A lot of doctors, experienced therapists and experienced counselors of substance abuse problems and issues refer family members and friends of problem drinkers and alcoholics to Al-Anon/Alateen. The Al-Anon program complements and enhances other forms and styles of therapy as well as treatment.
Al-Anon is a vital and essential resource
Al-Anon is a vital, essential and important resource for helping and assisting families find ways and methods to become healthy again. Through attending to their needs and their behaviors and actions, the family is much better able and in a position to own their responsibility as well as role in the destructive and harmful family patterns of substance abuse. Al-Anon Family Groups assist and aid family members to better handle and deal with the business of daily living for their own benefit and welfare, not just for the alcoholic or family member with substance abuse issues. This improves and enhances the individual member of the family’s sense of well-being, and often includes a positive impact on the behavior and conduct of the actual alcoholic.
Al-Anon group meetings are a helpful and valuable tool for families with substance abuse problems
Al-Anon group meetings are a helpful and beneficial tool to help and assist medical professional’s clients recover and recuperate from their own sense and feeling of self. Al-Anon helps men and women find and discover healthy ways to take care of and deal with themselves; not everybody else.
Al-Anon comes with a lifelong and long term support and assistance system built-in.
Al-Anon comes with an ongoing and lifelong support and assistance system which augments and increases, reinforces and strengthens what happens within treatment and therapy. A number of the benefits and positive aspects of Al-Anon are:
a) A sense and feeling of belonging through identifying with other people who have experienced exactly the same kinds of dilemmas, problems and difficulties in dealing with substance abuse issues.
b) Coping and problem management strategies and approaches for dealing with and handling negative emotions.
c) A crisper and clearer focus on an individual’s own goals, objectives and aspirations, instead of on somebody else’s drinking problems.
d) Mutual and shared support and assistance, a healthy and wholesome alternative to keeping and maintaining secrets, and trusting and having faith in no one.
Going to Al-Anon group meetings is an opportunity and chance that helps people develop the healthy relationship skills that the majority of members of alcoholic families do not learn and understand otherwise.