The 5 biggest mistakes YOU make when talking to your loved one about addiction.

 The 5 Biggest Mistakes YOU make when talking to your loved one about addiction.

1) Asking the addict/alcoholic to change their ways when you’re not prepared to do the same: Addiction is a FAMILY disease. Before confronting your family member, make sure you have a support system in place. Al-anon, counselling, and 12 step meetings are a great place to start. If you’re unwilling to reach out for help, your chances of making a difference in your loved ones life are slim. It’s like saying ‘do what I say, not what I do.’
2) Suppressing Emotions and ignoring your intuition: Most families suspect there is a problem long before they confront it. Repressing your fears and worries only make them bigger. When your emotions do erupt, and they will, they do so with a bang. Family members often react to their emotions, causing their behaviour to become as unhealthy as the person they’re concerned about. Debrief your feelings with someone before talking to the addict. If you act in a way you’re not proud of, you will feel guilty. Guilt enables addiction.
3)Saving and rescuing the addict: Learn to hit the pause button. Let the addict feel the consequences of their behaviour. Only then will they begin to move away from it.
4) Trying to control the addicts behaviour: You can’t manage an addict. You will only make yourself sick by trying. You can not LOVE an addict well. There is no quick fix. Instant gratification only enables addiction. Recovery from addiction, families and the addicts, is a process. Your family member can’t stay sick without your help. Learn what your role is. Be prepared to learn as much about you, as you hope your loved one will learn about themselves.
5) Protecting the addict by keeping his/her secrets, or making excuses for their behaviour: Addiction is POWERFUL. Families can fracture, marriages can fail, physical health can deteriorate, and bankruptcy does occur. Transparency and open communication is a must. Refuse to keep secrets. Addiction manipulates family systems, pitting member against member. Healthy family systems communicate openly, acknowledge problems, and sometimes work through them. Addicted families avoid problems instead blaming one another, keeping secrets, and using passive aggressive behavior.
Addiction is a progressive and terminal disease. It happens over time and effects EVERYONE involved. Families tend to make their primary focus the addict, eventually becoming consumed by this person. Just as the addict is consumed by their substance, the family, or primary enabler, is consumed by the addict.
Recovery is possible. But it doesn’t happen overnight and it doesn’t happen alone. Nothing says ‘I won’t be manipulated by addiction’ louder, than when family members attend meetings, join support groups, and learn to care for their own well being.
Don’t wait for someone else to make the choice to get well. Get up, get active and get going. The most caring thing you can do for anyone living with addiction, is to get support and education for YOU.
When you make healthy choices, addiction has no where to go.
Without an enabling system the addict is forced to experience the consequences of the choices he/she has made.
When the consequences become greater than the rewards of using, most addicts will seek help.
Although you don’t have the power to change the addicts behaviour, you can change your response to it.
The good news? Recovering from addiction doesn’t start with them, it starts, with you.

Don’t wait for them to go to their meeting. Get up and go to yours.
After all, the only thing worse than one person suffering from addiction, is two.

(c) 2014 Jagged Little Edges All Rights Reserved

4 comments

  1. Great list! This is so true. It is so hard when you are trying to change but those around you refuse to change their unhealthy behavior.

    • Thanks Anna,
      Addiction is a FAMILY disease. It’s so much easier to expect someone else to change, but the truth is… We don’t get here alone.

  2. Thank you for sharing this, very good points here in your article, I can share with you with experaince that your advice is dead on and will help alot of addicts and family members. God Speed and Peace 🙂

    • Hi Robert,
      One of the gifts recovery brings with it, is the willingness and courage to take an honest look at OUR part. Sadly, many do not have the tools to accomplish this.
      Thanks for visiting! 🙂

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