Break the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and guard your descendents
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Coping Options if Your
Partner  is Addicted
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p. 1 of 2

by Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/08/addicted_mate.htm

        Clicking links below will open a full window or an informational popup, so please turn off your browser's popup blocker or allow popups from this nonprofit Web site.

        This is one of over 150 articles focused on healing psychological wounds,  building high-nurtur-ance family relationships, breaking the [wounds + unawareness] cycle, and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

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        This article is written to adults who believe that their mate is probably or surely addicted - i.e. has an uncontrollable toxic compulsion. All four kinds of addiction are clear symptoms of major personal inner pain + false-self wounds + a low-nurturance childhood and family. Addiction is a family problem, not an individual or marital one!

       This article offers...

  • why adapting to an addicted mate is harder than with other people;

  • a quiz on basic addiction knowledge,

  • two vital things to check first,

  • options for assessing your mate for (a) significant wounds and (b) one or more addictions; and...

  • options for adapting if your mate is addicted (wounded).

Related articles describe options for managing your own addiction, and adapting to an addicted ex mate, relative, or child.

        This article assumes you're familiar with these concepts...

If you ignore these important foundation topics, you may be controlled by a well-meaning false self.

Why Does This Article Exist?

        If you are truly bonded with, and committed to, your partner (vs. imagining you are, or feeling you have to be), you probably want her or him to be wholistically healthy. So assessing whether your mate has a true addiction (i.e. is significantly wounded) and then acting responsibly on your results is harder than doing these with other people. This is because of the primacy of your relationship, and unique impli-cations for you and any dependent kids and special relatives.

        Discovering that your mate is psychologically wounded and addicted is scary! It implies that...

  • you may be significantly wounded and denying that;
  • you may have made up to three unwise commitment choices which can't be undone,
  • your primary relationship may not last, and...
  • any kids you're co-parenting are at risk of inheriting significant false-self wounds.

These implications are specially scary if you've been married or committed before, and/or you're middle-aged or older. Pause and notice your thoughts now...

        These scary factors can promote...

  • denying or minimizing that your mate may be wounded and addicted (reality distortion),

  • discounting the personal and family implications of your mate's wounds, and/or...

  • admitting s/he is significantly wounded and addicted, and doing nothing about that - i.e. enabling your partner and promoting a low-nurturance household. And if a false self runs your life, ...

  • the risk of codependence and trying to rescue (take responsibility for) an addicted mate is higher than with others you care about.

These are the reasons this article exists.

First Things First

        Before reviewing your knowledge and your options, see if you agree with these ideas:

  • any addiction (toxic compulsion) is a sure symptom of major inner pain + false-self (psychological) wounds + personal unawareness + a low-nurturance environment. (Agree / not sure / Disagree)

  • addictions can be controlled (vs. cured), once the person hits true (vs. pseudo) bottom and wants to learn a new way of reducing their pain and psychological wounds. (A  ?  D)

  • Without (a) family (vs. personal) awareness, (b) informed help, and (c) true (vs. pseudo) recovery, wounds and unawareness pass down the generations. (A  ?  D)

  • Typical Grown Wounded Children (GWCs) unconsciously choose other psychologically-wounded people as partners and associates over and over again, despite painful results. (A  ?  D)

Implication - the first thing to do if you feel your mate has an addiction is to check yourself for (a) false-self wounds and (b) your own addiction - specially codependence. Then check your relationship for signif-icant unmet needs which may promote self-medication (addiction).

Check Yourself

         Premise: the personalities of all normal kids and adults are composed of three kinds of talented subselves. If you doubt this, please read this letter to you with an open mind, try this safe, interesting exercise, and then return here.

        Guardian subselves can distort reality to protect vulnerable Inner Kids. They can cause you to deny, minimize, or rationalize any signs of wounds or addiction in you and/or others. If you feel you have sig-nificant traits of an addiction, make reducing that a higher priority than assessing your partner for wounds and addiction. Well-meaning Guardian subselves will try to persuade you to ignore, discount, or delay doing this.

If you have significant wounds and perhaps your own addiction/s, and you're not steadily giving high priority to reducing them, this article will probably be of little use to you.

