidance specifically for those who are supporting someone with addiction. This may include:
Where helpful and with your consent, I may collaborate with trusted psychiatrists, GPs, psychosexual therapists, or other specialists to ensure your support is clinically joined-up and well-contained.
Sessions can take place individually, with couples, or with family members together, depending on what feels most supportive and constructive.
One of the hardest parts of supporting someone with addiction is knowing when to help and when to step back. Families often oscillate between trying to control the behaviour and withdrawing completely out of frustration. Neither extreme tends to bring sustainable change.
Therapy provides a neutral space where we can explore boundaries that:
Boundaries are not about punishment; they are about clarity, safety, and balance.
It is a painful reality that not everyone struggling with addiction is ready to accept treatment. Families are often left in limbo, unsure how to cope or whether anything can change.
In these situations, therapy for loved ones can help you:
Even if the person with addiction does not seek help immediately, support for the family can still be transformative. By changing how you respond and by strengthening your own resilience, you create the conditions where recovery becomes more possible.
Partners of those struggling with addiction often describe a sense of loss of trust, intimacy, and stability. You may find yourself questioning whether the relationship can survive or feeling conflicted between loyalty and self-protection.
Therapy can provide space to:
For some couples, this work supports healing together. For others, it helps a partner step away with clarity and self-respect.
When a son, daughter, or sibling struggles with addiction, families can feel caught in a relentless cycle of hope and despair. Parents often describe grief for the child they once knew, while siblings may carry anger, resentment, or shame.
Therapy for family members can help:

In some cases, a family member may not reach out directly to me. Instead, it may be a personal assistant, secretary, or trusted advisor who takes on the responsibility of finding appropriate support. This is very common in high-pressure households and among clients with demanding careers or public profiles.
If you are part of a family team supporting someone struggling with addiction, please know that you are welcome to contact me in confidence. I work discreetly with representatives, offering:
Your role is invaluable, but it can also feel overwhelming. Having professional guidance ensures that your support is both effective and boundaried, without taking on more than you should.
As an accredited addiction therapist, qualified sex addiction therapist, and HCPC-registered Art Psychotherapist, I bring over a decade of clinical experience to my work with families.
My approach is:
In my professional opinion, the healing of the family system is just as vital as the recovery of the individual. When loved ones are supported, they are better equipped to set boundaries, maintain stability, and encourage recovery.
If you are a partner, family member, or trusted advisor supporting someone with addiction, please know that you do not have to carry this alone. I offer private, discreet, and specialist therapy for families and loved ones, based in Harley Street Medical Quarter, St Pauls in the City of London and available internationally online.
Together, we can explore your experiences, strengthen your resilience, and create a path forward, whether or not your loved one is ready for treatment. You deserve support, too.
Book a complimentary consultation or a private therapy session.