Many of us whose loved ones struggle with an addiction get so caught up in what's going on for them that we forget about ourselves. We put their needs first, and think and talk obsessively about them, what they may be doing, thinking or feeling...
As our own needs are progressively eclipsed by our loved ones' addiction, we find ourselves riding the emotional roller coaster with them, becoming just as unstable as they are.
Talk about folie à deux!
When we come to therapy, to Alanon-- or to our senses-- we are urged to "get a life!" and take care of ourselves. We start thinking and talking about ourselves. We learn to identify and respect our own needs. We draw some long-overdue boundaries. We start to recover our sanity.
But here's the thing:
The disease of addiction is so insidious and our involvement with the addict so irresistible that, even when we begin to make new choices, we may still weigh the pros and cons in terms of how it will impact our loved one's addiction!
How many times are the changes we make in recovery really motivated by the desire to influence the addict? Are we secretly hoping to force him to "hit rock bottom" so he or she will seek help and get fixed? That is not making choices for ourselves.
Addiction is a sneaky devil. What a pity it would be, after all our work to extricate ourselves from the insanity of the disease, to let it slip in the back door...
Monday, April 9, 2018
Sunday, February 4, 2018
Saying it out loud
- Happiness is the sum total of gratitude in a day
AA expression
There is something to be grateful for in every moment. Too often, however, we let these moments slip by, allowing our attention to settle on what we don’t like, or the many things we wish to change. Then happiness becomes quickly elusive.
One way to get ourselves out of that rut and claim our happiness is by saying out loud the things we appreciate right now: “What a beautiful snowfall!”
Immediately our hearts are lifted.
They say to put your money where your mouth is; to walk the talk. That’s how you put theory into practice. When it comes to happiness, the opposite is just as true: put your mouth where your money is. Talk the walk.
By expressing what we are grateful for, happiness is.
AA expression
There is something to be grateful for in every moment. Too often, however, we let these moments slip by, allowing our attention to settle on what we don’t like, or the many things we wish to change. Then happiness becomes quickly elusive.
One way to get ourselves out of that rut and claim our happiness is by saying out loud the things we appreciate right now: “What a beautiful snowfall!”
Immediately our hearts are lifted.
They say to put your money where your mouth is; to walk the talk. That’s how you put theory into practice. When it comes to happiness, the opposite is just as true: put your mouth where your money is. Talk the walk.
By expressing what we are grateful for, happiness is.
Friday, December 29, 2017
Go with the flow
A friend recently asked me about listening and I said I'd give him a few pointers. I thought of an acronym GWTF.
Here it is:
GWTF (GO WITH THE FLOW)
G is for GET: let them GET their feelings off their chest. Feelings are like a river, so let them flow! You don't need to do anything other than GET out of the way. Make room. Be receptive. Most of the time all we need to untangle our feelings is someone willing to GET them.
W is for WITH/HOLD: WITHHOLD (refrain from) expressing your own point of view, feelings, opinions, comments or reactions, especially negative ones (criticism). Do HOLD the person with your quiet presence, your eyes, your arms. Show them you are WITH them. They will feel held and heard. That is doing a lot!
T is for TIME: take the TIME they will need to get out all their feelings. Don't rush them, interrupt, stop them or give advice, especially when you feel like you have to do something. Don't. You will merely block their flow. And the more you do that, the longer you will be there! Be a conduit not a dam, and the river will come to rest all by itself. Give it TIME.
F is for FEELINGS: if you must do something, FEEL. Feel what they feel. Picture yourself in their shoes. Guess what emotions they might be experiencing. You can even say (when they have stopped sharing) "you must FEEL X, Y or Z". Let them correct you if you are wrong and don't take it personally. Remember! It is not about you. If all else fails, nod sympathetically and say "uh-huh" or "I hear you".
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
don't shoot!
Much of the work I do consists of helping people identify their emotional triggers. I try to get them to go from reactivity to reaction. My motivation is largely due to the tragically pervasive outcome of not owning reactivity: shooting the messenger. This is so distressing to me, especially when the messenger is a loved one, turning love into murderous hate in a heartbeat! Ironically, the real messenger usually turns out to be ourselves, the stories we're telling ourselves that drown out what our loved ones are really saying.
Say your girlfriend raises her voice and pleads, "Please don't go out again with the boys tonight!" You hear her trying to control you when, in fact, she is earnestly asking you to stay with her. You pick up the tone but not the content of her message, triggered by your own childhood story which comes projectile vomitting forward as the voice of your own wretched mother giving you grief and making you feel bad for wanting to play. You experience this as a personal attack and, before you know it, you shoot back, "You're a control freak!" and leave slamming the door.
