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Addiction-Informed Counselling

A plain-language explanation of addiction-informed counselling and how it supports counselling clients in Ottawa.

Therapy approach in plain language

How Addiction-Informed Counselling supports counselling clients

Addiction-Informed Counselling at Counselling with Karine is offered in Ottawa for clients dealing with addiction counselling, trauma counselling, depression counselling. Sessions are available in person and virtually, in English and French, with attention to safety, practical coping, and the client’s whole life context.

Safe pacing
Practical next steps
Whole-person care

What is Addiction-Informed Counselling

Addiction-informed counselling looks at substance use and compulsive patterns without reducing the client to the behaviour. It pays attention to triggers, shame, relief-seeking, trauma, family patterns, stress, spiritual distress, and the practical realities of change. The goal is not moral lecturing.

The goal is honest understanding, safer choices, and steadier support. Clients do not need to arrive with clinical language.

They can describe what is happening in ordinary words: I keep reacting too strongly, I cannot stop worrying, I feel numb, I keep going back to the same pattern, I am grieving and I do not know what to do with it, or my faith feels complicated right now.

This approach is different from general supportive conversation because it gives the work a clearer clinical shape. Therapy still includes listening and reflection, but it also tracks patterns, triggers, coping attempts, emotional responses, and practical next steps. The process is collaborative. Karine does not force a method onto the client.

The approach is selected and paced according to what the client is facing and what is safe to address.

The Evidence Base

Addiction-informed therapy commonly draws from approaches with strong clinical use in substance-related concerns, including CBT-based coping strategies, relapse-prevention planning, motivational conversations, and trauma-informed care when addiction is connected to painful experiences. Evidence-based care does not mean every session feels technical.

It means the work is informed by clinical knowledge about how people change, recover, cope, and rebuild trust in themselves. For Ottawa clients, this matters because therapy should be both compassionate and useful. A session should help you understand yourself more clearly and leave with a better sense of what can be practiced, named, or addressed next.

It is also important to be honest about limits. No modality is a cure-all. The quality of the therapeutic relationship, the client’s goals, safety needs, life circumstances, and consistency between sessions all influence the work. A responsible therapist explains the approach without promising a guaranteed outcome.

What Sessions Look Like

Sessions usually begin with what is most current: what happened since the last appointment, what felt difficult, what felt manageable, and what patterns are becoming clearer. Karine may help you slow down a situation step by step so you can see the connection between events, body reactions, thoughts, emotions, choices, and relationship responses.

This can reduce shame because the pattern becomes understandable rather than mysterious.

Depending on the concern, sessions may include grounding skills, reflection, practical planning, communication rehearsal, emotional naming, grief processing, faith-sensitive exploration, or structured work with thoughts and behaviours. When trauma or PTSD symptoms are present, pacing is especially important. The goal is not to force painful disclosure.

The goal is to build enough safety and stability that difficult material can be approached without overwhelming the client.

Who Benefits Most

This approach is well suited for people who want to change substance use, understand relapse patterns, reduce secrecy, rebuild trust, or support a loved one affected by addiction. It can also benefit clients who have tried to handle distress privately for a long time and now need a more structured place to understand what is happening.

People who are high-functioning outwardly often benefit because therapy gives language to the pressure they have been hiding.

This approach is not a replacement for emergency care, medical detox, inpatient treatment, or crisis intervention. If immediate safety is at risk, call emergency services or contact the 9-8-8 Suicide Crisis Helpline in Canada by calling or texting 9-8-8. Therapy can support recovery, but crisis resources are the right step when safety cannot wait.

How Long Treatment Takes

The length of treatment varies according to the concern, the client’s history, frequency of sessions, support outside therapy, and the level of risk or complexity involved. Some clients use a short-term focus to work on coping skills, decision-making, communication, or a specific life transition.

Others need longer-term work when trauma, grief, depression, addiction patterns, or relationship wounds have built up over many years.

A practical starting point is often weekly or biweekly counselling, followed by review once the client has more stability and clarity. Progress is not measured only by symptom reduction. It can also show up as better self-understanding, healthier boundaries, fewer shame-driven reactions, more honest communication, stronger coping, and an improved ability to ask for support before things reach a breaking point.

Connected support

Related therapy services and approaches

Questions before starting

Frequently Asked Questions

Start the Conversation

If addiction-informed counselling feels relevant to what you are carrying, the next step is a private conversation about fit, format, and safe pacing.