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You’ve said these things. Every family member we interviewed during the writing of this guide said them too. Every single one believed that their love, their effort, their sacrifice would be the thing that made the difference — right up until the moment they realised they were destroying themselves trying to save someone who wasn’t ready to be saved.
Maybe you’re reading this at 3am, lying awake wondering if they’re alive, scrolling through your phone because the not-knowing is worse than anything. Maybe you’re sitting in a car park outside a police station, or a hospital, or a rehab that costs more than your mortgage. Maybe you’ve just found something hidden in a bedroom and your hands are shaking because now you can’t pretend any more.
Maybe you’re the partner who checks bank statements like a detective. The parent who’s remortgaged the house. The sibling who stopped answering the phone. The grandparent raising children that aren’t yours because your own child can’t. Maybe you’ve been doing this for years and you’re so exhausted you’ve forgotten what your own life was supposed to look like.
Wherever you are right now, this page is for you.
Not adapted from literature written for the person using. Not borrowed from a single fellowship’s approach. Written from scratch — informed by the lived experiences of families who’ve found their way through, and built on recovery principles that have transformed millions of lives.
Addiction doesn’t happen to one person. It happens to an entire family. Yet almost every resource, every treatment pathway, every pound of funding is directed at the person using — while the people being torn apart around them are left to figure it out alone.
Over 60% of children whose parents enter treatment receive no early help whatsoever. Families do not count, because they are not counted. That invisibility destroys people.
The families we spoke to couldn’t find themselves in the literature. Al-Anon helped, but the language felt dated and the focus was primarily on alcohol. Nar-Anon meetings were sparse. Family therapy was a postcode lottery. And nothing addressed the specific chaos of living with ketamine addiction, or cocaine paranoia, or the particular hell of watching your teenager disappear into a substance you’ve never heard of.
These families didn’t need another leaflet. They needed someone to say: “We’ve been exactly where you are. Here’s what happened to us. Here’s what we learned. Here’s how we survived — and eventually, how we healed.”
Family addiction in the UK is a public health emergency hiding in plain sight. It doesn’t make headlines because the people suffering are too ashamed to speak, too exhausted to campaign, and too busy holding everything together to ask for help.
Research consistently shows that family members experience higher rates of anxiety, depression, PTSD, physical health problems, financial hardship, and social isolation. Children growing up with addicted parents are significantly more likely to develop addiction themselves.
This is not a niche problem. This is millions of people suffering in silence — and the support infrastructure has never caught up. Until now.
The Family Edition follows a structured four-part journey from crisis to healing, with every chapter built around the experiences, language, and challenges specific to families affected by addiction — regardless of which substance or behaviour is involved.
The book opens where most families find themselves — in chaos, confusion, and denial. Chapter 1 ("This Isn't Your Child/Partner Anymore") helps you see what's actually happening. A chapter on the science of family trauma explains what addiction does to your brain and body — not just theirs. "Why Love Isn't Enough" addresses the hardest truth families face. And the Three C's — You Didn't Cause It, Can't Control It, Can't Cure It — provides the foundation everything else builds on.
Your recovery, not theirs. This is the heart of the book — a guided journey through acceptance and surrender, honest self-examination, healing your own wounds, making things right in your relationships, building daily recovery practices, and finding purpose and meaning beyond the crisis. Each chapter adapts proven recovery principles specifically for family members, with examples you'll recognise from your own life.
The section families told us they needed most. Setting boundaries that actually stick. Knowing when to help and when to step back. The truth about interventions. Protecting siblings and other family members. Financial boundaries and the reality of tough love. Crisis management and safety planning. A comprehensive guide to different substances and their effects. Legal issues. What happens when addiction involves crime.
The chapters no one else writes. Rebuilding trust when recovery begins — and how to survive when it doesn't. What to do when they relapse again. Taking care of yourself first, not as an afterthought but as a practice. And the Promises for Families — because this story can have a different ending.
Every Chapter. Six Perspectives. Complete Understanding.