        To adapt to an addicted mate and protect any dependent kids from the [wounds + ignorance] cycle, you need accurate knowledge of some key concepts. To see what you know now, try this...

        Status Check - get undistracted and reflect honestly on these statements. T = true; F = false, and ? = "I'm not sure," or "It depends on (what?)"

I can describe the concepts of _ personality subselves, _ true Self, and _ false self to an average teenager now. (T  F  ?)

I accept that personality subselves are normal and real, not "pathological." (T  F  ?)

I can _ clearly explain the difference between a low-nurturance and high-nurturance family to another person now, and _ I can describe at least 10 typical traits of the latter. (T  F  ?) 

I accept that _ a true addiction is a sign of a low-nurturance family, and that _ addiction is a family problem, not a personal one. (T  F  ?)

I believe typical addicts are psychologically wounded and unaware, and cannot control their compulsion without hitting bottom and seeking informed help. They are not weak-willed, sick, immoral, a "loser," or irresponsible. (T  F ?)

I can clearly describe what inner pain is, and how it relates to (a) false-self dominance, (b) any addiction, (c) addiction-management and (d) relapses. (T  F  ?)

I can clearly define _ what an addiction is, and _ the four kinds of addiction. (T  F  ?)

I can clearly describe _ what psychological denial is, and _ what needs it serves in typical addicted families. (T  F ?)

I can describe at least four of the common traits of a true addiction now. (T  F  ?)

I can describe the main difference between addiction (preliminary) recovery and inner-wound (full) recovery, and why the former is required for the latter. (T  F  ?)

I accept that having "an addictive personality" really means "having a disabled true Self,  (being controlled by a false self), and not knowing this or what to do about it."  (T  F  ?)

I can clearly describe _ the difference between religion and spirituality, and _ what it means to have an active relationship with a responsive Higher Power  (T  F  ?)

I can describe _ pseudo recovery from addiction, _ enabling, _ codependence, _ cross addiction, _ addiction relapses, and _ how well-meaning false-selves cause each of these. (T  F  ?)

I understand the 12 "Anonymous" steps  for addiction-management and inner-wound recovery now. (T  F  ?) . 

My true Self is responding to these items now or I know which other subself is responding. (T  F  ?)

        Pause, breathe, and notice what you're feeling and thinking now. When you have _ assessed yourself honestly for false-self wounds and _ can confidently answer T(rue) to each item above, you're ready to...

Check Your Relationship

        You mates depend on your relationship to fill a set of important needs. If one or both of you are not filling those needs well enough, that can promote inner pain and self-medication with an addiction. So before focusing on the latter, take an honest look at your partnership. Two practical ways to do that are...

        How well and how often are your respective partnership-needs being filled recently?  If you conclude "not well enough, often enough," you probably have several fundamental problems to admit and improve, not just confronting your mate's addiction and its effects on your family.

        A common surface couple-stressor is an inability to communicate and problem-solve effectively.  On a scale of 1 ("we can't problem-solve at all") to 10 ("we're always successful at resolving our problems together"), where would you rank you two recently ___ ? If you're answer is "too low," probable causes are...

  • significant false-self wounds in one or both of you (Project 1), and...

  • unawareness of effective-communication and problem-solving basics and skills (Project 2). 

For perspective and options on these, study and discuss this article on marital communications, and then this one on mastering three common stressors.

        If you feel you have no major wounds, addictions, or bigger relationship problems now, then you're ready to...

Assess Your Partner

        If you seek to learn whether your partner is addicted, refocus on the real questions: (a) "Does my partner bear major false-self wounds? If so, (b) does s/he know that and (c) what that means to our relationship and family?" 

Is My Partner Wounded?

        If you haven't recently, review these slides and this article for necessary background. Then use all 12 Project-1 worksheets to answer this question if your true Self is in charge. Otherwise, settle for a phased confrontation with your mate, and focus on your own wound-assessment and any needed recovery!

        If your partner seems to have few false-self dominance (wound) traits, s/he probably does not have a true addiction. Double-check this with these traits and any other criteria you find by searching the Web on "addiction symptoms" or "addiction assessment." As you do, keep in mind that there are four kinds of addiction, not just compulsive self-medication via substances.

        If your mate does seem to be significantly wounded, select appropriate options from this article and return here. You'll use your findings in evaluating the options below...

