Can we contact Daren before the person accepts help?
Yes. Families often make first contact when the person struggling is still refusing support or minimising the problem.
Private preparation for families who need structure, boundaries and a calm way to speak to someone drinking or using drugs.
When someone refuses help, families can end up repeating the same argument, rescue, threat or silence. Intervention support helps slow things down, agree a message, understand risk and decide what boundaries are real.
Look at alcohol or drug use, denial, family roles, risk and what has already been tried.
Agree who speaks, what is said, what is offered and what boundaries follow.
Help the family think through treatment, meetings, coaching, sober companion work or referral routes.
Yes. Families often make first contact when the person struggling is still refusing support or minimising the problem.
No. The aim is calm structure, honesty and safety, not spectacle or pressure for its own sake.
That can happen. The work then turns to boundaries, safety, family support and the next realistic opportunity for change.