Close

Who We Are

Strategic Plan

Board of Directors

Staff

Annual Reports

Overview

Transition Services

Sample Daily Schedule

Facilities Tour

Overview

Measuring Success

Success Stories

For Caregivers

For Professionals

Fees for Service

Apply

Corporate Partners

Planned Giving

Donate

Wishing Well

Exploring Mental Health 2025

Summer Solstice 2026

June 11, 2026

How Family Can Support a Loved One During Residential Treatment

Nicole Holmes, LISW-S, Assistant Clinical Director, Clinician

 When someone you care about enters residential mental health treatment, you often experience a complicated mix of emotions — relief, fear, uncertainty, hope, and exhaustion. While residential programs provide therapy, structure, and clinical support, family involvement remains one of the most important components of long-term recovery.

At Hopewell, healing happens within a therapeutic community built on connection, responsibility, and personal growth. Families are an essential part of that process and understanding how to provide healthy support can make a meaningful difference for everyone involved.

What You Should Do for Your Loved One

 One of the most important things families can offer during residential treatment is support. While it is natural to want constant updates, recovery often requires residents to fully engage in the structure and relationships within the therapeutic community. Giving your loved one the space to connect with the program, their peers, and their treatment team allows them to develop greater independence and confidence in their own recovery. This may mean limiting excessive phone calls, visits, or attempts to “rescue” them from difficult emotions. A therapeutic community is designed to help individuals learn how to tolerate discomfort, practice coping skills, and build healthier routines within a supportive environment.

Healthy boundaries are also essential. Many families living with mental illness have spent years operating in crisis mode, which can sometimes lead to patterns of overprotecting, enabling, or taking on responsibilities that belong to their loved one. Boundaries are not about withholding love — they are about creating healthy expectations, accountability, and emotional safety for everyone involved.

Families can also provide encouragement through thoughtful gestures that help residents feel supported without disrupting treatment. Letters, cards, care packages, family photos, favorite snacks, or small comfort items can provide reassurance during difficult moments. Often, simple messages such as “We are proud of you” or “Keep going” carry tremendous meaning.

What You Should Expect from the Residential Facility

 Residential treatment programs should view families as important partners in the recovery process. Families should expect regular and appropriate communication with the treatment team regarding progress, concerns, goals, and recommendations for ongoing support. While confidentiality and resident privacy are important, families should feel included and informed about how they can best support recovery. Programs that emphasize therapeutic community often encourage residents to build relationships, participate in responsibilities, and engage meaningfully with daily life within the program.

In addition, families should expect opportunities to participate in family therapy or family education sessions when clinically appropriate. Mental illness impacts the entire family system, and healing often requires improved communication, greater understanding, and healthier relational patterns. Family sessions can help loved ones process difficult emotions, rebuild trust, and learn practical tools for supporting recovery after discharge.

Residential programs should also encourage honesty, collaboration, and realistic expectations. Recovery is rarely linear, and there may be setbacks along the way. Treatment teams should help families understand the recovery process while reinforcing hope and long-term growth.

What You Should Do for Yourself

 Supporting a loved one with a major mental illness can be emotionally overwhelming. Families often spend so much time focusing on the needs of their loved one that they neglect their own emotional wellbeing. It is important for you to seek support for yourself as well. There is often a great benefit for family members in finding their own individual therapist who can provide guidance, assist in setting boundaries and untangling responsibilities all while providing emotional support through this journey.

Taking care of yourself is not selfish. In fact, maintaining your own emotional health often allows you to provide more stable and sustainable support over time. Additionally, you might consider joining a support group for family members of individuals struggling with a mental illness.

Recovery affects the entire family, and healing often happens together. By supporting your loved one with patience, healthy boundaries, and encouragement — while also caring for yourself — families can play a powerful role in creating lasting recovery and hope for the future.

 

 

 

 

DONATE