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		<title>SoberRecovery : Alcoholism Drug Addiction Help and Information - Blogs - grewupinabarn</title>
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			<title>SoberRecovery : Alcoholism Drug Addiction Help and Information - Blogs - grewupinabarn</title>
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			<title>Looking for Love, or anything, in all the Wrong Places</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/3036-looking-love-anything-all-wrong-places.html</link>
			<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2010 11:34:11 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>I think addiction, to a substance or to reacting to an addict, ultimately is an obsession with seeking a solution (be it happiness, serentiiy, ect.) outside that best (or only) comes from the inside....</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>I think addiction, to a substance or to reacting to an addict, ultimately is an obsession with seeking a solution (be it happiness, serentiiy, ect.) outside that best (or only) comes from the inside.  The key difference with normal folks is the obsession, how I repeat the pursuit in the face of repeated repeated repeated failure (not just disappointment,  but crushing defeat). <br />
A lot of what I learn in Alanon is about looking for answers and pathways by at least looking a little bit within, by looking for some little bit of internal guidance. The guidance could be a HP or just a personal belief about what is proper, moral, ethical, cool, ect. <br />
Maybe I have to stop looking for THE answer and just be happy with the little clues. I like using hiking as a metaphor, and I have to realize that the path is often foggy and vague. Although we do sometimes see a clear trail marker, most of the time we are trusting in ourselves and our HP. Yeah, and sometimes we have to just keep moving, wait for better light, or hope for a rescue.<br />
What are some of my internal clues? I am not asking for guiding lights or burning bushes, just little trustworthy markers and the faith to keep walking when I can't find one. <br />
Consistently, even in the face of my very intimidating and occasionally viciously cruel father and with local bullies, I defend nature. I hated to see other kids hurting frogs or damaging a tree, and did make my thoughts clear.  Ultimately those frogs die and trees die, and my actions may mean little in the big picture, but that is just the way I am.<br />
And I really really like the Big Book and the 12&amp;12, though I am not alcoholic.  Something about them is just damn straight right. <br />
Maybe I just did Step 3!</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Step 2</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/2683-step-2.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 18 Oct 2009 21:42:06 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[*>> What is my concept of a Higher Power at this time? * 
My Hp is a spiritual guiding presence of the universe that speaks through the collective wisdom of others, mostly my alanon group, and...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><b>&gt;&gt; What is my concept of a Higher Power at this time? </b><br />
My Hp is a spiritual guiding presence of the universe that speaks through the collective wisdom of others, mostly my alanon group, and coincidence. The latter part has an element of magic to it, but I am ok with that. My HP cares for me. My HP has a plan for me, and life would go better if I just aligned my self with that will. My HP is always trying to talk to me in some way, but I am often to much in my head to hear. My obsession of the mind draws, or yanks, my emotions and thoughts away from hearing my HP. <br />
I often have thought I need to have just the right concept of a HP to hear and learn. Right now it is pretty well minimized of labels and definitions. The most concrete concept is that the HP speaks through my al anon group<br />
There is part of me that really does not think a HP cares about me. I no longer think the HP wants to find me screwing up and punish me, but does HP want to help me?<br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What would it take to allow my concept of my Higher Power to change? </b><br />
I thought I had a pretty stripped down, no labels no images, concept that has so little that can be changed. OK, I still don’t believe this HP will help me. Or maybe it cannot help me, even if it is really big. Yet I hope anyway. Maybe a sign, a miracle?  I think I am still clinging to the idea that I can come up with ALL the answers, that my thinking brain will come up with the HP’s answer, and that it how such answers come about. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Have past experiences affected my concept of a Higher Power? If so, how? </b><br />
I have left behind my catholic beliefs. Maybe I never accepted them.  By moving to a rural mountainous area that concept has become more open, less defined, more based on nature and a benevolent being that is everywhere. I have not had any sudden changes in the past or recently. Well, I did really give up on the Church since moving here. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What do I hope to gain from accepting the concept of a Power greater than myself? </b><br />
I will not become highly obsessed with everything that is less important than what is important (Does that even make sense?), and feel less fear and dread when I am working. And to enjoy friendship and love more, and enjoy my work more. . I just want to go thought the day being a caring effective person. To get stuff done. And to feel that people like me.  I still yearn to have people treat me just a certain way (the ‘way’ being constantly evaluated and measured, but generally involves unwavering respect, deferential treatment, and a little awe ;-).  Yes I now that is kinda dumb and unrealistic, that the love of friends and relatives should be enough, but it is hard to let go of those rosy expectations, as they are so desirable, and they got me through a rough childhood. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Do I sense spiritual guidance in my life? How? </b><br />
Yes. I am still just anxious that I am not doing the right thing to be worthy of guidance. I know my yearning for awe and deference does not fit any spiritual model and is un-christian. So I feel it but mostly I feel that I don’t deserve the guidance, or I that I have to give up to much. Possibly I am afraid of being looked on a silly person who goes around talking endlessly about spirit and convincing no one of anything except that I am a person deserving of little regard. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I describe the Higher Power I found in Al-Anon? </b><br />
This HP is the group as inspired and guided by a HP. The HP speaks to me through the group and the wise counsel of others.  The HP wants the best for me and for all humans and works with us, our mistakes, our human frailty and strength, to push the collective whole of humans toward a better future. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What does “Let Go and Let God” mean to me? </b><br />
This is a concept that is evolving a lot lately with some things of Tolle’s I have read. I am guessing the mental obsession, driving my thoughts persistently away from things feared (anything that can/could threaten to NOT comply with expectations) toward just about anything else. Tolle referred to this as the pain body. A posting on the ACoA part of this site referred to it as ‘the thing that fed on the drama’.  It is a knot of tightly wound little brain rules that inspire and grow on fearful thoughts and behavior. According to Tolle (taking his cue from Buddhism) one does not suppress this but instead opens up to a one’s higher consciousness (mediation, awareness) and regards the pain-body as a something not to be suppressed but to be allowed to pass into the well lit big room of enlightened awareness, which is naturally full of compassion, and it will eventually leave/quiet down. This is LGLG. Open oneself up with trust and faith all day to the HP, let the pain body decide on its own what to do in this strong light, and let it go do whatever it likes. Tolle (and buddhist teacher Tara Brach) assure us that it will quiet down and recede, as it has no food. The difficult thing to do is trusting and believing 24/7.  WHEW – that was a lot. I hope this is not another dysfunctional thought stream. That is the hard part – to realize that one’s own thoughts, in daydreams or in focused problem solving, are mostly pain-body.  What do you center upon when one’s own mind cannot be the center???? This is a big trick of faith, harder than any church lesson!!!!<br />
