lostforgottensoul
VIP Member
So those steps to try to get on top of it are terrifying. Doesn't matter how many people tell me I'm safe and that was long ago. It's in present tense -- always.
Yes! This!
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So those steps to try to get on top of it are terrifying. Doesn't matter how many people tell me I'm safe and that was long ago. It's in present tense -- always.
Alcoholism is a maladaptive coping skill. Give it up and all the pain someone was using alcohol to attempt to mask and self medicate will be there to face, plus the pain of the consequences of substance use disorder, on top of the withdrawal symptoms. Many have told me after rehab and recovery that living life sober is harder than the initial process of getting sober or being drunk. (But it’s well worth it to get sober - just not an easy path by any means.) That’s big part of why she keeps considering help, beginning to get help, and then running. This pattern may continue before and after rehab for some time. Relapse even after rehab is common part of recovery. This cycle she is in may last for years. (Some quit the alcohol cold turkey but even then they will struggle with behaviors and the trauma/pain that was underneath it all.)She keeps going back and forth...... wants rehab then doesn’t, etc. She can be the sweetest most wonderful person one day, then reckless the next. Heck it can even swing back and forth by the hour or minute.
You don’t need to get her help. She needs to be ready to get herself help. No amount of help will work until then.I really want her to get help with or without me..... How can you direct the untreated towards help? Ptsd and alcoholism....
She knows help is out there. She has the information and the skill to get into treatment. She has demonstrated it. You can keep directing her to resources but she’s got that info.She knows she isn’t ok. She was diagnosed with ptsd but hasn’t had any therapy beyond a session or two.
Sometimes it takes many years after sobriety to realize it all. Sometimes it doesn’t. What usually motivates people to get in the door of treatment for any number of addictions is that consequences of the addiction are so rough they are desperate enough to do the terrifying work in treatment. Some will lose homes, jobs, kids... and only then go. Drug and alcohol addiction is hell and takes ahold of people and wrecks them so badly - and yes, it is extremely hard to be on the outside of it and beg the person please get help only to watch them further wreck their lives.She knows she has a major problem with alcohol that has gotten worse since the trauma. I don’t think she fully understands how much it is impacting EVERYTHING.
I really hope she goes to rehab in August. It’s so good she has a place for her there. I’d suggest setting a boundary like you won’t let her stay over until after she gets into rehab and gets sober. You could offer to still listen and connect for coffee and the like, be a resource, but it may provide just enough comfort she is a little more likely tstays stuck becauseShe talked about wanting therapy. I agreed. Cross your fingers everyone.
It’s not about giving up on her to set boundaries with abuse and contact until she gets sober. It’s about caring for her enough to say no in order to sustain the chaos long haul and to give her the best chance to break through her own denial and face things and get her butt to rehab.I’m never giving up unless I think she is doing better without me. I’ll take whatever abuse she throws at me. I’m very strong willed. I truly believe paths in lives cross for a reason.
^This.For you, it may look different and I certianly wouldn't advise to push that hard or you will most certianly push her away but a slight nudge may just work. Advise something like "look, I cannot handle being in a relationship with untreated PTSD and addiction. I really need you to get some help and start working on yourself or I may need to end the relationship." Again, doesn't need to be those exact words but sometimes you need to put your foot down and be willing to leave a relationship
I don't know that it's accurate to say you can't HELP her. You can't fix her, you can't do the work of recovery for her, but I'm pretty sure you can help her. Seems to me most of the supporters here help their people in an assortment of ways. I've had friends who've helped me by telling me I was acting like a jerk. (Who knew?) There's a fine line between helping and "rescuing", but there's a line.Everyone keeps saying that I can’t help her. I
Yes. Boundaries are very hard. It’s why they call it “tough love” sometimes. It’s still loving even when it’s tough. I have had long nights with my stomach in knots with worry after telling a loved one no. They are very healthy. She might hate you for them. Don’t be thrown by this - it’s common and could mean you are headed in the right direction. It’s a sign to stay steady with the boundary.Boundaries are tough.
You really cannot love somebody better
I am really all she has.
Yet she hates the one person that cares about her.