Alcohol Intervention
Here are a number of useful alcohol intervention tips if you are attempting to convince someone to get help for their problem.
There are basically two types of interventions–formal and informal–and we are only concerned with the formal type here. Informal interventions are basically just conversations–short, unplanned confrontations with the alcoholic to try to get them to stop drinking or using. If you are considering a formal intervention, then you have already tried and exhausted a series of informal interventions at this point.
This is not something that should be rushed into, as there is a chance that the net outcome of an intervention could actually make matters worse. Therefore, we will start by examining the question:
Should we do an Alcohol Intervention?

A formal intervention should not be the first reaction from a concerned family. A series of informal interventions–simple confrontational conversations–should have been tried up to this point. The formal intervention should only be considered when other efforts have failed, or when the person’s life seems to be spinning hopelessly out of control. The addict in question should have suffered a number of different consequences from their addiction already, yet remain stuck in denial. This is an appropriate candidate for a formal intervention. If someone is simply suspected of addiction or alcoholism, but hasn’t suffered any real consequences or demonstrated their addictive capacities, then that is a poor candidate for an alcoholic intervention.
This is going to boil down to a personal choice, or a gut level feeling with the people who are closest with the alcoholic or addict in question. Chances are good that family relations are already strained because of this persons addiction, so understand that any attempt at a formal intervention could ultimately fail and result in even more tension and resentment than before. Things could get worse, not better. The intervention is a calculated risk. We are going to make every effort possible to maintain the peace during the intervention, but the risk of resentment is still there. Therefore, the decision to organize and perform a formal intervention should not be taken lightly. If you are not willing to risk further agitation with someone, you might be better off trying more informal conversations with them first. You can always encourage various friends or family members to do so without organizing a formal intervention. It is only when all of that has failed, over and over again, and the addiction continues to get worse and worse, that a formal intervention should be organized.
Do we need professional help for the intervention?
There are professional intervention services and agencies that you can hire to help you with this process. They often have an individual–usually a counselor in recovery themselves–who can come and help conduct the intervention with you. This intervention specialist also helps by speaking to everyone who will be at the intervention, and instructs them on how best to communicate with the addict/alcoholic in order to convince them to comply. If you can afford such professional services, then this might be a good option for you. Keep in mind that those services are not cheap, and the outcome is far from guaranteed. A formal intervention is a step towards recovery, but having a paid professional does not ensure success. The determining factor is going to be the addict’s ability to break through their denial, and their willingness to try to change. Professional interventionists don’t have any magic tricks up their sleeve–all they can do is teach you how to communicate with the addict in a loving and supportive way. The remainder of this article is meant to serve as a substitute for those professional services, and hopefully you can use the information here to organize an effective alcohol intervention by yourself.
Planning the intervention

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Do not feel overwhelmed at the idea of planning an intervention. You are going to reach out to someone and try to make a difference in a loving and supportive way. As long as you are genuinely concerned, the following principles and ideas should be sufficient to guide you.
Basically, you are going to get organized and do some thinking about what the best approach will be. You are going to decide on a handful of close people to have at the intervention, and we are going to decide how they should best approach the situation. You are then going to set a time and a place to do the intervention and provide some brief coaching to the participants beforehand. Then you will do the intervention and hope for the best. You are going to try to reach out in a loving and caring way. The idea is not to force a change, because that is impossible. Forcing someone to do anything will only push them away from you. This is the best we can do….to intervene in hopes for a change.
Who to Involve
At one point in time, popular opinion held that you should get anyone and everyone associated with the person involved in the intervention. This would have included any friends, family, coworkers, classmates, and so on. More recent studies are showing greater success with a more limited selection of people–maybe about six to ten individuals. Obviously, the people selected to be at the event should be close to the alcoholic, and they should be able to describe how that person’s drinking or drug use has affected them. Don’t involve kids. If the person has drinking or using buddies, those are going to be poor choices as well. Many times the alcoholic will be in a relationship with someone who is also addicted–again, this makes a poor choice, even though they might be really close with their partner.
