He has said it a hundred times. I want to quit. He has cried saying it. He has promised it to his children's heads. He has written it down in notebooks the family later finds in the cupboard. And every single time, within days or weeks, he is using again. The family begins to believe he is lying. He is not lying. He is telling you exactly what he feels. The problem is that wanting to quit and being ready to quit are two completely different psychological states — and most addiction centres in India do not know how to tell them apart.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, this is one of the most important conversations we have with families before admission. Because admitting a patient who only wants to quit, without first building the readiness to quit, is one of the fastest ways to set up a relapse.
Modern addiction science recognises that recovery is not a single decision. It is a process that moves through stages — pre-contemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, and sometimes relapse. This model is called the Transtheoretical Model of Change, and it is used worldwide by clinicians treating substance use disorders. The American Psychological Association, the leading professional body of psychologists in the United States, recognises this staged model as foundational to evidence-based addiction treatment.
In the wanting stage — what clinicians call contemplation — the person knows the substance is harming them. They feel guilty. They make promises. But they have not yet committed to the difficult, painful, identity-changing work of actually stopping. In the ready stage — what clinicians call preparation and action — the person has accepted that change requires sacrifice, has built motivation that survives cravings, and has internalised the reasons to stop. The difference is not effort. It is internal alignment. A patient who is ready will fight for their recovery. A patient who only wants to quit will hope it happens to them.
Most addiction centres in India operate on a simple model. The family pays. The patient is admitted. The patient is detoxed. The patient is discharged. There is no assessment of where the patient actually sits on the readiness spectrum. A patient in pre-contemplation — who has been forced into treatment by family pressure — is treated identically to a patient in action who has chosen recovery. The outcomes are predictably different. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the United States federal agency that sets national standards for addiction treatment, has documented that matching the intensity and type of intervention to the patient's stage of change significantly improves long-term outcomes.
When a patient who is not ready is pushed through standard treatment, they comply on the surface but resist underneath. They go through the motions of therapy without engaging. They count the days until discharge. They tell their counsellor what they think the counsellor wants to hear. And on the day they walk out of the centre, they head straight back to the substance — sometimes within hours — because the part of them that wanted to use was never genuinely treated.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we begin with a structured readiness assessment using validated motivational tools. We use Motivational Interviewing — an evidence-based, non-confrontational therapeutic approach developed by clinical psychologists William Miller and Stephen Rollnick — to help the patient explore their own ambivalence and discover their own reasons for change. Our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists do not lecture, threaten, or moralise. They ask questions. They listen. They reflect what the patient says back to them. And in the process, they help the patient move from wanting to ready.
Where Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is added at the right stage, it helps the patient identify the thoughts and triggers that drive use, and build practical skills for handling them. Where medication-assisted treatment is appropriate, it reduces cravings during the period when motivation is still being built. The result is a patient who walks into formal action — detox, rehab, aftercare — already committed, already engaged, and already much more likely to recover. The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse confirms that motivation-focused interventions roughly double the long-term success rates of standard rehab.
If your loved one keeps saying he wants to quit but never does, do not force him into a rehab that will simply restart the cycle. Instead, get a family-only consultation with a qualified psychiatrist first. Ask whether your loved one is in contemplation, preparation, or action. Ask what kind of intervention is appropriate for that stage. Ask whether motivational work is needed before admission. The answer may save you months of wasted treatment fees and your loved one years of avoidable relapse.
Q: How do I know if my loved one is actually ready?
A: He proposes the treatment himself, asks specific questions about it, and shows up on time on day one. Talk without these is wanting, not readiness.
Q: Can rehab create readiness?
A: Yes, when the programme uses Motivational Interviewing and a structured assessment of stage of change. Standard rehab without these tools cannot.
Q: Should I force my unwilling loved one into rehab?
A: Not without psychiatric guidance. Forced admission without readiness work usually fails. A family-only consultation is the right first step.
Q: How long does it take to build readiness?
A: Days to a few weeks for most patients. It is faster with skilled clinical input and slower when families try to convince through arguments alone.
Q: Is motivational interviewing available at Bharosa?
A: Yes. It is part of the standard assessment and admission process for every addiction patient.
Wanting to quit is not enough. Readiness can be built — but only with the right clinical approach. Speak to Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals - Hyderabad about a readiness assessment for your loved one. Call +91 95050 58886.

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