A non-judgmental and structured space to understand the roots of compulsion and move toward a life of genuine freedom and connection.
If you've spent your life feeling trapped in a cycle of behaviors or substances that you no longer enjoy, we want you to know that we understand the quiet shame that often accompanies addiction. At So You Need Therapy, we don't view addiction as a moral failure or a lack of character. We recognize it as a profound attempt to regulate an overwhelmed nervous system — a way to numb pain, escape a heavy reality, or find a moment of quiet in a loud world. We're here to help you address the reasons why you need the relief, so you can find a more sustainable way to feel at peace.
Addiction is rarely about the substance or behavior itself; it is about the relief it provides. Whether it involves substances, gambling, food, or digital compulsions, the brain is essentially seeking a 'short-cut' to dopamine or a way to quiet the 'fight or flight' response.
Over time, the brain adapts to this short-cut, making it harder to find joy or safety in the natural rhythms of life. Our work together is about rebuilding those natural pathways, moving away from 'emergency relief' and toward a more integrated sense of wellbeing.
Understanding these experiences as signals from your nervous system is the first step toward moving through them with greater awareness and self-compassion. What may feel like a lack of control is often the nervous system attempting to regulate distress, stimulation, or emotional discomfort. Common signals include:
Your thoughts increasingly revolve around the next moment of relief, making it difficult to stay present with work, relationships, or personal goals.
You may notice that what once brought relief no longer feels sufficient, requiring greater intensity, frequency, or time to achieve the same effect.
After the moment of relief passes, a physical or emotional crash — irritability, anxiety, or emptiness — can appear, often pulling you back into the cycle again.
You may feel as though your body is moving toward the behavior before your mind has time to fully process the choice.
Withdrawing from loved ones or masking parts of your behavior can create distance, making authentic connection feel more difficult over time.
These habits often begin as attempts to manage deeper distress — such as the stimulation needs of ADHD, the weight of trauma, or overwhelming emotional patterns.
Compulsive behaviors often overlap with other forms of neurodivergence or trauma. We help you understand the 'how' of your compulsions so we can offer the most precise support.
A powerful, 'magnetic' pull toward a behavior to stop internal discomfort.
A burst of impulsivity because the brain is seeking novelty or interest.
A sudden shutdown or 'numbing out' because the body feels unsafe.
To find immediate relief or numbing from emotional pain or boredom.
To find engagement and dopamine so the brain can stay 'online.'
To find felt safety so the body can stop its survival response.
Defined by 'secret shame' and feeling disconnected from values.
Generally stable, though you may feel like a 'failure' when tasks are hard.
Persistent feeling of being 'unworthy' or weighed down by past events.
Willpower feels hijacked by a physiological need for the next relief.
Attention feels hijacked by the most interesting thing in the room.
Safety feels hijacked by a memory of a past threat.
| LOOKING AT… | ADDICTIONS | ADHD | COMPLEX TRAUMA (C-PTSD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Moment | A powerful, 'magnetic' pull toward a behavior to stop internal discomfort. | A burst of impulsivity because the brain is seeking novelty or interest. | A sudden shutdown or 'numbing out' because the body feels unsafe. |
| Primary Goal | To find immediate relief or numbing from emotional pain or boredom. | To find engagement and dopamine so the brain can stay 'online.' | To find felt safety so the body can stop its survival response. |
| Sense of Self | Defined by 'secret shame' and feeling disconnected from values. | Generally stable, though you may feel like a 'failure' when tasks are hard. | Persistent feeling of being 'unworthy' or weighed down by past events. |
| Relationship to Control | Willpower feels hijacked by a physiological need for the next relief. | Attention feels hijacked by the most interesting thing in the room. | Safety feels hijacked by a memory of a past threat. |
The goal isn't sobriety as performance. It's a nervous system regulated enough that the short-cuts stop being necessary.
Discovering the emotional or sensory states that lead to searching for relief, addressing the 'hunger' before it becomes a crisis.
Providing practical, somatic tools to help you navigate the 'waves' of a craving and sit with discomfort without letting it drive your actions.
Rediscovering your core values and building a life aligned with the person you actually want to be.
Our Nurse Practitioners help address physiological imbalances, sleep issues, and withdrawal symptoms to provide a stable foundation for therapy.
A habit is a choice that has become automatic. An addiction is a physiological and emotional need that persists even when it causes harm — and even when you genuinely want to stop.
Because the 'logic' centre of your brain is often bypassed by the 'survival' centre during a craving. Knowing something is harmful and being able to stop are two different neurological tasks. We help you bring those systems back into balance — so logic and survival are working together instead of against each other.
Recovery is rarely a straight line. We view 'slips' as valuable data — they show us where your nervous system still feels unsupported, not where you've failed. The work is about understanding what the slip was telling you, not punishing yourself for it.
This is one of the most common questions we get. The honest answer is: we can't accept you as a client to 'fix,' 'manage,' or change someone else — that wouldn't be ethical, and it wouldn't actually work. But if loving someone with addiction is shaping your life — through worry, financial strain, walking on eggshells, codependency, or the impossible question of how much to help — that is something we can absolutely help you with. Therapy for the partner or family member of someone with addiction is its own important work, focused on you: your boundaries, your nervous system, your clarity about what's yours to carry and what isn't. If that's what you're looking for, we'd be glad to support you.
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