Here is another idea, but this one must be handled extremely carefully: Get the employer involved, if there is one. This can be very effective if it is done properly, but there can be a lot of problems with it. You don’t want to go to their employer and get them fired before you even get a chance to do the intervention. But most employers will be understanding and helpful if you approach them properly, and ask for their cooperation in sending the person to treatment. Ask their boss if they would be willing to give them leave to go get help, and guarantee their job when they come back. If the alcoholic has any sort of personal relationship with their boss, you may even want to have the boss present at the intervention–this can be extremely effective.
When and Where to do it

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A successful alcoholic intervention requires proper balance. On the one hand, you want to be loving and supportive and reach out and offer help without antagonizing or threatening the alcoholic. On the other hand, a bit of leverage can be useful in convincing the person to agree to treatment. When and where you do the intervention can play a big part in determining the outcome.
Think about your history with this individual and their pattern of drug or alcohol use to determine if there are any obvious opportunities for interventions. If they are a binge drinker, you might be able to stage the intervention so that it follows a day or two after the binge ends, before they have a chance to start again, and also when they are most able to listen to your arguments. Obviously, staging an intervention when someone has been using or drinking is not going to be very effective. You have to plan it out so that the person is relatively sober and at least somewhat receptive to what you’re saying. For some people, this might be after a night spent in jail for a drunk driving offense, or perhaps after losing their job or some other catastrophic event occurs. Doing the intervention after one of these events will take some patience, but it might make it that much more effective. You can still organize the intervention and alert the people involved to be ready for when you think the time is right. Timing can be everything. It’s all about when you think the person might be most receptive to listening and making the change.
Where you do the intervention might be equally important. There is potential to do something sneaky here and put the alcoholic in a corner–manipulating them into a situation where they are forced to listen to you. This is probably not a good idea. If the person feels threatened and manipulated, they are likely to shut down and things will just get worse. Try to find some neutral ground–a setting that is comfortable for everyone without being too threatening to the alcoholic.
Remember that it is very scary for an alcoholic to walk into an intervention. If the situation is too overwhelming for them, they will just shut down and refuse to cooperate. You are seeking a balance here. The idea is to be loving and supportive and yet still try to elicit compliance. If you are too overbearing or try to manipulate them too much, things will turn out badly and the intervention may actually be counterproductive.
If you choose to involve the employer, here is another idea that has shown some success recently: have the employer tip them off a few days in advance. Have the boss say something like “I need to meet with you on Friday after work for a quick meeting. It’s about your…..drug problem. Don’t worry, you’re not being fired. I just need to talk some things over with.” This way, the person is expecting a confrontation and won’t feel completely ambushed. This has been shown to have better results than catching the person completely off guard with the usual “surprise” intervention.
Specifying the Goal of the alcohol intervention
Those who organize interventions recommend that you come up with a goal ahead of time. You need to have a very specific and realistic goal for the intervention or it is likely to fail. It is not enough to get everyone together and simply express concern for someone’s drinking or drug problem. Having a specific goal is important. “We want you to stop drinking or using drugs” is not a realistic goal. While this is ultimately the desired outcome, it is not specific enough to be actionable. You need to have a very specific action that you want the person to take. The most popular example of this is to have them agree to go to a treatment center. Ideally, admission to an inpatient treatment center should be the goal of most interventions, because the controlled environment guarantees at least some period of sobriety, which then gives the person a fighting chance at staying clean and working a program of recovery. Anything other than inpatient treatment as an intervention goal runs the obvious risk that the person will simply continue using drugs or alcohol.
Unfortunately, most drug and alcohol treatment centers do not take clients on a walk-in basis. Part of your planning process will be to locate a treatment center and contact them well in advance of the intervention (at least two weeks prior). If you can set the person up for admission at a later date, then the intervention can be scheduled around that, so they can go directly to treatment if they agree to do so. This is the most ideal situation and best possible outcome for an alcohol intervention: for the person to agree to go directly to inpatient treatment, and having the ability to do so immediately.
Remember to emphasize that the goal is for the person to get help….the emphasis should not be on abstinence. Telling someone that they have to stop using drugs and alcohol forever is likely to just shut them down, and they will likely be more defensive. Get them to agree to treatment, where the emphasis will eventually be on abstinence anyway. Don’t put them off by overwhelming them with what sounds like a death sentence to a using drug addict or alcoholic.
