Addiction Therapy: support for substance use, habits and recovery
Addiction Therapy helps people understand and change patterns linked to substance use, compulsive behaviours or repeated habits that feel difficult to control. It can support people affected by alcohol, drugs, cannabis, gambling, gaming, pornography, smoking, social media use or other behaviours that continue despite negative consequences.
Addiction is not simply a lack of willpower. It often involves stress, cravings, emotional pain, avoidance, habit loops, shame, trauma, social pressure and changes in reward systems. Therapy helps the person understand these patterns without judgment, while building practical ways to reduce harm, regain choice and move toward recovery.
This approach may support people dealing with addictions, substance use disorder, alcohol use disorder, cannabis dependence, gambling addiction, gaming addiction, smoking cessation, compulsive sexual behaviour, emotional distress or relapse risk.
What Addiction Therapy works on
Addiction Therapy focuses on what keeps the cycle going. A person may use a substance or behaviour to manage anxiety, numb feelings, escape memories, reduce loneliness, cope with boredom or feel temporary control. Therapy helps identify these functions, then builds safer alternatives.
- Recognising triggers, cravings and high-risk situations.
- Understanding the link between emotions and addictive behaviour.
- Reducing shame, secrecy and self-criticism.
- Building coping strategies for urges and stress.
- Creating relapse prevention and recovery plans.
- Improving boundaries, support systems and daily structure.
- Exploring motivation without pressure or blame.
Recovery goals can vary. Some people work toward abstinence. Others first need harm reduction, stabilisation or a clearer understanding of their behaviour. A responsible therapist adapts the work to the person’s risk level, health situation, goals and support network.
What happens in sessions?
The first sessions usually explore the current pattern, history, triggers, risks and goals. The therapist may ask about frequency of use, consequences, withdrawal concerns, mental health, trauma, relationships, work, sleep, previous attempts to stop and available support.
Sessions may include craving tracking, trigger mapping, emotional regulation tools, relapse prevention planning, motivational work, communication skills and practical routines. The therapist may also help the person prepare for difficult moments, such as social pressure, conflict, loneliness, paydays, weekends or emotional distress.
Addiction Therapy should not rely on shame. Shame often increases secrecy and avoidance. Therapy aims to build responsibility without humiliation. The person learns to notice what happened, repair where possible and return to the recovery plan after setbacks.
Substance use and medical safety
Some addictions need medical assessment. This is especially important when alcohol, opioids, sedatives or heavy substance use are involved. Stopping suddenly can be risky for some people. In these cases, therapy may need to work alongside a doctor, psychiatrist, addiction service or detox programme.
Therapy can still play an important role. It can help with motivation, coping skills, relationships, relapse prevention and the emotional reasons behind use. Medication, medical monitoring or specialist care may also be needed depending on the substance, withdrawal risk and overall health.
Behavioural addictions
Addiction Therapy can also support people with behavioural addictions. These may include gambling, gaming, pornography use, compulsive shopping or smartphone and social media addiction. The work often focuses on triggers, reward loops, emotional avoidance, boundaries and rebuilding meaningful activities.
Behavioural addiction can affect finances, sleep, relationships, self-esteem and concentration. Therapy helps the person reduce automatic behaviour and create more conscious choices.
Approaches often used in Addiction Therapy
Many therapists combine several methods. Motivational Interviewing helps explore ambivalence and strengthen personal motivation. CBT can help identify triggers, thoughts and behaviour cycles. ACT can support values-based change when urges remain present.
DBT may help when addiction is linked to emotional intensity, impulsivity or crisis behaviour. Family Therapy can support communication, boundaries and recovery when addiction affects close relationships.
Is Addiction Therapy right for you?
Addiction Therapy may be helpful if a substance or behaviour feels hard to control, takes too much space, harms health, affects relationships or creates repeated regret. It can also help if you are unsure whether you are ready to stop but want to understand your pattern.
Before starting, ask the therapist about their experience with addiction, harm reduction, relapse prevention, risk management and coordination with medical care. The right support should feel clear, realistic and non-judgmental.
This content is for general information only. It does not replace diagnosis, emergency support, detox care, medical treatment or specialist addiction services. If there is overdose risk, severe withdrawal, danger to self or others, seek urgent local help.