Living with an alcoholic -- How to detach
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 5,582 legacy views
In the last article we discussed the need to detach from the alcoholic. In this article we will discuss how to detach, what it means and how to achieve it successfully.
When you live with an alcoholic, almost inevitably, you become caught up in his drinking behavior. You will find yourself trying to second guess how much he is going to drink, when he will be home, what condition he will be in and what's going to happen when he does get home. When you live with an alcoholic you'll find it's almost a full time job thinking about it and worrying about the drinker and his drinking. You probably find yourself thinking about it all through the day. Even if he is not drinking at the moment you will be worried about it when he is going to start and, again, what's going to happen. If you live in alcoholic worrying about the alcoholic and his drinking will be taking up all of your time and leaving little time and emotional space for anything else.
When you live with an alcoholic, if you are going to survive you need to give yourself emotional and sometimes physical time away from your drinker. You need to stop worrying about time, planning your life around him and his drinking, thinking about him all the time, being in a whenever he needs you and generally living your life for the alcoholic. This is what detaching is all about.
To stop worrying or thinking about something is very difficult. It is not something that many of us can achieve easily. We can't just shut off their minds at will, if we could most psychologists would be out of a job. Instead of stopping doing something we could do something different. In the Bottled Up program for people who live with an alcoholic we strongly advise that you begin to look after yourself. In bottled up we suggest that you take time to find yourself again. Often people who live with an alcoholic feel that they have lost their own identity that the person they were has been subsumed through looking after the alcoholic. Instead we suggest that you rediscover the things that used to interest you, and maybe still do, and find new things to stretch yourself and grow as a person.
Living with alcoholic can also cause you to become isolated. Since you feel there is a need for secrecy, to hide the nature of the problem from the rest of the world, you will very often have stopped talking to the people who can help you most -- your friends! In bottled up we strongly suggest that you renew your friendships. In doing that it will give you a sense of perspective, outside interests and a potential support network. In the next article we will discuss some of the barriers to detachment. If you want to learn more about detachment or bottled up go to the bottled up website.
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Living with an alcoholic – Shame
If you live with an alcoholic you will almost certainly feel shame. Some people will experience it to a very high level others less so but almost everyone who lives with an alcoholic experiences it to some degree. You will probably feel anxious that people will discover your secret, that they will judge you and, inevitably, will find you unacceptable to be around decent people. Seeing it written down like that it probably seems stupid. How could anyone feel that.
Related piece
Article
Myths About Drug Treatment
Myth #1: Drug addiction is voluntary behavior. A person starts out as an occasional drug user, and that is a voluntary decision. But as times passes, something happens, and that person goes from being a voluntary drug user to being a compulsive drug user. Why? Because over time, continued use of addictive drugs changes your brain -- at times in dramatic, toxic ways, at others in more subtle ways, but virtually always in ways that result in compulsive and even uncontrollable drug use. Myth #2: More than anything else, drug addiction is a character flaw.
Related piece
Article
What Do You Do and When
When you have a suspicion your teen is doing drugs, what do you do? First, learn as much as you can. Check out all of SelfGrowth.com for information on drug and alcohol use by teens. Know that there is help available for you and your child. In most communities, you can get help from your pediatrician, nurse, or other health care provider, a counselor at your child's school, or your faith community.
Related piece
Article
Is my partner an alcoholic?
Are you one of many people who live with someone who drinks heavily? Do you wonder whether your partner is an alcoholic. Well you are certainly not alone. For many people living with problem drinkers means agony and confusion wondering whether their partner is actually an alcoholic or whether they are making a fuss about nothing. This is a very real problem for many reasons.
Related piece