How do I tell my partner or spouse that I am quitting drinking?
Telling your partner that you are quitting drinking is a significant and often vulnerable conversation. The way it lands depends partly on the history — if your drinking has caused visible problems in the relationship, your partner may respond with relief and cautious hope. If your drinking has been less visibly problematic, they may be surprised or uncertain what this means. Be honest about your reasons without being so comprehensive that the conversation becomes overwhelming. "I have realised that my relationship with alcohol has not been healthy, and I have decided to stop" is truthful and sufficient as an opener. Be prepared for a range of responses — relief, concern, scepticism (particularly if you have tried to cut down before), or even unexpected resistance (some partners who drink heavily themselves may feel implicitly challenged by your decision). What matters most in this conversation is communicating your seriousness and asking clearly what support would look like from them. Then follow through consistently. Your actions over the following weeks and months will communicate far more than any single conversation.
What if my friends and social group all drink heavily?
A social group organised primarily around heavy drinking is one of the most significant environmental risk factors for relapse — and one of the most difficult things to address, because it involves changing relationships that may have been central to your social life for years. You have several options, and the right one depends on your individual situation. Some people in heavy-drinking social groups manage to maintain those friendships across the transition to sobriety, particularly when the underlying friendship has genuine depth beyond the shared drinking. Others find that those friendships gradually fade as the primary shared activity disappears, and new friendships develop in recovery communities and other contexts. Some people need to make more deliberate and faster changes — particularly when the social group actively undermines sobriety, pressures you to drink, or represents a high-craving environment that your early recovery cannot withstand. Be honest with yourself about which situation you are in. Protecting your recovery is not a betrayal of friendship — it is a recognition that your sobriety needs to come first, at least in the early period, before you can show up as a genuinely good friend to anyone.
How do I apologise to people I hurt while drinking?
Making amends is a process, not a single event. Meaningful apology has several components: genuine acknowledgment of the specific harm caused, expressed remorse without minimising or justifying, acceptance of responsibility without deflecting, and — most importantly — changed behaviour over time that demonstrates the apology was sincere. Before making amends, be clear about your motivation. Are you doing this for the other person or to relieve your own guilt? Both can be true, but if the primary motive is your own relief, the timing and framing need careful thought. Not all amends need to be made immediately or directly. Some apologies, particularly for serious harm, are best made once you have demonstrated sustained change. Some people may not be ready or willing to receive your apology, and that is their right — you cannot control how it is received, only whether it is genuine and appropriately offered. In some cases, direct contact is not appropriate (where there has been serious harm or where contact itself would cause distress). Making amends through changed behaviour, living well, and contributing positively to others can be a valid form of reparation where direct contact is not the right approach.
How do I handle family members who do not believe I will stay sober?
Scepticism from family members is often earned. If you have tried to cut down or quit before and returned to drinking, your family's scepticism is not a failure of faith — it is an accurate read of your history. The appropriate response is not frustration or argument but patience and action. You cannot persuade people that this time is different — only time and consistent behaviour can do that. Several things help navigate this period. First, acknowledge their concern honestly: "I know I have said this before. I understand why you are sceptical. I am going to focus on showing you through what I do, not through what I say." Second, reduce your need for external validation of your sobriety in the early period — your recovery should not depend on family members believing in it for you to pursue it. Third, give sceptical family members time and evidence before expecting trust to rebuild. Rebuilt trust after addiction-related harm is not instantaneous — it is accrued through sustained, consistent behaviour over months and sometimes years. That is appropriate, not unreasonable.
Should I enter a romantic relationship in early recovery?
Many recovery programmes and therapists advise against entering new romantic relationships in the first year of sobriety, and there are good reasons for this guidance. Early sobriety involves significant emotional instability, identity flux, and neurological recalibration — conditions that are not ideal for the demands of a new relationship. There is also the risk of substituting relationship-based emotional intensity and dopamine activation for alcohol — a form of cross-addiction that can destabilise recovery. Furthermore, early sobriety often involves honest confrontation with difficult aspects of yourself — your patterns in relationships, your emotional regulation, your needs and boundaries — work that is easier to do outside of the intensity of a new romantic relationship. That said, this guidance is not absolute. If you are in an existing stable relationship, maintaining and strengthening it is an important part of recovery. And individual circumstances vary. The key question is whether a new relationship is genuinely supportive of your recovery or whether it is a distraction from, or replacement for, the deeper work recovery requires.
