addiction

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Kim
Posts: 1
Joined: Fri Jul 29, 2011 4:27 pm

addiction

Post by Kim » Tue Aug 09, 2011 5:54 pm

Hi Gabby,
I got married for the 2nd time 2 1/2 years ago. I am a 53 year old woman. I married a 46 year old man. I knew he did not drink alcohol since he was a heavy drinker until around 10 years before our marriage and gave it up. He also gave up coffee, smoking cigarettes and dope, and TV since he was addicted to all of them.
About a year into our marriage, he found out I was drinking discreetly (that is I was drinking and omitting telling him, or drinking and lying saying I had not had a drink when I had). I know now about integrity and the terrible mess I made. I have cleaned it up.

The reason (I thought) I made the mess was because his conditions were:
  • 1. tell me when you've had a drink even if it was 12 hours ago
    2. when you tell me, I will stop talking to you and you will not sleep in the same bed as me
    3. you can not have alcohol in the house even if you hide it well
    4. don't call it by name - just say "beverage"
    5. you can not drink more than once every 2 weeks
Those conditions led to some unbearable situations for me. If I broke the rules (requests), he would stop talking to me, and once verbally abused me for 2 hours straight. We went to marriage counselling and for a year we discussed the situation getting pretty much nowhere.

Recently I told him I needed more information about addiction and would go to a meeting for my answers. He told me that if I go to get information and encourage him to get over his fears (he pulled a poppy plant out of the back yard because it reminded him of drugs) then our relationship was over. I did not go YET but fully intend to.

Is it over? Because if it is, I will just get on with the "over" part. What I lack is the freedom to choose although I know that's only how it appears and I do have choice in the matter.

I need some real help of the kind I have not been able to get from marriage counselling.

I'm a little afraid of intimate relationships, and of being a fully self expressed woman, so I can not decide if it's a failure to communicate that has us stuck or if it's that my husband is so fear-driven that he's irrational. If there's no hope for the change I seek (this relationship becoming easier) then I'd rather just get on with it and separate.

Please help!

Gabby
Site Admin
Posts: 455
Joined: Sat Mar 26, 2005 11:24 am

Re: addiction

Post by Gabby » Wed Aug 10, 2011 12:05 am

Hi Kim, Firstly, thank you for writing. Secondly, there’s no "help" here. Communication coaching is simply conversations that produce more desirable results. Neither of us will be exactly the same after these coms.

You ask, “Is it over?” Of course not, else we wouldn’t be having this com. It's obvious that you're unaware that you chose him to mirror you for you, so that you could become aware that you were out-integrity before you met him. You had no business marrying anyone until you had acknowledged and resolved earlier integrity* issues.

Re: “What I lack is the freedom to choose.” True. However, you're forgetting that once you made those agreements you automatically gave up choice about those items. Wedding vows and marital agreements are liken to entering a 3 foot diameter tube the wall of which is made of rock-solid agreements. Before you made your "no drinking agreement," you had the illusion of freedom, of choice. The minute you made the agreement you entered the tube. There's no way out, without hurting yourself and others, except through the other end, at which time you will experience true freedom and choice. Once you drink it's the same as trying to stand up in the 3' diameter tube, you'll hit your head and it will hurt. If you back up and out, and quit, such as with a divorce, you'll eventually have to enter the tube again so as to experience being enlightened, a person who can be trusted to honor agreements. In other words, enlightenment, the light, at the other end of the tunnel, comes from a life-time of honoring your word. That's the benefit of making and honoring agreements. You know before you make such an agreement that you'll probably want to drink but that you won't because you're a person of integrity. The problem is, you haven't made a commitment to honoring your word. Any “choice” you’d make now would be generated from the decision from which you live; it appears you live from the unconscious decision to thwart, argue and have relationships not work.

The challenge is to choose to experience what you’re experiencing and, not make a decision using the mind that created the problem; simply keep telling the truth until the problem disappears.

Re: “. . . so I can not decide if it's a failure to communicate,” Most who read this will think, “Whaaaat?” Given that one cannot not communicate it’s clear that you were unconscious when you wrote that sentence. You'll get value from reading about communication breakdowns.

Re: “. . . or if it's that my husband is so fear-driven that he's irrational.” Here’s where you reveal your misunderstanding about responsibility. Are you willing to acknowledge that somehow you (albeit unconsciously) are intending him to behave this way—that he is mirroring you for you? He’s revealing your addiction to abuse, to abusing and to being abused and, to setting it up to be controlled. If you were in choice you would not choose to hang out in such an adversarial relationship.

So we ask, toward what end does this result you've created serve you? What are you learning about you and do you need to play the game longer or are you ready to choose to have an abuse-free fear-free day? My intuition tells me it hasn’t gotten bad enough for you to get that it’s all your creation and that you need coaching/counseling (read a definition of responsibility).