Wow, I am insane! Nothing in this answer relates to the usual LGLG meanings, such as 1) to stop obsessing about others and to let them make their own decisions, and 2) to let go of trying to closely control events that impact one’s life but to let the HP let circumstances occur in what ever way brings to greatest good to the greatest number. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What does faith mean to me? </b><br />
The dictionary says that it is belief without proof, or hope of proof. It is also the belief that the HP is there and that whatever happens it is best for us, that it will all turn out for the best no matter what.  I know that it means that one walks with the HP at all times, being guided and loved. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; With whom and in what circumstances am I comfortable discussing my spiritual experiences? </b><br />
I was comfortable with D, but not with K. With M yes but with B or G no. As a child, I never did I talk about this stuff with my parents or any other adult.  Of course I am comfortable with my Alanon group and with the populace of the internet, since I post this stuff. Basically I don’t react well to skepticism, even if I am just expecting it and reacting to the expectation. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What might I gain from believing I could be supported and loved by a Power greater than myself? </b><br />
The same answer (to the same ? question 4) as before. [maybe answer 4 should be focused on Letting Go). <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What does “came to believe” mean to me? </b><br />
I worked (or will work) effectively, taking little steps through my work, to connect self (ego, superego, id, what ever) to the HP, to make my whole mind believe that HP is a sure thing. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What does sanity mean to me? </b><br />
Not sure. Never been there. Serenity is calm amid the storm. In my case serenity means no fear and dread when working on important, challenging, or emotionally difficult things in my career. And it means that my attention does not drift off at a sprint onto any task that is important, challenging, or emotionally difficult. <br />
Basically, a sort of demon in my brain likes to create exaggerated emotional reactions to problems and then really enjoys watching my thoughts run and/or hide from the problem. It feeds on imagined drama.<br />
I see sanity as a life of challenges, difficulties, ups and downs where I respond with some measure of thought, harmony, intelligence, appropriateness, and kindness.  I do not want to obsess, run, and hide anymore. I also see sanity as a life based on love and compassion, with a purpose that is focused on others and less so on my own needs. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How has the alcoholic situation affected my sanity? My life? </b><br />
To summarize (some of which I have already discussed), I tend to push people away and get obsessed with how people and situations around me are not matched to the precise yet constantly changing illusion in my mind that accord me respect, deference, and awe at all times. I have never had a relationship last longer that 10 months, I let go of friendships easily, and while I work very hard I can be stunningly ineffective and annoyingly inconsistent in my jobs. <br />
The prior paragraph also reveals the classic ACoA trait of reveling in one’s faults. I could go on and on…<br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How has my thinking become distorted trying to handle the alcoholic behavior? </b><br />
Well, it has always been distorted. As mentioned before, I get easily distracted by a sort of ‘pain-body’ that takes the tiniest discomfort or uncertainty and turns it into a overwelming sense of fear and dread regarding responsibilities, or an nearly irresistible urge to think about anything else but my responsibilities. The largest tragedy has been its effect on my relationships, which tend to be fleeting, tenuous, shortlived, and ephemeral, although most start out well enough with passion and care. Hmmm.  <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How have I turned to a Power greater than myself in times of great need? Did I call another Al-Anon member? My sponsor? Did I read Al Anon Conference Approved Literature (CAL)? Did I go to a meeting? If not, why not? </b><br />
I have attended meetings regularly for over a year and have 4 alanon books, including one I bought over 20 years ago (oh why did I stop going then). I have also been reading and posting on this forum. Admittedly, I have posted less regularly in the last half-year as I have focused on these steps and making more of meetings. <br />
Only a few weeks ago did I actually call another alanon member to talk – just talk. That was a big step. I have also had a few meetings with a sponsor. <br />
Since I started these steps, I realized that I really didn’t believe in a HP of my childhood, as provided by the catholic church. When I really focused on what I BELIEVED, it came down to a basic acknowledgement that there is a conscious guiding spirit in the universe that I KNOW is there when I look at a mountain landscape, and this HP expresses HP-self  (he/she/they) in my group, or in wise counsel of others (books, music).  I have not yet turned to this power, but I have suggested strongly and persistently to the ‘pain body’ in me to look this  HP, to trust this HP, and to turn its will over to this HP.  I feel that it has to be along for the ride, and that it has not conceded that what it does it powerless over others.  Right now I am praying to the HP and ‘showing’ this HP to the pain-body. I know this is important, and as the BB said on p66<br />
<b>&gt;&gt; In working this Step, can I describe a Step Two experience to my sponsor or my group? In a written sharing? </b><br />
I am not sure I have had a complete Step 2 experience. I have reached the ‘came to’ part, but not the ‘came to believe’. That demon/pain body in me still wants to see the world adjust itself to my insecurities, self-centered fear. I still react, not respond, and I react with resentment. I have yet to put down the weapon of resentment, and I have not put down the foggy lenses of expectations. I have verbally shared some thoughts on a HP, but no where near to the focus and breadth of this document.  <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; When have I done the same things over and over, yet expected different results? </b><br />
I have continued to enter new jobs and new relationships with the same behavior patterns (multi-spectral self-centered expectations and multi-dimensional resentments) and hoping that I can tweek the circumstances or come up with my own recipe of targeted behavior (if I just smile this way, or image a pigeon whenever I feel fearful, then everyone will act accordingly to my expectations).  Not much has changed. What has changed is my awareness of how my thinking patterns are getting in the way, and that THERE IS an option – and that a HP is that option. I have not come to believe in that option, I just know it is an option. And I am on the road to believing that a HP can restore me. The demon/pain-body/thing that feeds on the drama is not yet ready to even concede powerlessness.</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Step 1</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/2672-step-1.html</link>
			<pubDate>Mon, 12 Oct 2009 22:00:47 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[*>> Do I accept that I cannot control another person’s drinking? Another person’s behavior?* 