Overcoming Objections

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The overall strategy that should guide the intervention is a loving and caring concern for the person involved. However, you are attempting to coerce this person into doing something that is going to be a bit scary for most people. To agree to suddenly stop using their drug of choice and enter a treatment facility is a really big deal for most addicts and alcoholics. They are going to have objections, and you need to know how to handle these objections. The best way to do that is to anticipate those objections and figure out a suitable answer in advance. For example, you might anticipate that the person will say that they cannot possibly go to inpatient treatment because they would miss to much work. You could either work something out in advance with the employer, or you could point out that the person isn’t going to be able to keep the job much longer anyway due to their drug use. For every potential objection they might have, you need to either work something out for it in advance, or have a reasonable and logical argument prepared to deal with it.
Setting Boundaries and Consequences
An intervention is a formal opportunity for communication to occur. One of the goals of the intervention should be for you and the others involved in the intervention to set some boundaries. These boundaries should include what behavior is unacceptable to them. For example, you might say “It is completely unacceptable that you continue to drink and drive on a regular basis.” This can then be followed up with the consequences that you will enforce if the behavior continues. “If you continue to drink and drive, I will call the police when I see it, and I will not bail you out of jail if you get arrested.” Or, you might say “I can no longer accept that you are using drugs more and more frequently these days….if you refuse to go to treatment, then you’ll be kicked out of the house.” The consequences you set should be specific and enforceable. Do not set consequences that you do not intend to follow through with.
To recap: If you are serious about planning an intervention, then here is what you need to do:
1. Decide whether or not to do the intervention
2. See if you want professional help and whether or not you can afford it
3. Decide who to have at the intervention and where to do it at
4. Specify the goal of the intervention and schedule at a treatment center if possible
5. Anticipate objections and rehearse overcoming them
6. Define your boundaries of acceptable behavior and determine consequences if they don’t comply
The final preparation will be a coaching session with all of the people who will be involved with the intervention. This will help everyone to be on the same page, and also to know a little bit more about what to expect during the intervention.
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Hi there Kerstin
I am actually leaning toward “no” in this case but I would hate to mislead you… what you might do is to hit an Al-Anon meeting and share your dilemma with them, see what their advice is. They can get down to the details with you and give you an expert opinion from a whole group of people…..good luck.
I have a very close friend that was clean fro 1 1/2 years. She lost her first child to her in-laws due to drugs. She got pregnant again and did drugs until she was 7 months pregnant. She went to rehab and got clean and this lasted 18 months. She started back this past fall and has gotten clean a couple of times but goes right back within a week. I have had several informal interventions with her and have offered several suggestions because she says she wants to stay clean. Her parents recently took away her toddler due to her drug problem to be sure the toddler is taken care of. She swears she wants to clean up and get her baby back. She has many people that wants to help her and she knows this. Do you suggest that we have a formal intervention or what?
To be honest, CW, I have my doubts about the usefulness of a formal intervention in that kind of situation.
Think about what an intervention really is: it is a wake up call to show a person that everyone still cares about them and wants to see them get help.
In my opinion, losing custody of your children is a much, much bigger wake up call than a formal intervention.
Seriously, if that has not deterred this person from addiction, what makes you think getting everyone together and confronting her is going to make any difference? I really don’t have any suggestions at this point because it sounds to me like you have tried everything that you can. The problem is on her end. You have extended your hand to help her and she has refused it over and over again. What can you do?
Good luck to her at any rate and I’m sorry I could not be more helpful. It is a tough situation though….
no insurance and spouse laid off after working all his life because of the economy with a wife who is an alcoholic and also a 32 year old daughter we need help
Hi Ranee
Get to a support group of some sort. I recommend Al-Anon. You can get more specific advice and guidance there.
Best of luck…
I’m planning an intervention for my alcoholic brother. I’ve been looking for websites that explain step by step of what to do. I’m so glad I found this website. I know how to do it now and I hopefully will save my brother’s life. Thanks
I am almost embarressed to write this. I have been sober for 18 years through AA. My son grew up going to open meetings with me and conferences. Of course, I knew he would probably drink. I was not under the illusion that if he learned about drinking that would stop him.
