Can I quit an addiction on my own, or do I need help?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Consultant Psychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-05-05

Short answer

Mild patterns can sometimes be unwound alone. Moderate-to-severe patterns — daily use, withdrawal symptoms, repeated failed attempts, social or work consequences — need clinical support. Quitting alcohol or benzodiazepines abruptly without medical supervision can be dangerous.

Most habit loops survive on the shame they generate. So before anything else: wanting to quit is the hard part. You have already done it.

When self-quitting can work

When the habit is recent, not yet daily, has not produced withdrawal, and is not yet causing significant relational, financial or work consequences. In these cases, structured stimulus control plus a regulation practice is often enough.

When you need clinical help

Daily use, physical withdrawal symptoms, repeated failed attempts, escalating quantity, hiding the use from family, or any of the consequences above. In these cases please take the AUDIT-C and consult a clinician before attempting cessation.

Important safety note

Stopping alcohol or benzodiazepines abruptly after sustained heavy use can produce dangerous withdrawal (including seizures). This must be done under medical supervision. Please do not quit cold-turkey alone.

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