I can’t control anyone’s drinking. That was pretty obvious. If they want to drink go ahead. I knew well...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><b>&gt;&gt; Do I accept that I cannot control another person’s drinking? Another person’s behavior?</b><br />
I can’t control anyone’s drinking. That was pretty obvious. If they want to drink go ahead. I knew well that I could not stop my parents’ drinking. I never did the ‘pour it down the drain’ thing.  I just really wished that the drunkeness was less humiliating to watch. I definately couldn't control my dad's bitter anger at his family, how much he preferred his drunken pals, or my mother's withdrawal from life. At times they were both happy to be with their kids and not drunk, but it was notable enough to be a surprise. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I recognize that the alcoholic is an individual with habits, characteristics and ways of reacting to daily happenings that are different from mine?</b><br />
I never really accepted that they thought differently than I, other that they were adults. Alcoholics DO think differently, even highly functional ones like my dad. Ok. So what I did had less chance of changing them than I had ever realized. Trying to call a cat with a dog whistle. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Do I accept that alcoholism is a disease? How does that change how I deal with a drinker?</b><br />
Oh yes. I am not sure if I emotionally accept that they had an obsession of the mind. Some emotion in me still thinks they had a choice. Dumb. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How have I tried to change others in my life? What were the consequences?</b><br />
A nearly continuous stream from the day I learned to pick my nose of passive aggressive reactions. Plus I have a constantly changing model of how everyone should be acting toward me and any deviance from it indicates ridicule and disrespect.  I know my inability to deal with imperfect Beings, an intolerance that is the common thread of inhumanity in civilization and the elimination of which is THE GOAL OF EVERY MAJOR RELIGION AND CIVIC ORGANIZATION, has made me just miserable. A sometime friend, poor employee. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What means have I used to get what I want and need? What might work better to get my needs met?</b><br />
I work hard, if ineffectively, at most jobs to get what I consciously want. Though I don’t really know what I want. as that saying goes – to get what you want out of life decide what you want out of life.  I generally took my goals from others. Whenever I have focuses on my goals it seems I’ve gotten slapped hard by life. Soooo I guess that means that I have wanted much and gotten little. I have managed some good things (master’s degree, enriching outdoor work, a few happy employers and clients) but it seemed to happen if I didn’t focus too hard. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I feel when the alcoholic refuses to be and do what I want? How do I respond?</b><br />
Resentment. At first it was strong and then it went away, maybe. I responded with more passive aggressive. I don’t think I ever responded without a little passive aggression, as I don’t think I really had an end goal for their behavior changes. So I always had an excuse to resent. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What would happen if I stopped trying to change the alcoholic or anyone else?</b><br />
I….don’t know. I always pinned my happiness to them becoming better people, less embarrassing to be around, less bullshit slurred compliments (were they all bs), and more approachable.  More like people I could rely on to make me feel better. Oh god - that is so very very codie. I think it would generally be better if I didn’t have so many expectations, epecailly those that relate to my percieved mistreatment (“everyone is so unfair” feelings). <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How can I let go of others’ problems instead of trying to solve them?</b><br />
I am trying to focus on my HP, on the Present, on the power of my alanon group and other wise counsel. The Big &amp; Now spiritual picture. I am trying to let go of the obsessive self-centered fear, let of the thing that feeds on the fear and drama, and the drama of searching for some sort of answer.  Search for a better lit room. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Am I looking for a quick fix to my problems? Is there one?</b><br />
Many times have I tried. I just hate waiting to get better while I am still screwing up realtionships in work and personal life. There is not quick fix, but I am unsure of the slow patient path. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; In what situations do I feel excessive responsibility for other people?</b><br />
Nearly all the time. I always feel that their behavior can be modified somehow to make me feel better about myself.  I really do depend on others to make me feel better and resent it deeply if they don’t comply. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; In what situations do I feel shame or embarrassment for someone else’s behavior?</b><br />
1) when watching movies where there is humiliation and shame as the result of an actor’s decision – really hard to watch. 2) so many times when I watched my dad drunk on the floor or front lawn, or watched my mother sitting on her bed staring out the window hopelessly (did she …mean to be seen by her kids in this pose, the door was open so often when she sat like that….uuggh). <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What brought me to Al-Anon? What did I hope to gain at that time? How have my expectations changed?</b><br />
I bought a house for which I likely overpaid and definitely under inspected. I inventoried everything except my self. It was such a obvious personal mistake from day 1, that it made it clear, along with the failed relationship, that I had shortcomings that would ruin or kill me if I did’nt address them. I have read it takes a criis that is clearly self-made to go into recovery. so very true. I had a crisis and it was mine. <br />
I don’t know what I would gain but I expected something quicker. I was hoping for a BillW-style spiritual awakening, but I am not alcoholic and haven’t been close to death.  Only lately have I had to revisit steps 1 and 2 and really work the steps. Hopefully I can keep writing honest answers. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Who has expressed concern about my behavior? My health? My children? Give examples.</b><br />
K was concerned, expressing it in her critical/insightful way. D also noted my habit of pushing away people. My sister and I have a co-concern club.  I am pretty sure my parents were concerned, but only now do I see why that concern didn’t come out in a recognizable form. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I know when my life is unmanageable?</b><br />
I have had no relationship longer than 10 months, I am constantly bothered with a yearning searching self centered fear (stinking thinking). <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How have I sought approval and affirmation from others?</b><br />
Nearly everyone. Or I am looking for the right kind of reaction, even if it is negative. Such as awe or reverence. (just kidding, I think - not always sure what I am expecting.)<br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Do I say ‘yes’ when I want to say ‘no’? What happens to my ability to manage my life when I do this?</b><br />
I have never had a strong desire to say no, just a desire to say yes and maybe a cloud of uncertain thoughts, mostly pondering what sort of reaction I want to see or expectations from saying yes or no (ie – a lack of expectations is not an option). <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Do I take care of others easily, but find it difficult to care for myself?</b><br />