How do I find a sponsor or accountability partner in recovery?
Accountability in recovery is consistently associated with better outcomes. An accountability partner is someone who knows your commitment, checks in with you regularly, and whom you can contact when you are struggling. In twelve-step programmes, this role is formally held by a sponsor — an experienced member who guides you through the steps and provides personal support. In secular recovery, accountability takes more varied forms. Accountability partners can be people from recovery groups who you connect with individually, a therapist or counsellor, a trusted friend or family member who is willing and able to provide consistent support, or a recovery coach. Online recovery communities increasingly provide peer accountability through apps and platforms that allow daily check-ins, messaging, and connection. What makes an accountability relationship work is consistency, honesty, and the willingness to be genuinely known — not just the performance of doing well, but the willingness to disclose when you are struggling before it becomes a crisis. The relationship needs to be genuinely mutual in terms of trust and safety, even if it is not symmetrical in terms of who is supported.
How do my children experience my recovery, and how do I talk to them about it?
Children of parents with alcohol problems often carry significant psychological weight — anxiety, hypervigilance, parentified role-taking, confusion, and sometimes shame. Your recovery is profoundly good news for them, even if they do not immediately show this or know how to express it. Age-appropriate honesty is usually the best approach. Young children do not need detailed explanations — "Mummy/Daddy is making healthy changes and is going to be more present with you" is often sufficient. Older children and teenagers often already understand more than parents realise and may benefit from more honest conversation: "I have had a problem with alcohol. I am getting help. I am sorry for the ways this affected you." Acknowledge the impact on them specifically, not just in general terms. Do not make promises about how things will be — show them through sustained change. Family therapy is particularly helpful for families navigating recovery together, providing a safe container for children to express the feelings they may have been suppressing and for parents and children to repair their relationship with professional support.
What is codependency and how does it affect recovery relationships?
Codependency is a relational pattern, common in the families and close relationships of people with addiction, characterised by excessive emotional reliance on and preoccupation with another person, often to the detriment of one's own wellbeing. Partners and family members of heavy drinkers frequently develop codependent patterns: enabling behaviours (covering for the drinker's absences, managing their consequences, making excuses), hypervigilance to the drinker's moods and states, neglect of their own needs and feelings, and a sense of identity organised around managing the drinker's problem. When the drinker enters recovery, codependent patterns do not automatically resolve — sometimes they intensify, as the organising centre of the relationship (the drinking problem) shifts and the codependent partner feels unmoored or threatened by the recovering person's growing independence. Recovery for the whole family system — not just the individual who was drinking — is often necessary for the relationship to function in a genuinely healthy way. Al-Anon offers peer support specifically for family members and partners of people with alcohol problems. Family therapy is also highly valuable.
How do I ask for help when I am struggling in recovery?
Asking for help when struggling is one of the most important and most difficult skills in recovery — important because isolation and unshared struggle are among the primary precursors to relapse, and difficult because shame, pride, and the fear of disappointing people who have invested in your recovery all create barriers to disclosure. The first step is acknowledging to yourself that you are struggling before the struggle becomes a crisis. The neurological state of intense craving, severe depression, or acute distress narrows thinking and reduces the range of options that feel available — which is why reaching out before you reach that state is so much more effective. Identify in advance who you will contact when struggling, how you will make contact, and what you will say. "I am having a hard time and I need support" is sufficient — you do not need to have a perfectly articulated account of what is wrong before reaching out. Use the supports you have: your recovery community, your therapist, your accountability partner, a helpline. The evidence is unambiguous: people who ask for help when struggling do significantly better than those who do not.