|
Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
boys36 |
Addiction: leave your
spouse, never leave your kids?
This is going to seem crazy but I have been
thinking about this for awhile and wanted to see what all of
your opinions are about this.
How come when it comes to addiction (of any kind) most people
feel that you should never ever give up on your children but
with the spouses it is a whole different story?
The majority of advice seems to be IMO if its a child to never
give up but when its a spouse the advice is to go, to run.
I am wondering about this because I have both in my life.
An addict daughter.
An addict husband. (alcoholic)
I am not going to give up on either of them but it kind of seems
unfair to me that my daughter had to move out while in active
addiction and my husband gets to stay. Does that make any
sense?? I mean we made her move out because of her addiction and
here I am sitting with my hubby day in and day out while he
drinks and is in denial.
This was just something that I want opinions on.
Why do you think the advice is different pertaining to ones
child and ones spouse?
Cause our kids are our kids forever and men/women can come and
go?
Has anyone else dealt with an addict child and an addict spouse?
Did you deal with both the same way?
Different?
Wondering what anyone else did in the same situation. |
Replies... |
Sfj |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
I think that it is the way you use, or define
the phrase,
"Give up on them."
There are certainly many ways that phrase can be used,
understood, misunderstood, abused, and defined.
One cannot divorce a child.
We all have different feelings and we use our feelings when we
embrace definitions. |
Loraura |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
We have the ability to chose who our spouses
are.
We do not have that choice about our children. |
Tender
heartsKS |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
Quote:
I mean we made her move out because
of her addiction and here I am sitting with my hubby day in
and day out while he drinks and is in denial.
I guess my question to you is, why make
the daughter move out while the hubby gets to stay?
Not trying to be judgmental, but trying to understand your
choices.
In my mind, especially being a recovering addict myself, I can't
help but wonder what effect or feelings has that created in your
daughter? It seems like a double standard to me.
I left my addict ex-hubby. I had to, for my own recovery. My
oldest daughter was told to hit the door years later, so I can't
put the two together in the same time frame as she was only 8
when I left my ex.
I still pray for my oldest. I also still chose not to have an
addict/alcoholic for a significant other. I have to remain
consistent in my own recovery. Does that make any sense? |
Sfj |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
I'm not certain, but this whole thread seems
a bit off topic to me, but since we don't have a real OT forum
anymore, I'll jump in and see what happens.
I admit that my case may be the exception on this forum, but I
don't think it is an exception for the American population.
Please inform me if I'm incorrect.
I married a wife, and made a vow to stay with her till one of us
dies. I also know that half of the married people get divorced.
Any comments on that?
I have four kids that are still living.
The older two left home when they were teens.
I think Karie was about eighteen and Robert was younger but he
went into the army.
My two younger boys are still at home. They are twenty-five and
twenty-six.
Now then, my question is, "How old do they have to be before I
kick them out?"
This whole notion of kicking people out is perplexing to me.
I see wives wanting to kick out their husbands on this forum.
I see husbands wanting to kick out wives. Parents wanting to
kick out children and on and on it goes.
The whole world seems hell-bent on controlling others.
I guess I'm missing something in life. I and my family members
actually like each other. Are we freaks? |
sierra
nights |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
Quote:
This whole notion of kicking people
out is perplexing to me.
Yep, me too. I was welcome to stay at home
as long as I wanted to. I also had the freedom to leave when I
wanted. Same with my son.
Now I did leave my home. It was/is absolutely heartbreaking to
me to see my son high. The sores, the behavior, the coming down.
He gets so thin when he does it for a long time. It was most
painful. I cried way to much.
Quote:
I and my family members actually like
each other.
Us too. See, I do like my son and he likes
his mommy. We talk, we laugh and we have even cried together. He
does what he does. I cannot control that. He is an adult. Alls I
can do is try to show him how it's hurting him. And hurting him
it is.
One the other hand, I'm thinking I would not put up with some of
the things I've read here that wives do put up with. I can't say
for certain but I can't see me doing it. But then again I do
believe in vows. I do believe they are to be took seriously. I
see a lot of encouraging people to leave their spouses. Can't
say that I really agree with that.
I'm thinking there is no "one size fits all" here. We are all
different. Different tolerance levels. I guess you do what you
have to. I don't know. That's why this is a good place. Most
likely you going to find somebody here that has been where you
are right now.
Oh and off topic Sfj? I actually thought it was a pretty good
question. Seems to be about dealing with meth to me. |
Sfj |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
To sierranights,
Thanks for the post. I like what you said.
I often use the phrase, "meth gets too much credit."
If it were all the fault of meth, my family would have been
dissolved long ago.
I'm just as convinced as ever that the problems are much deeper
than meth addiction, but people avoid the real problems and
focus on meth addiction.
Not that meth addiction isn't a real problem, because it
certainly is. But when the other problems are ignored, and meth
is the only focus of attention, meth comes out the winner.
"Meth gets too much credit." |
never
ending |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
SFJ you said:
"I see wives wanting to kick out their husbands on this forum.
I see husbands wanting to kick out wives. Parents wanting to
kick out children and on and on it goes.
The whole world seems hell-bent on controlling others."