This is confusing. Ok, I act and speak with expectations of others reactions, and this is not caring. I don’t believe I have done a lot a caring, except caring with expectations. Caring is just another option for creating expectations. Yes, I really don’t care for myself except to address my fears. In other ways I ignore my needs and desires as much as I ignore others. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I feel when life is going smoothly? Do I continually anticipate problems? Do I feel more alive in the midst of a crisis?</b><br />
I don’t thrive well in smooth times, I make a crisis somehow out of every day that I am not in the classroom. Or I find a way to manipulate the day to make tomorrow more of a crisis. I have spent far too many Tuesdays and Thursdays accomplishing little except parsing the word GOD.  I only get things done 1) in crisis mode or 2) at night. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How well do I take care of myself?</b><br />
I take care of my bodily health quite well. I severely abuse my mental health. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; How do I feel when I am alone?</b><br />
There is often a feeling of ‘should, must, ought to’ when I am alone and I often end up procrastinating around the biggest” should, ought to, must”<br />
<b>&gt;&gt; What is the difference between pity and love?</b><br />
Love is caring for all parts of a person, admiring strength as well as compassion for weakness. Pity is the focus on the failings, the destitute , and the suffering of another and feeling EMPOWERED by that. Yes, I do search out failings in others to make myself feel good even as I say to myself I am just interested. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Am I attracted to alcoholics and other people who seem to need me to fix them? How have I tried to fix them?</b><br />
I am attracted to friendships with men who seem in need of help. Ooohhhh - That is new. I am definitely not attracted to men with strong egos. As for women, it is more intelligence that is attractive. No, really – that is the only common denominator in all my short relationships – wicked smart with degrees and accomplishments to prove it.  I have never dated very needy women, ever. That part of my mother is kind of repulsive to me, in women at least. In men…….sort of one yearning endlessly like me. Maybe some neediness. Yeah, like me. <br />
<b>&gt;&gt; Do I trust my own feelings? Do I know what they are?</b><br />
No. My instincts are awful. My feelings seem to run in all directions and I try to supress them more often than not. No, I don’t know what they are. Apart from fear I react in a way to create certain responses by others.</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Addiction to Misery</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/2506-addiction-misery.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 02:26:26 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>I am having another painful evening of trying to get work done. On a alanon twitter posting I saw this repeated and asserted by several people: Change happens when the pain of holding on is greater...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>I am having another painful evening of trying to get work done. On a alanon twitter posting I saw this repeated and asserted by several people: Change happens when the pain of holding on is greater than the fear of letting go.  What I think is happening is that I really enjoy the pain, and maybe the fear to. This may be 'addiction to misery' as described by <br />
Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D. (of Potatoes not Prozac) The following quote comes from the Alanon Family Group on the activeboard forum.<br />
<br />
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				I have often reflected on why some people stay stuck in being miserable. No matter what life presented them, they would pick out certain variables to show that once again life was against them. This pattern went beyond your basic garden negativity. It was more like &quot;I will continue my attachment to misery no matter what. It doesnt matter what good comes to me, I know it is not real.&quot;<br />
<br />
This pattern defied logic to me. Why would perfectly thoughtful, intelligent people want to live this way? My first clue in sorting this out came when I noticed my own physical response. I withdrew energy, disengaged and did not want to hang with misery or the miserable. When I realized that nothing I did or said changed anything, I just backed off.<br />
<br />
One day, in the shower, I had an incredible thought. My body was responding to les miserables just the way it does around active alcoholics and addicts. If someone commits to change, asks for help, listens and moves, I am there in a flash. But stay stuck, go round and round, whine, stay miserable no matter what, I just dont want to spend time on the boat with it. The more I have healed my own codependency the less I can do rescuing.<br />
<br />
As I was rinsing the shampoo, I thought, &quot;What if we can be addicted to misery?&quot; As soon as that thought passed through, I knew it was true. It would explain the tenacious holding on, the energy, the devotion to it.<br />
<br />
So then I trundled off to do some research on this. My books, google and PubMed all gave clues. Yep, misery evokes beta-endorphin. Misery evokes the same brain chemical activated by alcohol, heroin, morphine and sugar. When we are miserable, our brains release BE so we feel better. It soothes us until it wears off and then we have to go back for more.<br />
<br />
We become attached to it. We get romantic and intense about all the bad things that have happened to us. We do woe is me!. Andsignificantly, we become tolerant to it, just like with any drug. Then we need bigger misery. More, more. We amp up the feeling of less than, not good enough, poor, not smart enough, not rich enough, not educated enough. And if life does not cooperate by offering enough brutal events, we create them in our minds. We need to feel worse to feel ok.<br />
<br />
We create catastrophe in our minds, we exaggerate, we munch to create drama and perpetuate the BE feelings. The increasing tolerance creates immunity to the little negatives, so we need more misery. We then take neutral events and shape them into desperate drama. For example. Perhaps you live on little money. You feel bad because you are poor. And you have low BE because you are sugar sensitive. So you overdraft your account, you pay late, you skip your taxes. And your tolerance grows so things get worse and worse.<br />
<br />
And when you try to change this pattern, you actually go into withdrawal. So you need to find other misery to grow. You stay in a horrible job, an abusive marriage, a bad apartment. You go round and round and misery becomes your way to being in the world.<br />
<br />
When you first hear this, it may be confusing. You dont feel you are seeking it; you arent looking for a &quot;high. But think of it another way. BE is a painkiller. When life is hard, your natural tendency is to look for ways to soothe the pain. You unconsciously turn to things that do that, and then you get hooked. You didnt know. Just like you didnt know sugar was a drug until you were way in.<br />
<br />
Les miserables is a hard one to face. You might feel shame at first and think, oh dear gawd, not more!<br />
<br />
But the joy of healing is that now you understand. Now you have a name for what you thought was just circumstance. Now you can make sense and take action. You start to laugh at yourself. You get amazed at the skill your little inside addict hasit can find ANYTHING and EVERYTHING to make you feel ok. It has a good heart, it is trying its best to have you not feel pain. It is just a little misguided and now, in your recovery, you will do something a little different.<br />
<br />
You will kiss it on its little black nose, and say ah, nice try, baby, but we arent doing that anymore.. You will see that you do not want a life of les miserables. You are ready for something different. You can go to school, you can find ways to work with little money, you can leave abusive relationships, you can find a life of joy. This is what recovery is about. When you do the food, you do way more than give up sugar. You are HEALING addiction on a cellular level. Healing is real and it is yours for the doing.
			