Each chapter in the Family Edition is examined through our proprietary Six-Lens Framework — a structured approach that ensures no angle of family recovery is left unaddressed:
Helps you see through the stories you've told yourself. Family members are masters of a different kind of denial — "It's just a phase," "They promised they'd stop," "At least they're still working," "Other families have it worse." This lens strips away the minimisation so you can see your situation clearly.
Shows where your efforts fail — not because you're not trying hard enough, but because you're trying to control something that was never yours to control. You've hidden bottles, flushed drugs, checked phones, issued ultimatums, begged, screamed, and cried. This lens examines why love and willpower alone cannot fix someone else's addiction.
The moments of willingness and change — yours, not theirs. From the phone call that finally breaks you, to the quiet realisation that you've lost yourself entirely, to the terrifying decision to stop managing their addiction and start recovering from its effects. This lens explores the crisis points and quiet surrenders that open the door to your own healing.
Addiction promised your family nothing but took everything. This lens examines how families find hope, meaning, and even growth in the aftermath of devastation — and shows how connection, purpose, and something beyond yourself become possible even when the person you love is still using.
You're sceptical. You've been let down by promises before — from them, from treatment centres, from well-meaning friends who said "just kick them out." This lens acknowledges every objection honestly and shows how families from every background and belief system — including those with no faith at all — have found recovery that works for them.
How to help other families. Your experience — the very worst of it — becomes the thing that helps another family survive their darkest night. This lens shows how sharing your story, supporting others, and staying connected to your own recovery creates meaning from pain.
Start with Chapter 1 and see if the stories match your experience. If they do, you're not alone. You don't have to fix anything tonight. Just know that millions of people have been exactly where you are — and they found a way through.
You've developed survival strategies that kept you going but may now be keeping you stuck. The practical tools in Part III will help you examine what's working and what's slowly destroying you. Chapters 11–15 on boundaries and enabling are where most long-suffering families tell us the shift begins.
Work through it sequentially, ideally alongside a family recovery group such as Al-Anon, Nar-Anon, or Families Anonymous. The chapters build on each other. Use the journal prompts. Share what you're learning. This is your roadmap.
Chapter 20 ("Rebuilding Trust When Recovery Begins") and Chapter 21 ("When They Relapse") address the complex emotions that early recovery brings for families — because their getting clean doesn't automatically make everything better, and no one prepares you for that.
The guide addresses the specific devastation of watching your child — at any age — disappear into addiction. From protecting siblings to navigating the criminal justice system to the impossible question of when helping becomes enabling, this book was written by parents who understand.
Living with an addicted partner creates a particular kind of loneliness. The constant vigilance, the broken promises, the person you fell in love with becoming someone you don't recognise. This guide helps you find yourself again — whether the relationship survives or not.
You shouldn't have to carry this. Chapter 14 ("Protecting Other Children/Family Members") is written with you in mind. Our Foundations Edition (ages 14–21) provides additional age-appropriate support, and our Children's Companion (ages 8–12) helps younger family members understand what's happening.
Chapter 2 ("The Science of Family Trauma") and Chapter 17 ("Understanding Different Substances") provide evidence-based insights into family dynamics. The Six-Lens Framework translates effectively into therapeutic settings, offering multiple engagement strategies for family work.
Existing family recovery resources save lives — and they’ll continue to. We recommend them throughout this guide.
But every family we interviewed described the same gaps:
Al-Anon literature was groundbreaking when it was written, but families today are dealing with ketamine, synthetic cannabinoids, prescription drug dependency, and substances that didn't exist when those texts were published. The scenarios feel like someone else's era.
Most family recovery literature centres on alcohol addiction. If your loved one is addicted to cocaine, ketamine, crack, or prescription drugs, you're left translating every example and hoping the principles still apply. They do — but you shouldn't have to do that work in your worst moments.
Treatment systems, legal frameworks, support services, cultural context — the majority of family recovery literature assumes an American reader. UK families need UK resources, UK helplines, and content that reflects the NHS, the criminal justice system, and the treatment landscape they're actually navigating.
Traditional family recovery programmes require regular meeting attendance. This guide supports and encourages fellowship — but also serves families in rural areas, those who can't attend meetings due to childcare or work, and those who need help at 3am when no meeting is running.