My problem is, we have talked about his drinking. I dont preach to him but my family does not know about his consequences. As I type this he is sitting in his apartment, with staples across his head and 2 black eyes from a bar fight. The police said, the men tried to kill him. He is 24 years old and has had more consequences through drinking than I ever did.
I have a big family and they would help in any way I asked. They love my son. He just never wanted anyone to know of his consequences. I am planning an intervention with him and some of my family members. Just hope I am doing the right thing and he does not get a resentment to where he never wants to be around them because he feels guilty.
Thanks for putting this website together. Your comment about alanon “smacked me in the face”. I have never been to an alanon meeting. It was suggested a year ago that I attend but being stubborn, I thought it did not apply to me. After reading the comments section, I know I am in the same boat. Thanks again.
Good luck with that Sue. Hopefully he comes around to a decision….
I have a brother addicted to oxy codon pain killers. About 4 months ago he overdosed and had to be revived. My family and I thought this would be a wake up call and he would finally end his addiction but when I went home for thanksgiving I found a prescription bottle with plenty of evidence that he is injecting the drugs through his veins. My parents are divorced and as of today he has been kicked out of both of their houses for stealing money and not being trustworthy. I live 3 hours away from home so I cannot physically do anything but I am very concerned for my brothers, and also my parents well being. What can I do for my brother and also my parents? thank you
JeffG,
I’m a Certified Drug and Alcohol Interventionist with a near 100% success rate helping individuals into treatment on the same day of an intervention. I’d be happy to talk you through some steps to help your parents and brother now. Email me if you like jscott@guardianinterventions.com or call me direct 561-706-9939.
Josh
I have a question, don’t know if anyone can help. I live far away from my brother. After visiting at Christmas I told him I can not spend time with him any more as long as he continues to drink. His wife is an alcoholic whose employer has sent her to rehab and yet she continues to drink. So she’s no help. Now he says he wants a “truce.” Am I supposed to say I will NOT communicate with you unless you either try to get help or try to quit drinking? And why is Antabuse so frowned on, when it seems like a foolproof way to keep someone from drinking?? I’m at my wit’s end and I fear for his two kids.
my 18 year old sister is a severe alcoholic. i know she uses drugs, but i am not sure of what kind and how often. she is living with her boyfriend who has been to many different rehabs across the country and either gets kicked out or just leaves the program. he was addicted to intravenous heroin and alcohol. and is exceedingly wealthy and pays for all the drugs and alcohol, he is an ultimate enabler. he tells her that i am a liar and that i am trying to control her life by trying to help her, and that i am really not trying to help her at all. they hang out with two guys that the boyfriend met in rehab who have relapsed. my sister just got out of jail for putting a ciggarette out on her boyfriends neck and for punching him repeatedly in the face resulting in a black eye. someone that was in the house called the cops on them, and the boyfriend wouldnt press charges. i tried to pick her up from the jail and the boyfriend lied to me about what time she was getting out so i couldnt. i was going to try to have an “informal intervention” with her. i am at a loss. she was completely un phased by this experience, and is always un phased by the catastrophes that come from her addiction. i just recently found out that she was date raped by an acquaintance who house she was couch surfing at awhile ago, and my mother says that she fears that, that wasnt the first time she was date raped. she is showing signs of jaundice and is sick alot of the time. she can not control herself. this time it was a cigarette but maybe next time it will be a knife, and i am terrified and feel nausea and overwhelmed from trying to help her. she has been stealing money from me and i just dont know what to do! i have been searching online for hours trying to think of something.
she is also the most avoident person there is. please any advice will greatly help!
Well EA that is not a good situation. I am afraid there might not be a whole heck of a lot you can do at this point.
Sometimes you just have to be ready to help them when they say they are ready. Sometimes you have to give them the space to feel some pain. Natural consequences teach us eventually. It just sucks because I know it is a risk to watch someone self destruct like this.
Good luck.
My question is once you decide to do an intervention, and you organize the people involved, you let them know the structure of the meeting and where it will take place, How do you state why we are all here? What should the introduction be? For ex we are all here because we love and care about you…… What should you say next to start it off?