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</div>I think this is me. I often feel a rush of blood to my face and a warm feeling when I am being severely criticized. This is disturbing, really - could I be this warped to desire being made miserable, to actually get physical pleasure from it?? yuck!<br />
<br />
I have to realize that this pain is not pleasure, that it is un-desirable, that my HP doesn't want it for me, that I don't need/deserve it, that it just plain sucks, that it is just pain. And I need the HPs help because I am powerless over it.</div>

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			<title><![CDATA[Useful April postings in F&F]]></title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/2136-useful-april-postings-f-f.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 03 May 2009 21:28:49 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/friends-family-alcoholics/173192-courage-change-april-1-acceptance.html#post2174594 
 
---Quote--- 
Thread - Courage to Change ~ April 1 ~ Acceptance 
Posted by...</description>
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				Thread - Courage to Change ~ April 1 ~ Acceptance<br />
Posted by CatsPajamas<br />
Courage to Change ODAT in Al-Anon II 4/1<br />
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				I’ve heard acceptance mentioned at meetings as one part of the “Three A’s” – Awareness, Acceptance, and Action. However, I am inclined to try to jump from awareness to action without even pausing for acceptance. My thinking goes like this: “Something’s wrong! Quick, let me fix it before I have to feel any discomfort.”
			
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</div>When I feel something is wrong, even the damn weather, this fear is created. <br />
Questions:<br />
Is it 100%, or more than even 1/2, my fault<br />
Can I accept, learn and improve on mistakes?<br />
Can HP, if asked, help?<br />
<br />
Another Entry, from ACOA's forum<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/adult-children-addicted-alcoholic-parents/175089-attempt-resolve-past.html#post2207193" target="_blank">http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/...ml#post2207193</a><br />
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				Thread - In an Attempt to Resolve the Past<br />
Posted by Dothi 4/25/09<br />
&quot;Think of how many times you've seen an alcoholic in your life be confronted with one of life's lessons, only to see them turn away in denial. Ask yourself is this one of the unhealthy coping skills that you may still be using? Do you know what a healthy coping skill would look like? Or are you still modelling what you learned growing up?&quot;
			