Maybe I am reading this incorrectly, but because I choose to not
live w/ a drug addict I am controlling him? Because I choose not
to live w/ a drug addict that is sometimes in recovery and
sometimes not that I am controlling him? And yes, I did have
mine kicked out. Why the hell should I have to uproot myself and
kids?
I look at it that I am controlling my own life and serenity. |
Sfj |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
To neverending,
Right, and for you, that is how it is.
About half of America agrees with you. |
sierra
nights |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
Sfj, thanking you, *blushes*
I do have to agree with you that meth does get way, way to much
credit. My son has issues that he refuses to deal with. I know
this. Bury it with the drug. That, in my opinion, is what he is
doing. If I could get him to get professional help and face life
on life's terms, he just might not want to do meth anymore.
See, I'm thinking it's a whole lot the underlying issues in our
lives. Not all the drug.
If one does have to leave, then so be it. I very firmly believe
you do what you have to do to survive. I wish I had a pocket
full of answers to all this but I sure don't.
Hopefully, together, we'll figure it out. |
boys36 |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
In answer to your question Tenderheart about
why my hubby is staying and my daughter had to go...............
The house we are living in was bought and paid for by my husband
long before we were married. It is NOT community property. I
can't make him move out of his home that he bought and paid for
before I was even in the picture.
So it would be me that would have to leave.........not him.
I am not ready to do this .......at all. I guess that is the
reason he stays and she goes if that makes any sense???
How many of you here are dealing with an addict spouse and an
addict child ??
Just curious. |
scared
mom |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
I love my boys and would have them close or
at home forever BUT there are rules in our home. One rule is no
drugs. Rules are good, consciences are good. You can not live in
my house and do drugs. So if one of my children decide to do
drugs then they are making the decision not to live here. I
guess that is how I look at it.
I am glad currently my boys are not doing drugs. One is at home
and one is on his own. |
boys36 |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
I think I am just feeling a little resentful
that my hubby could see my daughters addiction and he cant see
his own.
When he sits there and drinks a 12 pack at a time and talks
about my daughter being addicted to drugs it makes me ill.
Kettle calling the pot black.
It is very hard having a daughter and a spouse as an addict.
The relationships are so different that the solutions cant be
the same. I cant come up with the solution anyway cause that is
something they have to do ....for themselves.
I think I am still with my hubby because of the mind set I had
with my daughter. They are both someone I love. Leaving them
doesn't seem a possibility. Either of them..
I guess sometimes I feel like addiction is a disease and if my
hubby was diagnosed with terminal cancer I couldn't walk away
.No more than I could walk away from my daughter.
I am rambling now.............. |
lax2 |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
So Sfj, I am confused ... are you saying that
if your son was shooting up meth or smoking it in the house you
wouldn't have a problem with it.
Would you set a rule as to whether he was permitted to use drugs
in the house. Would you kick him out if he continued to use meth
in the house? What if he only used it in the back yard? Would
this be enabling his use? Are you in favor of enabling?
I'm just curious as to your opinions on this subject...Don't in
any way take offense, I think you are a great parent. I think
your kids are fortunate to have a Dad whom they can talk to
about anything. I know you love your kids unconditionally. |
silly
veronica |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
Quote:
BUT there are rules in our home. One
rule is no drugs. Rules are good, consequences are good. You
cannot live in my house and do drugs. So if one of my
children decide to do drugs then they are making the
decision not to live here.
I agree with this 100% - regardless of
whether it's your spouse or your child.
SFJ - I feel like you get too bent on the whole divorce issue -
you're against it, and that's okay. Do I feel like some people
get married and divorced for the wrong reasons, yes. But what
about the rest of us? Is divorce EVER okay in your eyes? It's
okay to expect someone to stay in a marriage because of vows
when there is drug use? Or verbal abuse? Or physical abuse?
Divorce isn't always right ... but it isn't always wrong either,
and I get the feeling that's what you're trying to portray.
I give your wife credit because if she lived through HALF the
hell I've lived through, then I have NO IDEA how she was able to
stay sane and keep the marriage going ... I truthfully don't.
I don't feel bad, not one single bit, for kicking my addict out.
You don't get to behave like that, continue to lie and hurt
people, betray people's trust, cheat and whatever else you want
to do and still get to stay in a nice, warm bed at night with
food on the table for your meals and everyone else taking care
of you. You just don't.
Again, MY situation. |
Sfj |
Re: Addiction: leave your spouse, never leave your kids?
To sillyveronica,
I 'll answer part of your questions. My other answers would be
too boring.
Yes, of course, sometimes divorce is indicated.
What would you think If i told you I've been married four times
and divorced three times?
That's a fact. Two of the divorces were entirely my fault. IMHO.
But sillyveronica, let me tell you why I post these
"controversial opinions." It's to get people to talk to one
another.
Have you ever noticed how the "drama" threads get all the action
in most cases?
I'm not trying to create undo drama, just trying to get people
talking. And some people won't say anything until they get
annoyed, irritated, or emotionally upset in one way or another.
Marymary1 has a good supply of worm cans that I've been
borrowing ! |
See also:
Practical tips for surviving a spouse's addiction
Why is it so hard on us non-addicts?
Relationships and Meth
Letting go ...
Back to Crystal Meth & Methamphetamine Questions, Answers & Advice
|