A parent dealing with their teenager's ketamine addiction faces very different practical challenges to a partner living with a cocaine user. Understanding what the substance actually does — to their brain, their body, their behaviour — is essential for families. This guide provides it.
When do you call the police? How do you protect your finances? What happens if they're arrested? When is an intervention appropriate — and when does it make things worse? Traditional literature leaves these questions to meetings. This guide answers them directly.
Available in multiple formats. Choose the one that fits how you prefer to engage with recovery material.
Portable paperback. Annotate, underline, carry to meetings. No digital distractions.
Instant, private access. Searchable, adjustable text size. Read discreetly on any device.
Professional narration for commutes, walks, and sleepless nights.
Print guide plus discussion cards, worksheets, and progress tracking tools.
Print and digital editions available now
If you work in addiction treatment, you know the problem. Families arrive desperate for guidance, and your service is funded to treat the person using — not the people collapsing around them. The leaflets you can offer feel inadequate. The family groups you’d like to run don’t have funding. And when a parent asks you what they should actually do, you’re left referring them to a fellowship meeting and hoping for the best.
The Family Edition provides comprehensive, evidence-informed family recovery material that fills this gap. Professional packages include:
Recovery saved our families when we had nothing. We’ll never let money prevent a family from accessing help.
For every ten guides sold, we donate one free to treatment centres, family services, prison visitor centres, schools, and families who can’t afford a copy. If you or a family you know needs this guide and genuinely can’t afford it, get in touch. We’ll find a way.
We recommend and support all family recovery fellowships — they save lives. The Family Edition doesn’t replace them. It complements them with modern language, multi-substance coverage, UK-specific resources, and practical tools that go beyond the spiritual programme. Think of it as a companion that helps you understand addiction across all substances while applying recovery principles to your own life — whether you attend meetings or not.
Yes. The Family Edition covers addiction across all substances, with Chapter 17 providing a comprehensive guide to different drugs and their effects on both the user and the family. Whatever substance is involved — alcohol, cocaine, ketamine, heroin, cannabis, prescription drugs, or anything else — the family experience shares common patterns, and this guide addresses them all.
We strongly encourage connecting with other families in recovery — it’s where the deepest healing happens. But this guide provides comprehensive tools for any situation, including families who can’t access meetings, those in remote areas, those with childcare commitments, and those using online recovery communities.
No. Stepwise Recovery is an independent publication. We respect the traditions of established fellowships while serving families who need additional, practical, and substance-comprehensive resources. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or approved by any recovery organisation.
The Family Edition is written for readers aged 13 and above. It contains honest discussions of addiction, its consequences, and family trauma — because minimising the reality helps no one. For younger family members aged 8–12, our Children’s Companion provides age-appropriate support. For young people aged 14–21 dealing with their own substance use, our Foundations Edition offers an accessible entry point.
Absolutely — and this is critically important. Your recovery does not depend on theirs. The majority of this guide focuses on your healing, your boundaries, and your life — regardless of what they’re doing. Many of the families we interviewed began their own recovery while their loved one was still in active addiction. Some of those loved ones eventually found recovery too. Some didn’t. The families healed either way.
Yes. Chapters 11–15 deal extensively with boundaries, enabling, tough love, financial protection, and the agonising difference between helping and enabling. These were the chapters families told us they needed most — and the ones that were hardest to read. If you suspect you’re enabling, those chapters will either confirm or challenge that belief with clarity and compassion.
No. The guide is inclusive of all backgrounds and belief systems, including people with no faith or spiritual framework at all. Recovery principles are presented in accessible language that doesn’t require any particular worldview. Lens 5 (Spiritual Resistance) in every chapter specifically addresses scepticism and resistance — because we know these are real barriers, and we wanted to meet them honestly.
Yes. Chapter 14 (“Protecting Other Children/Family Members”) addresses the impact on siblings and children in detail, including age-appropriate communication strategies, developmental considerations, and practical protection measures. We also provide guidance on accessing professional support for children affected by family addiction.
The Family Edition is in final development and launching in 2026. Join the waitlist to secure early access and a launch discount.
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Millions of families have survived addiction. Families who were more broken than yours. Families who’d been suffering longer. They found their way through. And you can too.