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</div>There some well learned acoa lessons to unlearn,<br />
1) Look at difficulties and discomfort as being inherently your fault in some way<br />
2) Respond with denial and avoidance of difficulties and discomfort. <br />
Yuck. Driving in forward and reverse, toward and away from suffering, at the same time. This is me exerting my power, and making myself powerless. 1 minus 1 = 0. <br />
Sounds like me. It cannot be resolved by my power, but by my HP. <br />
:giveup</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Ok, I get it now</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1891-ok-i-get-now.html</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2009 20:19:56 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>All that fear I talked about in the last post is still around.  
Its like - I uncovered the truth, I know where the fear comes from, and now that fear is running around loose like a vampire let out...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>All that fear I talked about in the last post is still around. <br />
Its like - I uncovered the truth, I know where the fear comes from, and now that fear is running around loose like a vampire let out of his coffin. <br />
And all that analyzing was an attempt cure myself. You have no idea how often and how many times I have ruminated over this. <br />
Yes, I figured it out and it is out of control. I am paralyzed with fear now. <br />
And yes, I get it, about what it means to hand over 'our will and our lives' and to 'realize that only a power greater than ourselves can restore us.' <br />
I even try to control God - thinking I can invoke a HP to change me with bracelets, pictures, rings and other Things. To <b><i>Believe </i></b>there is a HP is to say HP is there always, 24/7, everlasting and always  - not something I conjure like a genie. This is <b><i>faith</i></b>, blind faith, blind and deaf faith, not reason, or rationalization.  I have got to believe. <br />
I am just gonna pray. I am just gonna pray over and over, 'our father' and 'Serenity'.<br />
I am not praying to get rid of the fear. I pray to that God will remove from me 1) self-centered thinking (which includes fear), 2) the mental obsession that I can control the self-centered fear, and 3) the desire to control God and other individuals (where I imagine the fear is coming from).<br />
Damn, I am tired of this fear. <br />
I get it. Got Fear? Get praying. For everyone who is trying to recover. <br />
Good Shepard, this scared sheep is all yours.</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[Paralysis & A Very Frightening Afternoon]]></title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1887-paralysis-very-frightening-afternoon.html</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2009 21:46:40 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>Yesterday, I was attempting to get some work done and a familiar resistance came over me. It is procrastination but it is an awful paralyzing procrastination. If you have ever had a premonition, an...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Yesterday, I was attempting to get some work done and a familiar resistance came over me. It is procrastination but it is an awful paralyzing procrastination. If you have ever had a premonition, an intuition, that you should not do something (get in a car, walk down an alley, ect.) then you know what it feels like. Every brain cell is screaming stop - don't act, don't do, don't try. <br />
Yesterday afternoon it was incredibly strong, almost a physical pressure pushing me away from the desk, away from work, as if the desk were about to burst into flames. I managed to get up and walk to an informal presentation next door. I sat in the back and just felt this almost blinding fear wash over me. It has never been this bad. I usually obsessively think about the fear, kind of wrestle with it, and it trickles slowly away. Last night I didn't fight it - I just let it go. And wow, did it go. Toward the end of the meeting (I was barely listening) it just kind of ebbed, without me wrestling with it. <br />
What was it? I know it comes from the alcoholic family. Recent blogs have been reflections on the anger I felt at my AF and AM, and all the expectations I still have for all the humans and events in my life. From it comes a strong resentment and resistance, rooted in self-centered fear. <br />
I have had this 'unhappy procrastination' since kindergarden, when both my parents were actively drinking and arguing. And I wanted to do 2 things - 1) run away and hide, as my AF's anger was random and vicious as a rabid dog, or 2) make them stop being such stupid and embarressing people in front of the neighborhood and the world. I always felt very stuck, not being able to choose either, so I often just sort of stood there - paralyzed, which I see was default option #3. <br />
So every emotional difficulty I meet with paralysis. It served my parents' addiction well - it kept me quiet. I acted as the 'lost' child but instead of feeling lost I was rooted in fear, and anger. I was Addiction's Tool. <br />
Whenever I meet an emotional difficulty, the response is fear, resentment, a desire to act, a desire to run, and paralysis. <br />
I never knew there was an 4th option - to leave them to their own problems and work on my own happiness. Even as I am paralyzed then and now, HPs love never stops. It never has and never will. I have to keep reaching for that strong never-darkening flame. <br />
Two items for step 4 - 1) a strong desire to control events and people 2) very self-centered (note all the 'I's above).</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Self-Centered Fear 2</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1877-self-centered-fear-2.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2009 20:25:29 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>What to do about self-centered fear? 
First, it is a fear of what? Well, the answer was shown previously: 
 
---Quote--- 
lose something we already possessed 
or would fail to get something we...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>What to do about self-centered fear?<br />
First, it is a fear of what? Well, the answer was shown previously:<br />
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				lose something we already possessed<br />
or would fail to get something we demanded
			
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</div>'Fail to get control of others' - that is mine, as a child and now. We do not address our needs and wants to humans, we ask HP. Humans don't deliver that kind of stuff, either from a demand or a request. <br />
<br />
Second, its a defect of character. My defect, and it is pretty useless to me, and fairly damaging. But I can't remove it - only HP can. Its that 'cleaning house' part of the steps.</div>

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			<title>Self-Centered Fear</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1853-self-centered-fear.html</link>
			<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:52:11 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>This was posted by gr8ful2day on July, 2007: 
Self-centered Fear 
 
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The chief activator of our defects has been self-centered fear -- 
primarily fear that we would lose something we...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>This was posted by gr8ful2day on July, 2007:<br />
Self-centered Fear<br />
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				The chief activator of our defects has been self-centered fear --<br />
primarily fear that we would lose something we already possessed<br />
or would fail to get something we demanded.<br />
Living upon a basis of unsatisfied demands,<br />
we were in a state of continual disturbance and frustration.<br />
Therefore, no peace was to be had unless we could find a means<br />
of reducing these demands.<br />
The difference between a demand and a simple request<br />
is plain to anyone.<br />
c. 1953 AAWS, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, p. 76<br />
With permission, Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc.
			