Say your son has forgotten his homework again and he just sits there staring at you when you ask why. He shoots you a glance that reminds you of your father's silent treatment when he tried to get the upper hand on you, and you shoot back, "Wipe that smirk off your face! You should be ashamed of yourself."
I hear examples every day... I have shot back myself... a switch is flipped and we see the very ones who love us most as threats, treating them like enemies when, most of the time, they never say half of what we hear coming from their mouths.
It is so damaging.
In a nutshell, we need to stop and reflect, slow down, and hear the stories in our heads, owning them before acting them out on someone else.
How do you stop violence?
When you get triggered, don't open fire.
Say your girlfriend raises her voice and pleads, "Please don't go out again with the boys tonight!" You hear her trying to control you when, in fact, she is earnestly asking you to stay with her. You pick up the tone but not the content of her message, triggered by your own childhood story which comes projectile vomitting forward as the voice of your own wretched mother giving you grief and making you feel bad for wanting to play. You experience this as a personal attack and, before you know it, you shoot back, "You're a control freak!" and leave slamming the door.
Say your son has forgotten his homework again and he just sits there staring at you when you ask why. He shoots you a glance that reminds you of your father's silent treatment when he tried to get the upper hand on you, and you shoot back, "Wipe that smirk off your face! You should be ashamed of yourself."
I hear examples every day... I have shot back myself... a switch is flipped and we see the very ones who love us most as threats, treating them like enemies when, most of the time, they never say half of what we hear coming from their mouths.
In a nutshell, we need to stop and reflect, slow down, and hear the stories in our heads, owning them before acting them out on someone else.
How do you stop violence?
When you get triggered, don't open fire.
Thursday, October 19, 2017
enabling, disabling and re-engaging
Anybody can be angry, that is easy; but to be angry with the right person to the right degree at the right time for the right purpose and in the right way, that is not easy
~Aristotle
Today I met a mother whose college-aged daughter had become belligerent and rude. When the daughter asked for something like a glass of water, the mother either complied, bringing it to her with a "Here you go, dear," or denied the request explaining that she was just too tired to get up from the couch at the end of her long day.
In the first scenario, the daughter rarely thanked the mother and, sometimes, didn't even acknowledge her. The mother felt invisible, like her daughter was acting all entitled. But if the mother did not comply, the daughter pressured her relentlelssly, sometimes even treating her to a litany of explosives which criticized and demeaned her. The mother was appalled at what she perceived to be her daughter's lack of empathy.
She knew, "I'm an enabler" but her alternative strategy, to disengage, seemed to be doing more harm than good. What to do, she wondered...
The mother came from a family where you either cared for others or looked after yourself. She never learned how to engage needy others without enabling them. Not surprisingly, the mother's two gears for dealing with her daughter's requests were: enabling or disengaging. Lo and behold, she created a monster!
But there is an alternative.
The mother could make her service to others dependent on their respect. She could do this by enabling civility, at the very least by inviting them to say "please" and "thank you" before and after doing something for them. This disables rudeness without disengaging, a pretty simple way to turn this mother's situation around. She may not be able to control her daughter, but she is always in charge of herself.
~Aristotle
Today I met a mother whose college-aged daughter had become belligerent and rude. When the daughter asked for something like a glass of water, the mother either complied, bringing it to her with a "Here you go, dear," or denied the request explaining that she was just too tired to get up from the couch at the end of her long day.
In the first scenario, the daughter rarely thanked the mother and, sometimes, didn't even acknowledge her. The mother felt invisible, like her daughter was acting all entitled. But if the mother did not comply, the daughter pressured her relentlelssly, sometimes even treating her to a litany of explosives which criticized and demeaned her. The mother was appalled at what she perceived to be her daughter's lack of empathy.
She knew, "I'm an enabler" but her alternative strategy, to disengage, seemed to be doing more harm than good. What to do, she wondered...
The mother came from a family where you either cared for others or looked after yourself. She never learned how to engage needy others without enabling them. Not surprisingly, the mother's two gears for dealing with her daughter's requests were: enabling or disengaging. Lo and behold, she created a monster!
But there is an alternative.
The mother could make her service to others dependent on their respect. She could do this by enabling civility, at the very least by inviting them to say "please" and "thank you" before and after doing something for them. This disables rudeness without disengaging, a pretty simple way to turn this mother's situation around. She may not be able to control her daughter, but she is always in charge of herself.
