How Do I Lose the Shame Over My Addiction?
How Do I Lose the Shame Over My Addiction? Today, addiction affects a significant portion of the population. In fact, according to the National Survey on
Most of us are familiar with the concept of an intervention. If your loved one is struggling with a substance use disorder and won’t listen to pleas to get help, you can confront them with a group of family and friends sharing the impact that their addiction has on you and the people around them or on themselves.
An impact letter is a similar idea. In fact, an impact letter is sometimes called an intervention letter. And, you might be surprised to know that for many people, an intervention is about delivering impact letters, as a group.
At the same time, an impact letter doesn’t have to be a big thing and it doesn’t have to be an attempt at a final try to help. Impact letters can be used in a lot of ways, and many of them can help the people in your life.
An impact letter is a letter where you share the impact of something on something else. In most cases, we use them during interventions to share how an addiction has impacted us. In other cases, we use impact letters to share what people mean to us, how they’ve impacted our lives, and that we hope they can be there for themselves as well. In each case, the impact letter is meant to inspire the person it’s written to into taking action, such as going to rehab or talking to a doctor, to considering that they need help, or even to simply feeling good about themselves.
Depending on the circumstance an impact letter can:
Each of these letters fits into a slightly different scenario if you’re sending it. All three are intended to motivate the receiver to be clean and sober.
Impact letters are most commonly used as part of an intervention, but they don’t have to be. Instead, you can use impact letters as part of subtler but still powerful attempts to motivate your loved one to be clean and sober.
Impact letters can be part of an intervention or an alternative. The question is, which is better? In most cases, the impact letter is a better choice. Why? Interventions are something you should save for a last resort when nothing else is working. When you really have to confront your loved one with everything that’s going on and you really must do so as a group. Impact letters can be delivered in private, giving your loved one the dignity of processing and going through things alone, to think about things, and to figure out what they want. They offer your loved one a choice and respect that they can make decisions for themselves.
An intervention might be necessary if no other efforts reach your loved one. For example, if they ignore your letter, don’t listen to talks, or don’t engage with you. Or, if they respond with anger to attempts to help. In that case, you need the final effort of a big and confrontational intervention. Otherwise, an impact letter is probably the kinder choice.
Impact letters are a valuable way to connect with your loved one, to let them know the impact they are having on you, and to share how you feel. It can make the difference between your loved one thinking they are alone in the world and realizing that they are part of a family and their loved ones actively suffer because of their disorder. And, that can help your loved one make the decision to go to treatment.
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