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</div>My resentment, resistance, and obsessive rumination come from a self-centered fear. I never thought of my self as self-centered - that is something spoiled celebrities of sports, movies, and rock do, right?<br />
Well, I am definitely self centered, in a dark, fearful, and bad way. <br />
It might well have started with my AF. AM was a quiet drinker, unlike my dad who had a highly dominating and aggressive personality. This sounds like a 'its my dad's fault' whine, but I really got stuck on wanting some caring words, something along the lines of 'I will change the way I treat you and talk to you, the way I treat your siblings, the way I act that is so embarrassing to you, to make you feel better.&quot; <br />
Wow, now that I think about it, most memories of him are embedded with a the idea 'that's him, and I wish he could have been different'. Now THAT is classic codie controlling stuff! <br />
I now realize that he had a limited toolbox, a few tools, really really big tools, but still only a few. <br />
I could never have changed him. Even sober, he was not a 'hand-on-the shoulder with a few kind words' kind of guy. He would donate money to a men's homeless shelter 100% anonymously - he didn't even like to talk about it. He wasn't comfortable with the appearance of compassion. I think I, and my siblings and AM, knew that compassion was there and lived for the day that it would be openly expressed in a big personality change. I remember how much he admired Ronald Reagan and William F. Buckley, but he could never have emulated the concern that they expressed so eloquently. (OK this is a can of political worms - their politics and methods are debatable, yes, but not their motivations.)<br />
My self-centered fear, upon which I built resentment and resistance, was dependent on him changing. I had made a child's bargain - you change I will change. You don't change I will keep up the resentment and resistance. <br />
In many ways, I never understood my father and to a degree I <u>did not want to try</u>, so strong was ego and my resentment. So in the present my fear is, to a degree, rooted in ignorance. To this day I have a lot of trouble reading other's emotions - sort of self-imposed autism. What I did toward AF, and AM, I am still doing to others. <br />
<br />
The rumination, the endless obsessive psuedo-intellectual bull**** thinking, analyzing, anywhere-but-the-present brainwork, is just my drink to drown the fear a little. It never helps. I wish I could get a hangover from it so I'd know when to stop. Maybe if I held my breath when I think too much - that'll get me back to the present!<br />
<br />
Ok, great, wonderful, and so now what??  I have a hint at where this passive resistance comes from - typical ACOA codie habits and continuing this behavior with the rest of the world. Getting rid of it - well, I need the HP's help to do that. <br />
And I am making that request every day (although I forget occasionally).<br />
And a little message to that little boy, JJ, who could not make his AF be different kind of dad: Go and tell him, and mom, that you love them, but don't get any expectations, ANY, as to the reaction, and DON&quot;T expect change; but it will do you a lot of good to say it, especially if done with no expectations. Work on you - do things that are good for you, that make you healthy, that aren't meant to change others.<br />
<br />
Postscript: I really didn't address the fear. I feared my AF and I fear others, just about everyone I encounter. How does that work with the codie stuff?<br />
A child instinctively lets the parents control how they feel. The child's emotional life orbits around the parent's emotional life. The child trusts that if they feel bad the parent will make it better. Fear happens when the child has no sense of predictability in the parents' moods and a knowledge that the parent is sometimes very angry. So anger from the parent is very scary. A child knows instinctively that they have some control over their parents actions, as when a child acts/is lovable and cute when he/she seeks a hug or a cookie. If a child doesn't know if their limited power has any effect, then they are even more scared. <br />
There is a conflict of instinct and reality: 1) The child 'knows' that a parent should be predictable, but in reality they are not. 2) the child 'knows' that they should be able to predictably create a positive response, but in reality they can't. This creates a lot of fear -self centered fear. And, for some children, (such a me) resentment and resistance is the reaction because they want to make a change that will never come. <br />
It is a bit like the weather. We trust that it will get warmer from January onward. If it does not get warmer, we are unhappy. If it gets really cold one may actually get scared, because the earth is not only unreliable, it has become threatening. If we have no warm home and the only provider of warmth is the weather, then we are very scared and very angry when we are denied a spring that the earth should provide. <br />
We have to let go of that expectation, and realize that we must make our own warmth, even if we cannot change the weather (or any person).</div>

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			<title>Declaration of Recovery</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1843-declaration-recovery.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 15 Feb 2009 20:58:45 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[Using the Steps as a guide, I can see that steps 11 and 12 require declaring 2 personal goals:  
1) I want recovery from living with alcoholism 
2) I want to do HP's will for me, knowing that it can...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Using the Steps as a guide, I can see that steps 11 and 12 require declaring 2 personal goals: <br />
1) I want recovery from living with alcoholism<br />
2) I want to do HP's will for me, knowing that it can be done only by me. HP's will for me is Exclusive to me. <br />
<br />
I fervently hope HP's will for me will involve teaching people how to conserve and enjoy the natural world and helping others with recovery. <br />
<br />
Steps 10, 11 and 12 provide 2 tools for these goals: : <br />
1) Focus on the present. In the present, I am closer to HP. I cannot get close to my HP focusing on the future or past. The change that I can do in the present is, very likely, the change that the HP wants me to create. Thinking about actions I did in the past or actions I could do in the future will not show me HP's will. <br />
2) Progress not perfection. As much as HP's will for me is exclusive for me, I expect that there will be setbacks and that I will move deliberately and consistently forward in spite of any setbacks.<br />
<br />
Its about the Steps, stupid!<br />
The 12 big Steps and all those little steps.</div>

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			<title>I have made progress - from Step 2 to Step 1!</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1828-i-have-made-progress-step-2-step-1.html</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:56:51 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[(this was copied from my post in Families & Friends of A's) 
 
