Man this is a tough one @Julie_Smith and I certainly still (and probably always will!) consider this a lot.
Natural consequences are a great teacher. 1. Because the lesson doesn’t come from us, and 2. Because it allows our loved one to own their wins - which I think, and have seen, is equally important. With my husband, he has a lot of self doubt to overcome so praises of simple things matter a lot to him - I guess they might do to us too
I’ve definitely developed more of a muscle to let my husband flounder, though it can be really frustrating to watch, I guess it’s an acceptance learned over time that I can’t change the way he is immediately. I can reinforce and contribute to positive changes over the long run, but immediately I’m not able to change things for him. Does that make sense?
Maybe it’s a decision between intervening in a long term mindset vs short term. And aiming for the long term.
SO that means - let them experience natural consequences in the short term and aim to help shape their long term growth. EG. If they miss work today they miss work today, but make yourself available to talk and help with better planning / rhythms to over time make it to work or understand the factors that lead to them not making it to work.
Just a thought
I’ve found it to be incredibly helpful to move out of a ‘crisis’ and reactionary mindset to a more long term view. I’m able to trust that any one slip is not determinant of a terrible future. And I do still get caught up in emotions when I find reasons to be - which honestly still happens frequently!
BUT all this is caveated with the fact that in my situation we’re certainly out of the depths of the woods with my husband - he’s 3 years out of rehab and into recovery and still slips up but more in a ‘bumps in the road’ way for sure. And not that this couldn’t change. But this is the lens I’m coming from <3