Strategies
Strategies for the non-gambling family member or friend
- Protect and care for yourself. Find someone to talk to, for example a friend, counsellor or help service.
- It is normal to feel betrayed by your friend, family member or partner. You have a right to your feelings.
- It is normal to be angry. Acknowledge your anger, talk to someone and learn appropriate ways to express your anger.
- Don’t try to take control of the gambler’s life – it won’t work and will make you unhappy.
- Relate to the gambler as an equal person. Avoid trying to protect them.
- Use your energy to help change your own situation rather than the gambler’s.
- Allow the gambler to take responsibility for their behaviour.
- Be honest and let the gambler deal with the consequences of their behaviour.
- Let them deal with creditors and their employer. You do not need to help them with lies and deceit.
- Decide if you can manage the gambler’s money. If you do not want to, you may need to maintain separate bank accounts and credit cards.
- Do not lend the gambler money!
- Do not pay the gambler’s debts!
- Seek legal, financial and other advice to explore your options.
- Communicate your feelings to the person who is gambling. Do this carefully and openly.
- Let the gambler know you want to help. They may be feeling out of control, embarrassed or ashamed. You can convey a willingness to support them.
- It is important for you to support them in their struggle, not to take their burden on yourself. You may choose to say “I can’t do this for you, but I will be with you while you do it.”
You cannot change the gambler’s behaviour – they have to be willing to change themselves.
As a person without a problem, you can’t understand why the person with the gambling problem doesn’t just stop. They are like a run-away train. You try many ways to stop them but a run-away train is impractical and impossible to stop. Just as you cannot stop a run-away train, you cannot control the gambler’s behaviour.
You need to focus away from their behaviour and deal with your own feelings. This will help you to see the gambler as a person in crisis and out of control. This will then allow you to be supportive and to understand their feelings, and yet not apply pressure about their behaviour.
Gradual steps to change
Quite often family members and friends are ready for the gambling behaviour to change while the person that gambles is not. This can lead to conflict and stress for all involved. Identifying where the person is up to within the change process can be a useful strategy to use in deciding how to approach the issue. You can think about change as a staged process:
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Dianne tells her very real and very personal account of her husband’s gambling problem, and how with the assistance of Gambler’s Help.
Robert, tells his story of how he discovered his wife had been gambling, and how, with the help of counselling they were able to overcome the problem and repair the damage gambling had done to their family.

Resources to help professionals identify problem gambling clients and respond to their needs.

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Comments
if my partner is trying to quit gambling (on horses), should he / I / we ask his friends to stop sending "hot tips" though? or will this make him feel isolated? i think the gambling is a bit of a social thing for him...
hi there,
i have recently ended a relationship with my boyfriend due to a gambling problem.he told me he had a problem last year and that he's not gambling any more and going to councelling. about 6 weeks later he admitted he could not stop. he then went to about 3 gamblers anonomous meetings. for the best part of a year he swore to me he was fine no gambling and all was good. i believed him until last weekend when i spoke to his mother and discovered things were less then bad with him in relation to gambling. myself and his family confronted him and made him confess and try to admit to himself. i knew in my heart and soul that i would never believe him again and all trust was lost. i really wanted to support and help him through this but i knew i could not. i had to break it off the next day which was so hard because i felt i had abandoned him and he begged me to stay etc etc.
its about three weeks since and i am finding it hard but getting through it.
should i speak to someone about it? as i do not want it all hitting me out of no where
thanks for your help in advance,
regards
where are there meetings for wives of gamblers please? I live in Bulleen
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