How Addiction Affects Lives Of Everyone Affiliated With An Addict, Part 1

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Man Addicted To Alcohol Photo By rebcenter-moscow Pixabay

I wanted to share this story to hopefully help others who were also affected by having addicts in their families or friends who are addicts. This will be part 1 of my life as a daughter of an alcoholic, and alcoholism with family members, and a mother of an addict.

I was one of the lucky one’s addiction skipped! My dad did not really drink a lot until he retired from the Air Force after 21 years, and started his life as a civilian.

Even though he was working a job, spending two terms in Vietnam really affected him, and he used alcohol to self-medicate. He passed away at 64 from a heart attack.

I recently had to come to the conclusion he had PTSD, which was not diagnosed when he was in the service, as so many weren’t for so long! He lost his parents in an accident when he was 10, and basically raised himself, working on ranches, and eventually joining the service at a very young age.

The military was his life, and we rarely saw him growing up! I eventually went to counseling as an adult, as I would sabotage relationships I was in with men.

They told me I had feelings of abandonment, and that I thought the chaos was normal, and so if I got in a relationship where the guy was nice to me, I would sabotage it, as I was not comfortable with normal. I found out I was co-dependent and wanted to fix people and situations, to where I would feel in control.

I attended 12 step co-dependent meetings for several weeks, and finally was seeing why I acted the way I did in relationships.

How Addiction Can Consume Your Life! Photo by rebcenter-moscow Pixabay

Then I got married when I was 27 to a nice guy, but he also grew up with an alcoholic father, who was abusive. My husband at that time gave up his childhood to protect his mom, brother, and sister from abuse.

We had a son, who from a young age had a hard time dealing with being in social gatherings. He did ok through most of his elementary years, but then in middle school his personality changed, and when I was at work, I received a phone call from his school that the police were there, as he had drugs and drug paraphernalia on him, and was expelled from school!

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My husband and I were divorced by now. This was a nightmare as a mom, and so foreign to me as I was a good kid growing up, not getting into trouble!

At the time, I was living with a great man who loved both of my sons. We had to go to a court to try and get him back in another school, but in the meantime, he had to be home-schooled, and eventually was able to get into a continuation school.

After about a year he was able to enroll in a school in a different district. Things got worse, as he stole, lied and continued to secretly do drugs.

I took him to counsel for several years. Since both grandfathers were addicts, they mentioned that becoming addicted would be doubled, and since starting at such a young age, it would affect how the brain develops.

I also got calls from my neighbor that he was starting fires in our backyard. As the years went on, life did not get better, but he did graduate from high school. Now he was staying with me and weekends with Dad.

The Drinking Consumes Their Life – Photo by geralt Pixabay

Closing Thoughts

I know there are so many people and families out there affected by addiction, and how it can tear families apart. If you or someone you know is a recovered addict or family member, please share your story on your road to recovery.

If we can help other people who have addictions and give them hope and ways to have the strength to get through this, and most of all DO NOT GIVE UP ON THEM, I see it as a purpose in life. It takes a lot of “tough love”, patience, lots of LOVE, and the strength to not enable them, and understand that they have to want to get sober and admit they are an addict before they will move forward in a positive direction.

There will be many times they will relapse which in our case, took years not months, and in and out of many rehab centers. It also takes good insurance, which he had eventually to get the care and help he needed.

SAMHSA’s National Helpline SAMHSA’s National Helpline is a free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish) for individuals and families facing mental and/or substance use disorders.

If you found this post helpful and found it to be informative, please share it with family and friends, and on social media. Leave a comment, by going to the comment section below.

Here are some other posts you might find useful:

How Addiction Affects Lives Of Everyone Affiliated With The Addict, Part 2

Addiction and Depression – A Way Out

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See you soon, Denise

Posts may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases and collect a small commission at no cost to you. This helps my blog to keep going. Thank you! For more info, read my disclosure policy.

If you are affected by addiction within your family, here are some books that could be helpful!

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4 thoughts on “How Addiction Affects Lives Of Everyone Affiliated With An Addict, Part 1

  1. That is so sad to read. I’ve seen the ravages of addictions and it is tragic in some cases.

    It may not hurt for you to Google CBD and addictions. I know of a doctor in Arizona who deals with patients with addictions, and he has had extremely good success incorporating CBD with the rest of his program. I’m referring to CBD with the non-psychoactive properties—they con’t get high from it at all.
    Somehow CBD fills in the void or demand of the body that’s causing them to “crave” the addictive substance. My brother has severe mental disabilities and it has helped him a lot. No addictions though.
    Thank you for sharing. Praying your son will find healing in God or whatever path you choose.

    1. Thank you, Kim, for the encouraging words! It brought me to tears! It took so long to even talk about this, let alone blog about it. I felt like no one would understand and judge until I became a blogger. I felt this would be a way to touch other people’s lives going through addiction problems in their own family! I do have an update, and this is in Part 2 of this story on my blog. About a month ago, after coming down from meth, he felt the paranoia and was suicidal so he checked into a behavioral center, that his insurance covered, and he is now getting the help he has needed for years. Thank the Lord! He is on medication they are monitoring to find what works for him, and he is attending classes for about three more weeks. They will then find him an outpatient facility, but he has to follow the regimen he has been on. Thank you for the prayers and information, I will definitely check it out. God Bless!

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