Saturday, October 7, 2017
crossing the line
Either you're right or you're in a relationsip
~Anonymous
Question:
Much of the literature advises “no contact” with a person who is abusive. Sometimes I think I should do this with my husband. Other times I’m not so sure.
I see a pattern in my life. I've been the victim before. Actually, I've been thevictim a lot! My boundaries have been violated by friends, family, colleagues... so I must be the common denominator.
My partner is working on himself. He is becoming more self-aware and the incidents of verbal abuse are getting fewer and farther between. He is in an anger management group and starting to look at his behaviour.
I don’t want to blame myself when my husband crosses the line (the literature calls this “blaming the victim”) but doesn’t every conflict have two sides? Shouldn’t I be owning mine?
Answer:
It’s easy to lump “abusers” into one pile and “victims” into another, and say never the twain shall meet. This might be the only recourse in a relationship where the abusive person is so defensive that there is only ever one side to every disagreement. Your boundary is not really being crossed because, in the abuser’s mind, there is no “you”, just an annoying voice that needs to be quashed, controlled or silenced. It is a no-win situation and no-contact may be the only option.
But sometimes a black-and-white solution like no-contact
is not the only answer. In fact, in the
majority of conflicts, even when one partner becomes abusive, the dynamics are
usually more nuanced. Both sides may need
to do some work on maintaining boundaries.
Like you, I have noticed that most victims are repeat defenders just as most abusers are repeat offenders. Without blaming the victim, I wonder: are victims possibly missing cues that might forewarn them of violence?
I recently read that victims of physical violence tend to push back on their abusive partners. Maybe they are misreading or ignoring a potentially abusive situation and failing to back away before it escalates? This may be especially true in a relationship where there is a pursuer-distancer dynamic.
“Distancers” get easily overwhelmed by strong emotions. They need downtime to self-regulate (hence the famous dictum to “breathe”, “take a time-out” or “count to ten”). The “pursuing” partner, rather than back away when the distancer becomes unavailable, attempts to bridge the gap by getting physically closer or asking what is wrong and trying to fix the problem. The distancer, threatened by the encroaching pursuer who seems to be ignoring their need for space, feels warranted in pulling further away or pushing back harder and begin at this point either to sulk and go silent, or raise their voice and yell at or insult their partner.
Distancers often feel it is unfair to be called
out for “abusive” behaviour. They see their partner as having provoked them. While pursuers do not deserve to be blamed for their partner’s violence,
they may need to do their work on containing their emotions rather than acting them out. They may be
just as impulsive as their abusers.
So, to answer your question, it is quite
possible you both need to work on your side of the conflict, even if only one
of you resorts to verbal or physical violence.
When you work on your dynamic together, you become allies rather than opponents
and stand a much better chance of managing conflict before it gets to the point
where someone crosses a line.
~Anonymous
Much of the literature advises “no contact” with a person who is abusive. Sometimes I think I should do this with my husband. Other times I’m not so sure.
I see a pattern in my life. I've been the victim before. Actually, I've been thevictim a lot! My boundaries have been violated by friends, family, colleagues... so I must be the common denominator.
My partner is working on himself. He is becoming more self-aware and the incidents of verbal abuse are getting fewer and farther between. He is in an anger management group and starting to look at his behaviour.
I don’t want to blame myself when my husband crosses the line (the literature calls this “blaming the victim”) but doesn’t every conflict have two sides? Shouldn’t I be owning mine?
Answer:
It’s easy to lump “abusers” into one pile and “victims” into another, and say never the twain shall meet. This might be the only recourse in a relationship where the abusive person is so defensive that there is only ever one side to every disagreement. Your boundary is not really being crossed because, in the abuser’s mind, there is no “you”, just an annoying voice that needs to be quashed, controlled or silenced. It is a no-win situation and no-contact may be the only option.
Like you, I have noticed that most victims are repeat defenders just as most abusers are repeat offenders. Without blaming the victim, I wonder: are victims possibly missing cues that might forewarn them of violence?
I recently read that victims of physical violence tend to push back on their abusive partners. Maybe they are misreading or ignoring a potentially abusive situation and failing to back away before it escalates? This may be especially true in a relationship where there is a pursuer-distancer dynamic.