Once you have read the definition of responsibility the following will make sense: Notice that you cleverly (albeit unconsciously) chose a therapist whom you could con, one who would not address your addiction to controlling, your cause for the friction; one who would not require you to recall and complete earlier similar interactions with your controlling parents. One difference between a Communication-Skills Coach and most therapists is that a coach will not continue working with someone who continues to choose to relate with an abusive person, to do so is to enable the abuse. Sending a patient home to an abuser, for another 24-hours of abuse, is irresponsible. A coach first consults with one partner who is willing to communicate responsibly from cause. Then the other partner, then as a couple. If you put your foot down and insisted that he acknowledge each and every abuse (each condescending make-wrong) then he'd no longer be attracted to you because you couldn't be controlled.

Most consider your sabotaging behavior reprehensible; it’s tantamount to smoking crack in front of someone just out of rehab (read, Parole—the First 24 Hours). Your behavior verges on evil. And no, you didn’t do it for the reasons you believe—there’s something else that’s motivating you; I suspect it’s something for which you have a need to get caught. Which parent is he most like or not like? Who else in your life would say that you thwarted them?

I trust you’re aware that you set him up to impose Sharia-like law on you? You conned him into marrying you; you deceived him, you led him to believe that you were committed to honoring your word. And, then you abusively made him wrong for following through on the agreed upon consequences. This was your way of controlling him. No actualized powerful woman would go out on a date with him. He hasn't driven enough women out of his life for him to discover how he destroys relationships.**

Let's review what you're calling agreements; they are in fact demands.

1. "...tell me when you've had a drink even if it was 12 hours ago..."
For this to be an agreement it would read. "I agree to communicate openly, honestly, and spontaneously, no significant withholds." (Significant = any thought withheld that would trigger upset or anger.)

2. ". . . when you tell me, I will stop talking to you and you will not sleep in the same bed as me."
This should have been the red flag. Punishing someone for telling the truth reveals ignorance, his misunderstanding of the word responsibility. It doesn't make sense to punish someone for manipulating them (even unconsciously) into doing an undesirable behavior. He's completely unaware that he set you up to fail. You should have insisted on another agreement, "If you shut down communication between us, if you refuse to communicate an upset through to mutual satisfaction you must leave the house. If we cannot resolve an upset we will engage the services of a communication-skills coach."

3. " . . . you can not have alcohol in the house even if you hide it well . . ."
This should read: "We agree to not have alcohol in the house; the consequence will be immediate annulment, with absolutely no second chance. The one who breaks the agreement forfeits the right to sue for possessions or custody." Such an agreement can be mutually amended. Picture if you will how you would have handled your drinking if the consequences was, Him: ". . . and if you drink I'll cut off one of your fingers." You: "Oh, Wow, you really really mean no drinking. I get it."

4. " . . . don't call it by name - just say "beverage"
This reveals his addiction to controlling and yours to being controlled. Only an ignorant needy person would make such an agreement. Ignorant meaning, one not clear about creating and supporting agreements that work.

5. ". . . you can not drink more than once every 2 weeks . . ."
This is another indication of him wanting to control your behavior and of your need to be controlled. It further reveals that he is not experiencing love in his relationship with you; wanting to change another is not love. The love between you has become conceptualized.

* What we're looking for is incompletes in your relationships with your parents. To recall and complete these do The Clearing Process.

** You might wonder why I don't recommend that you attend AA (Alcohol Anonymous) or Al-Anon meeting (to address one's addiction to enabling). Given that there are millions and millions who attend AA meetings regularly and that one of the 12 steps is: "Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all." Given this promise, this agreement, and the fact that our phones aren't ringing off the hook daily with calls from those whose drinking have negatively affected us, reveals AA member's ignorance about the correlation between integrity and outcomes. AA also requires that one believes in God as a ruler/creator. Also, AA members believe that one can't address the source of, and complete, his/her addiction and drink from choice again.

With aloha, Gabby

P.S.: There’s no way he can heal until you commit to not interacting with abusive people. He has no choice but to react to your leadership-communication skills. No matter the age difference you will always be the leader in your relationships.

P.P.S.: For a partner to be awarded the position of leader, the quarter-back, who (after all considerations have been communicated) makes all the calls, the one who is served; he/she, this leader, must themselves operate from impeccable integrity and with the firm agreement to not make the source of their power (the one who feeds the leader power) wrong (except that the leader acknowledges the perpetration immediately to their partner's satisfaction), else, and here's the biggie, they must exchange roles until the ex leader has demonstrated an ability to serve. Read Who gets what?

P.P.P.S.: In my opinion women make the best leaders/managers.

Last edited 3/15/21

Kimbo
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Aug 11, 2011 11:22 am

Re: addiction

Post by Kimbo » Thu Aug 11, 2011 11:46 am

Test of new registration for Kimbo

Barbara
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Jan 24, 2019 1:00 am

Re: addiction

Post by Barbara » Fri Jan 25, 2019 11:05 am

I like your reply Gabby.

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