Addiction Treatment with Mental Health Support in Huntington Beach, CA
You’re not “too complicated” for treatment.
Many people don’t struggle with addiction in isolation. Anxiety, depression, trauma, or emotional overwhelm often exist alongside substance use — influencing cravings, relapse, and recovery.
At Aloha Recovery, addiction treatment is delivered with thoughtful support for mental health symptoms when they are part of the picture, all within a safe, structured residential rehab environment.
“Why do I keep relapsing when I’m stressed or anxious?”
This is one of the most common questions people ask, often quietly and often after trying to get sober more than once.
For many people, relapse isn’t about motivation or willpower. It’s about untreated stress, anxiety, emotional pain, or past experiences that substances were helping manage.
When these factors aren’t acknowledged as part of addiction treatment, recovery can feel fragile or exhausting.
Find out if your insurance will cover the cost of treatment.
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What people mean when they say “dual diagnosis”
“Dual diagnosis” is a clinical term used when substance use and mental health symptoms occur at the same time.
This doesn’t mean someone needs a separate mental health program. It means recovery is more effective when emotional wellbeing, stress, and past experiences are considered as part of addiction treatment.
At Aloha Recovery, the focus is on understanding how mental health symptoms interact with substance use and supporting recovery accordingly.
Mental health support within addiction treatment
Aloha Recovery is a drug and alcohol treatment center. Mental health support is provided as it relates to addiction and recovery, not as standalone or primary mental health treatment.
Support may include:
- recognizing anxiety, depression, or trauma as relapse drivers
- helping clients develop emotional regulation and coping skills
- addressing stress and mood changes during early recovery
- coordinating with outside providers when appropriate
This integrated approach helps reduce relapse risk while remaining focused on addiction recovery.
Care that feels safe enough to be honest
Talking about emotions can feel vulnerable, especially in early recovery. At Aloha, care is attachment-led, meaning safety and trust come first.
People are supported in:
- talking openly about stress and emotional triggers
- learning healthier ways to cope
- understanding how emotions impact substance use
This work happens gently and without pressure.
Residential drug and alcohol rehab at Aloha is attachment-led. Relationships matter here. Staff show up consistently, boundaries are clear and compassionate, and people are treated with dignity and respect. This relational foundation allows deeper healing to take place.
Emotional support within residential care
Emotional wellbeing is addressed as part of residential addiction treatment, not as a separate track.
Support may include:
- individual and group therapeutic support
- trauma-informed approaches
- emotional regulation skill-building
- medication coordination when appropriate
- consistent therapeutic relationships
All care remains centered on addiction recovery while acknowledging the role emotional health plays in that process.
This approach may be helpful if…
This type of integrated support may be helpful if:
- stress or anxiety contributes to substance use
- emotions feel overwhelming once sober
- relapse happens during emotional strain
- past treatment didn’t address emotional triggers
- you’ve heard the term “dual diagnosis” but weren’t sure what it meant
You don’t need a formal mental health diagnosis to benefit from this kind of support.
Where the Aloha spirit fits in
The Aloha spirit emphasizes compassion, presence, and mutual care. This approach is especially important when emotional vulnerability is part of recovery.
At Aloha Recovery, people are supported with:
- calm, respectful communication
- emotional safety
- consistent relationships
- space to slow down and reflect
Healing happens when people feel safe enough to be real.
Stability first, then forward movement
As emotional stability improves and substance use patterns are addressed, individuals are supported in building a recovery plan that feels realistic and sustainable.
This may include:
- continued residential care
- stepping down to lower levels of support
- ongoing therapy or community resources
- relapse prevention planning
- reentry and life rebuilding
Care is continuous and coordinated.
Talk to someone who understands the full picture
If addiction and emotional wellbeing are tangled together for you or someone you love, you’re not alone.
Our admissions team can help you talk through what’s going on and explore next steps with clarity and care.