How to Help Someone with Hallucination: A Practical Guide

Practical guidance for supporting a friend, family member, or colleague experiencing Hallucination.

Knowing how to help someone with hallucination — and what not to do — makes a real difference in their experience and your relationship.

Understanding Hallucination Before You Help

Before you can effectively help someone with hallucination, it helps to understand what it actually is. Hallucination isn't a choice or personality weakness — it involves real neurological and psychological processes.

What to Say (and What Not to Say)

Helpful:

  • 'I'm here for you and I care about you'
  • 'That sounds really hard — I'm listening'
  • 'What would be most helpful right now?'

Not helpful:

  • 'Just think positive'
  • 'Other people have it worse'
  • 'You should just...'

Encouraging Professional Help for Hallucination

Gently encourage professional support without pressuring. Offer to help research therapists or accompany them to appointments.

Taking Care of Yourself as a Support Person

Supporting someone with hallucination is emotionally demanding. Set boundaries, seek your own support, and remember you can't fix their hallucination for them.

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