“Distancers” get easily overwhelmed by strong emotions. They need downtime to self-regulate (hence the famous dictum to “breathe”, “take a time-out” or “count to ten”). The “pursuing” partner, rather than back away when the distancer becomes unavailable, attempts to bridge the gap by getting physically closer or asking what is wrong and trying to fix the problem. The distancer, threatened by the encroaching pursuer who seems to be ignoring their need for space, feels warranted in pulling further away or pushing back harder and begin at this point either to sulk and go silent, or raise their voice and yell at or insult their partner.
Monday, October 2, 2017
Caring and compassion, chaos or control?
My husband is a very kind, protective
person but, once in a while, he flips and becomes unbearably bossy. He gets on his high horse and starts to comment
on my life and how I should live it. It could
be as stupid as telling me how to organize my kitchen while I’m cooking, or how
to load my fork so the food won’t fall off it when I’m eating. It’s kind of cute. Until he goes as far as to tell me how to be
a better parent to my kids (who are not his) or gives me all kinds of unsolicited
advice on my choices with friends, colleagues, family or money. He starts out sweet and caring but, if I tell
him I did not ask for his advice, it escalates and becomes chaotic very quickly. He can get so worked up that he ends up giving
me these patronizing lectures that sound almost angry. If I continue to push back or (God forbid)
cry because I feel like a scolded child, he tells me I can’t take criticism and
accuses me of taking things too personally.
I tell him his way of talking hurts me,
and have tried asking him to talk about himself and his feelings instead of criticizing
me and mine (to use I-statements as you have suggested), but he says I am playing
the victim, or the therapist, and that he should not have to use special words or
phrases to express his opinion. He says
I am being controlling! But I feel like he
is the one trying to control me. The conversation
goes round and round. It’s crazy-making…
He has ADD and OCD. Sometimes he uses cocaine. Maybe there is a connection? Or maybe he is a just a hopeless control
freak.
Me:
He is the one being controlling! I do not think that is your husband’s intention
and, yes, there is probably a link to his ADD and OCD, and cocaine; we’ll get
to that later…
One of the reasons I-statements are
so important is it puts the emphasis on the speaker and his opinions and
feelings rather than on you and yours. Relying
on you-statements puts the listener on the defensive as your husband is doing
to you, “the accused”! He is pointing
the finger instead of talking about himself.
If you feel criticized it is because you are being criticized. No wonder you push back!
Lovers and parents can both get into
this “high horse” mode when they are worried about their loved ones. One of my good friends told me that when he
was a boy his sisters would berate him when they worried about him. If he cried they’d just dig in deeper, trying to
get him to man up, like your husband is doing to you now. They probably cared. They just had a helluva way of showing
it.
As a parent I have surely fallen
into the same trap when my kids have done things that upset me, like forgotten their
homework. “How many times do I have to remind you to double-check your agenda?”
If my son or daughter would push back on me, “I don’t have time”, or say, “Stop
telling me what to do!” I would just get more exasperated and respond with something like,
“Well you should make time!” or “I’ll stop telling you what to do when you
start doing it by yourself!” I wanted to
inspire and encourage them but it always came out angry!!
This is definitely a learned thing. My parents did it to me and theirs to them
and so on and so on… We learned to express concern by sermonizing but to our
loved ones it just feels like strong-arming them into submission.
As for ADD and OCD, you’re right, it
would make it even worse. ADD is an impulse
control problem, and OCD resolves anxious feelings by trying to do something about
them! So if someone has both ADD and OCD
tendencies, when they worry about their loved ones, their impulse is to say
or do something to get them or the situation under control, quick! It is more than an impulse. It is a compulsion that bypasses thoughtful action
because of an overwhelming sense of helplessness. Add cocaine to the mix and,
well, you have someone who is going to be even more emotionally labile, even though
he may be using coke to help get his emotions under control. It’s a vicious circle because of course it is
not just avoiding the problem, it’s making it worse.
Your husband needs to understand the
triggers for his impulse control issues (always going back to childhood) then develop
a plan of action for dealing with his feelings other than by avoiding
them with drugs or acting on them by controlling you. He will have to practice the plan, putting it into
action until it becomes second nature. He
can do it! And you can help him. But he needs to own his part, stay planted in his feelings and reach out to you rather than tell you what to do.
Finally, in terms of being a “control
freak”… I am not very fond of that term or in agreement with claims that people
who are controlling relish power over others.
That is a rare perversion of the human spirit. I think it is more accurate to say that controlling
people feel easily controlled and, when they feel helpless, deeply and genuinely want to do something about it. They just haven’t learned
how.
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