Is My Partner Addicted?

        Recall a basic premise here: a true addiction, including co-addiction (codependence) and enabling are each reliable signs of significant false-self dominance and wounds. Managing addictive thoughts and behaviors effectively for at least a year ("preliminary recovery") is required to progress on full recovery from false-self dominance and wounds. Do you agree with this?

        Begin to evaluate a possible addiction in your partner by learning the traits of any addiction. These traits indicate two things:

  • is the person truly addicted? and if so,

  • where is s/he and her/his family in the normal progression of the addiction - early, middle, or late phase?

The second question is useful in determining how best to intervene. Recall that a useful, well-accepted diagram of this progression showing the common sequence of behaviors is called the Jellinek Curve, after it's creator. It was originally designed to show the progression of alcoholism in an individual (vs. a family) by identifying a sequence of characteristic behaviors. These may be adapted to any addiction.

        Addiction to activities (e.g. workaholism, PC usage, cleaning, or gambling), relationships (codependence), mood states (e.g. rageaholism, fanaticism, or sexual excitement), or other substances (e.g. fat, sugar, nicotine, and other drugs) may not have some of the behaviors of alcoholism (like "black-outs"), but the Curve illustrates the theme of inexorable addiction-behavior progression.

        Make a preliminary judgment as to what pain-reduction strategy your mate's false-self may be ad-dicted to. Then search the Web for related addiction traits and appropriate variations of the Curve for that addiction - e.g. a diagram of progressive behaviors for an over-eating, shoplifting, sexual, or gambling compulsion .

        The best way to make an accurate judgment is to hire a professional addictions counselor to help you decide if your mate is addicted or not. If s/he is addicted (wounded), an effective counselor can also help you judge...

  • whether you are unintentionally enabling your mate, and...

  • how your partner's addiction is affecting your family's wholistic health and nurturance level - specially if you mates influence minor kids.

        Because each addiction has its own rituals and progression traits, seek a professional with special experience and training in your mate's type of compulsion. It's unlikely that you'll a counselor who is familiar with how false-self  wounds relate to addictions and recovery, because most schools haven't validated them yet. Most experienced, licensed addiction counselors can still be a great help.

        Caution - avoid blindly accepting the opinion of a well-meaning friend or relative about your mate's being addicted or not. Most people don't know addiction and false-self wound basics, so their opinions are often well-meant - and wrong.

        For example: people with fundamentalist religious beliefs who rigidly insist that addiction is an individual (vs. family) problem and is "the devil's work" which can only be healed by prayer and "spiritual warfare" or equivalent. Well-informed clergy and congregations can be a major resource for addicted families motivated to recover!

Options for Adapting

        If you conclude that your mate is self-medicating major inner pain with a toxic compulsion, you may (a) delay confronting him or her, (b) prepare to confront, and (c) confront. The rest of this article explores special considerations for the first and last of these options. For a larger perspective on these choices, see this.

Delay Confronting

        Premise - People seek a primary partner to fill some special needs. Can you name the needs you  mates are trying to help each other fill? Doing so will raise your awareness of what partnership-needs (a) your mate's addiction may be blocking, and/or (b) what needs may become unfilled if you confront your mate. If you're not willing to assess each of these honestly now, your true Self is probably disabled and one or more Guardian subselves are trying to protect you from major discomfort.

        If...

  • your Self (capital "S") is in charge (i.e. you're not co-dependent or addicted yourself), and...

  • your mate is probably or surely addicted (wounded and unaware), and...

  • you have no more urgent partnership or family problems, and...

  • you're hesitant about planning to confront your mate over time or directly, then...

identify your subselves' reactions when you think about confronting. They may be something like...

"C'mon, this (the addiction) isn't that big a problem." (a dominant Magician subself distorting reality by minimizing)

"You know confronting (your mate) won't do any good. It will just cause bigger problems - its not worth it." (Pessimist / Skeptic)

"Let's wait to see what happens." (Procrastinator)

"What if s/he denies being addicted, or says s/he won't change?" (Worrier and Catastro-phizer)

"What if this leads to divorce?" (Scared Child, Worrier, and Catastrophizer)

"What would (some other important person/s) say if I confront my mate?" (Scared Child,