Supporting someone with addiction while maintaining your own mental health is one of the hardest things a person can attempt. Most people who try to do both eventually fail at one — usually their own wellbeing goes first. This guide is about changing that equation.
Why Families Neglect Their Own Mental Health
It’s not laziness or selfishness. Families neglect their own mental health because:
- Their loved one’s crisis feels more urgent and more real
- Focusing on themselves feels selfish when someone they love is suffering
- There is simply no time or energy left
- They have been conditioned, over time, to put everyone else first
- They don’t recognise how much they’re deteriorating until they reach a breaking point
None of these are good reasons to neglect yourself. All of them are understandable ones.
The Signs You’re Burning Out
- Persistent exhaustion that sleep doesn’t fix
- Difficulty experiencing any positive emotions
- Physical symptoms — headaches, digestive problems, frequent illness
- Increasing irritability and anger that spills into other relationships
- Feeling completely disconnected from your own identity and interests
- Intrusive thoughts or hypervigilance that doesn’t switch off
- Increasing use of alcohol or other substances to cope
These are not signs of weakness. They are signs of a nervous system that has been under sustained stress for too long. They require action.
Practical Mental Health Protection
1. Get your own support — non-negotiable
Al-Anon, Nar-Anon, or individual therapy. Not instead of supporting your loved one — alongside it. The research is clear: family members who get their own support are significantly more effective at helping their loved one AND significantly less likely to develop serious mental health problems themselves.
Online-Therapy.com offers CBT-based therapy from $40/week — accessible from home, starting within 24 hours.
2. Protect your sleep
Sleep deprivation amplifies every other mental health challenge. Set boundaries around overnight calls, arguments, and the checking behaviour that keeps you awake. Your brain cannot function — and cannot support anyone else — without adequate sleep.
3. Maintain at least one relationship outside this crisis
Isolation is one of the most damaging effects of loving someone with addiction. Keep one friendship alive. One activity. One connection to a world that isn’t defined by this crisis.
4. Exercise — even small amounts
The evidence for exercise as a mental health intervention is strong. Even 20 minutes of walking daily reduces cortisol, improves mood, and builds resilience. This is not optional self-indulgence — it is basic maintenance.
5. Set limits on crisis engagement
You do not need to be available 24 hours a day. You are allowed to turn your phone off at night. You are allowed to have evenings that don’t revolve around their situation. Boundaries protect your mental health as much as anything else. See: Setting Boundaries →
6. Use recovery apps for yourself
Apps like Headspace and Calm offer mindfulness and meditation tools that have strong evidence for anxiety management. See our guide: Best Recovery Apps →
Codependent No More — Melody Beattie
Addresses the patterns that cause family members to sacrifice their own mental health in the service of someone else’s — and provides a roadmap to reclaiming yourself. Over 5 million copies sold. One of the most important books a family member of an addict can read.
Battling Drug Addiction:
A Complete Guide for Families
Understanding addiction, supporting recovery, setting boundaries, and crisis helplines — everything families need in one free guide.