@ Anonymous – you have to dive in and get honest…..”We love you and we care about you and we want to see you get help. You are self destructing and we can’t stand to let it keep happening.” etc.
At some point you have to just come out with it and not beat around the bush, I think. They have to face it for what it really is. No need to sugarcoat it, really…..
Thank you that makes alot of sense if you have any extra info that could help me please email me!!!
Hello, we have a cousin with health issues trying to deal with her duaghters addiction/alcohol, she is 35, no insurance needs a facility for free treatment..she is willing to go as an outpt..i gave my concerns to all involved..she has pulled all the manipulative stunts there is…she needs in pt, but they feel that she needs to work …how does one keep a position, but doing what the Lord has inspired me to do..keep a list of options in case she rings again …we’ve set limits calling when sober…and boundries…but they’ve all been broken..now i feel personally my involvement is to be loving and keep encouraging this young woman to get treatment…now i’m on my knees…its gonna take a lot to be strong parents of this young woman, give her the tools and let her learn to work a program and treatment…i have dealt w this on all avenues…father, relatives, husband(who i’m proud to say has been clean for 19 yrs, has not gotten the help i feel would be beneficial to continue this current life style..)its always possible of relapse..at any stage of the game…prayers and going to Kensington of Troy Mi..are of great help..but its always a challenge…thank u djms
hi my name is maha hamade,im 21 years old…i met a great guy called karim,he is a telented and smart and sweet,he is addicted to drugs and heroen,and here in lebanon are not having a good people that help such people i met him in my piano lesson,and i didnt say any thing bas it appeared that he is a drug adicte,i started searching for help even before i told hi that i know,he have a lot of bad things in his life,and im soo tierd trying to save this guy,i talked to him today and told him a lot of things,but i didnt blam him,and i told him that am here to help and support him,but the problem is that detoxification and helping this kind of people is too expensive and me am not a rich person but my heart and my mind want to help him so bad..i swear that ill sell a part of my body to help him,please help me to help this guy case helping him is helping 10000000 people please i need some one to help me case am dying..thnx
with all my respect maha
ana this guy want help he is bagging for one,but no one is helping him,his girlfriend passed away from overdosage 3 years ago,and that helped hi to stop but he returned to forget her,he is in a big mess,and his family are careless,no one in this life want to help him waht shall i do to save him?
Josh,I hope your still out there.. read your letter to Jeffg, can u help me.. will wait for a response here before i call u! i have been at my wits end..My only son an he is addicted to Oxycontin an Crack, to make a long story short..we, stepfater an I an his 2sisters, have helped in anyway,we can.. he had been living with us for over a year..in an out.. we’ve been tricked an lied to through the year an half..an he has been using ever since. he had a wife an has a 5yr old son, not living with them, but he is still allowed to visit his family..we all have been helping him, keeping him in cash, clothes, bike,(which he has pawned bike & tv) too.. well in the begginin the first year, he wanted the help an took all the help he could, the ride, an the inconvince, was never an issue,. we all wanted to help him an each other. well he left again like many times before. but always coming back cus he wanted to change, stop using. get clean an sober.. well everytime he left i made sure he always had a paid cell phone.. he has been in DACO outpatient as well..he has all the help he needs an he has abused us all.. so now his sister’s somewhat closed there doors.. we will never give him a dime again, which he had manage to take an take more an more each time.. he is good at con-ing us (is what i call it)i feel he does not want the help.. everytime i let him back he has new rules to follow..well he has been gone over 2weeks now, asking to come back, cell bill is due now (as we speak, an i told him) yes! but no more cell, no more buses, no more nothing, what else can i do, or should do! I have paid out more an more money to him some of it not knowin he was buyin drugs, (see i thought he was getting well) 1 example he got a check in his name for #1245.00.. he cash it, gave his wife 300. an the rest in his arm or in his nose, or both.. an it only took a couple of days, an he was broke again, an that story i have not told his dad,.. I dont want to say No to him, i want an can help him, even thou it is taking a toll on me, i work 2 jobs, second job 18hrs a week an 1st job 40hrs aweek. been doing this for 2years, i cant seem to be able to quit cuz he keeps me from paying my debt’s down. I go to a support group & (an church) now since the last 6mos. I read all of the above notes, and it sounds like every1 is in the same boat as i..but i dont seam to be getting the answer’s i need, or someone tellin me what to do..I dont know what to do anymore.. I might go ahead an pay his phone bill, only cus i think he needs that to keep in touch with us.. he is a very loving, kind person, an loves us all..but he has a problem, after (an maybe he never was) clean, sobber, whatever, he goes rigth back to using again, first intercation is when he fine’s a friend we dont get to meet, an he see’s all the time just to hang out.. he is up 2 no good.. anyway, he did not like my new rules, call’s it jail, dont know if i want to come back an live like i am in jail..help dont know what to do with my son, like all my kids, i love them all equally ..only 1 service we did not try was the methadome service, or take to wein u off opiods. Right now i let go! let god!, an work my steps, an read read read.. tried of reading, what else can i do????
