movie zombie
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2005
- Messages
- 11,879
advise given to me by a recovered alcoholic woman when i spoke to her re my problems in a relationship with an alcoholic boyfriend: it will never work. her opinion is that recovering people need each other and do better in relationships with each other. that's the simplifed version of the conversation....and she was right.
unfortunately, once trust is broken, it is broken. i'm not sure it can ever be "earned" back. it doesn't make you a bad person. and its not your job to heal him. that's his job. perhaps the voice of reason he needs is that his marriage is failing or has failed because of his addiction.
your disconnect is a survival instinct. a healthy one, imo. you can lead a horse to water but you can't force it to drink. same with addicts: you can point to all the resources, encourage them and attend with them, but ultimately it is their work that needs to be done.
i think you want the best for him but realistically have come to the conclusion that he's in denial and not doing the necessary work. of course, you're finding it hard to trust.
i read the following in a self-help book: you can tell what a woman thinks about herself by the man she is with. for me this was a breakthrough that got me to thinking about a lot of my choices.
again, good luck. i think you're on the right track. but please do remember: he is responsible for himself. he makes his choices. you can and must be clear with yourself and then communicate to him the life you want for yourself. then act accordingly.
good luck.
MoZo
unfortunately, once trust is broken, it is broken. i'm not sure it can ever be "earned" back. it doesn't make you a bad person. and its not your job to heal him. that's his job. perhaps the voice of reason he needs is that his marriage is failing or has failed because of his addiction.
your disconnect is a survival instinct. a healthy one, imo. you can lead a horse to water but you can't force it to drink. same with addicts: you can point to all the resources, encourage them and attend with them, but ultimately it is their work that needs to be done.
i think you want the best for him but realistically have come to the conclusion that he's in denial and not doing the necessary work. of course, you're finding it hard to trust.
i read the following in a self-help book: you can tell what a woman thinks about herself by the man she is with. for me this was a breakthrough that got me to thinking about a lot of my choices.
again, good luck. i think you're on the right track. but please do remember: he is responsible for himself. he makes his choices. you can and must be clear with yourself and then communicate to him the life you want for yourself. then act accordingly.
good luck.
MoZo