
Types of Family Therapy Explained
Learn about the main types of family therapy, how each approach works, and how therapy can help families build stronger relationships.
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Clinically Reviewed by Brittany Astrom Brittany has 15 years of experience in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse field. Brittany has been licensed for almost 8 years and has worked in various settings throughout her career, including inpatient psychiatric treatment, outpatient, residential treatm
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Clinical Editorial Team

Clinically Reviewed by Brittany Astrom Brittany has 15 years of experience in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse field. Brittany has been licensed for almost 8 years and has worked in various settings throughout her career, including inpatient psychiatric treatment, outpatient, residential treatm
Brittany has 15 years of experience in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse field. Brittany has been licensed for almost 8 years and has worked in various settings throughout her career, including inpatient psychiatric treatment, outpatient, residential treatment center, PHP and IOP settings.
At Rize OC, we understand how feelings of shame and feelings of guilt influence the recovery process. Shame is a common trigger for relapse, especially in individuals with alcohol addiction or substance use disorder. Addressing this emotion is essential for long-term healing and the development of adaptive behavior that supports sobriety.
Shame is a negative self-conscious emotion that leads to intense feelings of being a bad person. This differs from guilt, which focuses on behavior. Shame targets the self, undermines self-worth, and reduces the ability to build healthy habits. Research such as the daily process study and the current study has shown that levels of shame may predict future relapses, especially in those with alcohol use disorder and other types of substance use disorder.

Learn about the main types of family therapy, how each approach works, and how therapy can help families build stronger relationships.

Explore how family therapy for addiction recovery helps loved ones rebuild trust, improve support, and create a healthier path forward.
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Guilt often motivates harm-avoidant behaviors and moral behavior. Shame, on the other hand, promotes avoidance, secrecy, and relapse shame. This cycle fuels negative emotions, especially in those with mental illness or co-occurring mental illnesses. According to researchers like Brene Brown, understanding the relationship between shame and behavior is essential for developing behaviorally influential interventions in recovery.
Negative feelings such as shame, anxiety, and regret increase likelihood of shame eliciting substance use. These proximal triggers are often unnoticed but deeply rooted in the emotional patterns developed during active addiction. In studies examining the slope of shame and slope of substance use, researchers found a strong relationship between shame and episodes of alcohol use, especially during periods of frequent alcohol consumption.
After a relapse, many individuals engage in self-punishment, believing they deserve the consequences of problematic alcohol or drug use. This can create a negative spiral, reducing their capacity to seek help or practice positive emotions and healthy life choices. The intercept of shame and its bidirectional effects with substance use highlight how shame can become both a cause and result of relapse.
Relapse is not failure—it is a sign that something in the addiction treatment program needs to be re-evaluated. Studies such as the original study on self-conscious emotions suggest that identifying the impetus for shame can reduce the perpetuation of shame over time. This leads to decreases in shame and renewed commitment to recovery.
Shame often increases after a relapse. But understanding that relapse is part of the recovery journey can reduce its impact. At Rize OC, we teach clients how to break the cycle of relapse shame by using the experience to build new coping tools and reestablish positive emotion intervention strategies.
Support groups like SMART Recovery offer a safe space to discuss negative legacy emotions and find support from others with similar experiences. This sense of connection can reduce the risk behaviors that often follow shame-based setbacks.
Daily self-care practices, such as exercise, mindfulness, or individual therapy, help manage negative emotions and reduce emotional reactivity. These techniques are especially helpful in outpatient settings, such as a structured outpatient program, where consistency is vital.
By focusing on positive emotions and self-growth, individuals can turn shame into a driving force for change. This transformation is especially important for people with lifetime substance use history, including those with alcohol dependence, injection drug use, or HIV-positive persons who may face added stigma.
Understanding the context of substance use, including emotional, environmental, and social triggers, is essential. The relations to alcohol use, type of substance use, and findings across substances show that relapse risk varies depending on the model of alcohol use or drug use patterns.
Forgiveness supports long-term recovery. Letting go of shame from guilt allows people to form healthy identities and move past relationships between substance use and self-blame. Commitment therapy can support this process by helping clients accept their past without letting it define them.
Treatment environments that reduce shame and promote interpersonal behavior rooted in empathy help individuals heal. At Rize OC, we avoid judgment and focus on healing through evidence-based approaches that acknowledge how shame in addiction recovery affects daily functioning.
Recovery is more effective when people feel supported. Community-based support—whether in groups or during individual therapy—helps individuals manage levels of drug use and maintain accountability. It also improves the generalizability beyond individuals in structured settings and encourages consistent engagement in treatment.
If you’re struggling with relapse shame, feelings of guilt, or the effects of self-conscious emotions, Rize OC is here to help. Our Orange County programs address both emotional wellness and substance use recovery in a compassionate, structured environment. Call us at (949) 919-6601 or visit 22792 Centre Dr Suite 104, Lake Forest, CA to begin your recovery today.
1\. How do shame and guilt differ in addiction recovery?
Shame and guilt are both self-conscious emotions, but they influence behavior differently. Guilt focuses on actions—feeling bad about what someone did. Shame targets the self—feeling like a bad person. In recovery, guilt can support adaptive behavior and change, while shame often leads to isolation and relapse. Understanding this difference is essential to reduce negative legacy emotions that may trigger substance use disorder behaviors.
2\. Why is shame a common trigger for relapse?
Shame is a negative emotion that creates emotional distress and reduces self-worth. Studies examining the relationship between shame and relapse show that levels of shame may increase the likelihood of shame eliciting a return to substance use. Individuals may feel they’ve failed or don’t deserve recovery, which becomes a proximal trigger. Without support, shame can fuel the cycle of episodes of alcohol use, especially in those with alcohol dependence or other types of substance use.
3\. What are effective ways to manage shame after a relapse?
Managing shame involves self-awareness, individual therapy, support, and building positive emotions. Engaging in groups like SMART Recovery, practicing healthy habits, and participating in an outpatient program help process shame in a safe setting. Forgiving oneself and addressing negative self-conscious emotions can reduce the perpetuation of shame and support long-term recovery.
4\. Can shame ever be used as a motivation for recovery?
Yes, when processed with support, shame can become an impetus for shame-driven growth. Recognizing how past behaviors conflict with personal values can inspire positive change. Therapy models like commitment therapy help transform shame into accountability and reinforce the desire to build a healthy life. The key is learning from the experience without falling into cycles of self-punishment or relapse shame.
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