Thanks for the information. I am planning an intervention for my 20 year old sister for alcohol and I am desperate but so afraid that she will feel completely betrayed and it will ruin our relationship. She trusts me and I do not see it going well. But at least now I have a little more knowledge.
This is a very useful article. My children are planning an intervention with their father this friday. My daughter found this article. I am so scared. After 37 years of marriage, I feel my life in 2011 will spiral out of control. My family is changing rapidly. I know I have to set boundries not only with my husbands alcoholism but with my children to, if I am ever going to survive. My husband has been a severe working alcoholic for over 9 years now. 365 days a year and wasted every night. He however manages to go to work..so people do not think it is a problem… he doesn’t start to drink until he comes home. He however is losing track of where he is at times and doesn’t remember what happened most times. His mother and grandmother both had dementia in their early 60′s. My husband will be 60 this year. I am so afraid not only for my husband but for me. I am not happy the way my life has turned out. I try to change but always quit because of no support or just plain fright. I do not want to start over again but it looks like I might have to. Thank you for listening and giving advice. Pray for us.
I have a friend who is a full blow addict, his life is a mess and he doesn not want to get better.If he does not change he could go back to jail or die.He avoids me now because he knows I do not approve of his drug friends who are users and want to get what they want out of him.I do love him and care about him, but I cannot kill myself running him down. He of course lies all the time, and says that he is my friend and that I am his only real friend, then I realize he is not capable of being a “real” friend when he is under the influence.
A few years ago I had to cut off another boyfriend because of this behavior. I have friends that say I am beautiful and I deserve so much better than him.He does not treat me very well anyways. I just moved to a new city and I have to focus on my recovery and my life too. He takes total advantage of me and he mistreats me. Even his own friend treats me better than him. I now have to cut him out of my life for now.
If you dont cut him out of your life you will have no friends… After awhile youll only have memories of being beautiful…
One day you will look up and realize all that truly matters is lost!
My boyfriend of 2 years is chronic binge drinker type of alcoholic. He used to use meth for several years and had to replace all of his teeth. He hasn’t used meth the whole time we have been dating to my knowledge. When you look at him, you can see he has had a rough go but he is a beautiful man and has the biggest heart. He went to treatment one time 20 years ago but it didn’t curtail his drinking. He said he wouldn’t drink anymore around me and hasn’t but sneaks it. He is able to go a couple weeks without drinking then starts sneaking. He can become very aggressive when he drinks too much and is verbally abusive. This aggressiveness has gotten better since he is not also on drugs…I notice a huge difference. He knows he needs to try and quit but this feeling doesn’t last long and he has never said he won’t drink anymore but really has made a conscious effort to do it on his own and even went on medication 2 different times but only stays on it for a month or two then quits.
His family and I are considering doing an intervention but he is very reaction prone unless he is in remorse stage (after a night of binging is always the best time to talk to him…I can say anything and he listens, apologizes etc) We all feel very used. He has no job, no place to live and recently lost his car. God help us he is 50 stuck in a teenager mentality. It is excruciatingly painful to watch.
We LOVE him SO MUCH. He is like the brother in The Fighter…funny and warm, but then completely addicted on the flip side.
Any advice regarding intervention would be much appreciated. Thank you and sending strength to all those suffering from addiction and to those whose lives they touch.
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