In a post for the Step 2 thread (in F&F of A's), I said I was a bit p***** off at HP for, well, just being a HP. I 'came to believe'...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>(this was copied from my post in Families &amp; Friends of A's)<br />
<br />
In a post for the Step 2 thread (in F&amp;F of A's), I said I was a bit p***** off at HP for, well, just being a HP. I 'came to believe' that there was a power greater than myself and I didn't like it. It wasn't a thought process- it was just my reaction. <br />
The resentment has gone away, mostly. Now today I can see a thing that I must give up, a thing that I felt, as in semi-subconscious id/ego stuff, <b>made me feel powerful</b>: a little and constant stream of passive-aggressive acts and thoughts against just about everyone.  This is a powerless action, originating from self-centered fear - I am trying to exert control and it <u>aint' happenin'</u>. <br />
This resentment leads to another kind of control, but it is kind of counter-intuitive (keep reading - I'll try to make sense): The resentment and fear give a emotional excuse to, well, make excuses, to be irresponsible, to procrastinate, to not take responsibility for all those things one is responsible for (work, taxes, paying bills), and to hide from the boss. <br />
<br />
Making excuses and avoiding responsibility is a trait of non-recovery Alcoholics, and I think I have learned it all too well. My AM (I apologize if this sounds like a 'its all my parents' fault' whine) was an extreme example. She took the blame for everything wrong in our family but at the same time gave up control over her own life and anything in the family to my AF (who didn't want it). It is impossible to give up control like this and I think it is actually a power play -pushing responsibility into other's hands. You might call it 'playing victim', making others responsible for my mistakes and happiness.  I loved her - it was awful to watch.<br />
<br />
That is what I am doing (me, not AF or AM): trying to exert power <u>1) with resentment and 2) evading responsibility.</u> Utterly powerless, as I now know. <br />
That is a bit of Step 4 there, and 5, and well maybe 6 too. Hmmm - 8 too?<br />
And a bit of typical ACOA self-bashing is in there too. <br />
Did I mention that it has made my life unmanagable??:lmao</div>

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			<title>I was missed!</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1826-i-missed.html</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2009 16:20:05 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[Through a variety of excuses and some procrastination, I missed 2 al-anon meetings last week.  
When I got to last night's meeting, they said they missed me. Me? Missed?  
And these are people...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Through a variety of excuses and some procrastination, I missed 2 al-anon meetings last week. <br />
When I got to last night's meeting, they said they missed me. Me? Missed? <br />
And these are people against whom I still harbor little expectations, resentments, and fear (same as with the rest of the world). I am often late and often 'space out' in meetings because of my long term habit of making little passive agressive acts against, well, everyone who might have a judgment about me (which is, well, everyone). <br />
So, a little evidence that I can be loved and that my HP does care about me. <br />
:praying<br />
Postscript: As much as this is wonderful, I don't have a good tool to preserve it in my heart against the self-centered fear-ful thoughts. This needs work. Spiritual awakening takes work.</div>

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			<title>Assessment, Losing Control, and Dogs</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1796-assessment-losing-control-dogs.html</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2009 15:03:35 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[Why do am I so averse to situations where people can judge me? I don't fear tests - those are just pieces of paper. No, I fear 'them' - all those people I can interact with who might or could judge...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Why do am I so averse to situations where people can judge me? I don't fear tests - those are just pieces of paper. No, I fear 'them' - all those people I can interact with who might or could judge me because what I do impacts them somehow. This is a learned response - don't do anything that can be evaluated by the alcoholic parent. Or, don't do anything that might give the world a yardstick to measure what is going on at home. <br />
<br />
I watched a dog and its owner today while getting coffee. It hit me: treat yourself like a dog treats its owner, with bottomless love (apologies to cat owners) that does not quit.</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Good Blog site</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1795-good-blog-site.html</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2009 14:51:03 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>I found a really great blog by an ACOA at Ramblings of an ACOA: Adult Children of Alcoholics Learn How to Overcome the Characteristics of ACOAs and Develop Healthy Relationships...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>I found a really great blog by an ACOA at <a href="http://acoaramblings.blogspot.com" target="_blank">Ramblings of an ACOA: Adult Children of Alcoholics Learn How to Overcome the Characteristics of ACOAs and Develop Healthy Relationships</a>. The blogger hits on many issues that I am familiar with. <br />
This was a good quote:<br />
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	<div class="smallfont" style="margin-bottom:2px">Quote:</div>
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				In the end, rejoice in who you are, and embrace the love others have for you. I have no doubt that you have many reasons for others to love and appreciate and enjoy you. If you find yourself thinking, &quot;no, I'm not special, I don't see why anyone would even like me...&quot; realize that <i>this is a programmed response!</i> You even being alive after your upbringing is something to be proud of, and something for others to love. Let them. The more you allow others to love you, the more you will be able to love yourself.
			
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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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			<title>Frightened</title>
			<link>http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/blogs/grewupinabarn/1782-frightened.html</link>
			<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 19:48:04 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>First Blog entry ever! Here it goes. I suspect this will be lots of whining and self-centered navel gazing, but it may also help to tell the world, or a passing friend, what is going on. Comments are...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>First Blog entry ever! Here it goes. I suspect this will be lots of whining and self-centered navel gazing, but it may also help to tell the world, or a passing friend, what is going on. Comments are invited but not necessary - I assume that the HP is reading it all. <br />
<br />
At an alanon meeting last night I wondered why my mind drifted so easily away from the conversation and off to thinking about stuff, any stuff, anything at all but what was going on in front of me. This happens to me alot - I drift off into thought to easily, especially when I have to do something important. It is not ADD - I tried med s for that and they just make me focus harder on the stuff that is not in front of me. <br />
I think, at least today, that it is fear. Fear of just being near people. Thinking about it, I got a little angry and felt like saying 'Don't talk to me, go away, I don't want to talk to you!&quot; I know I have a strong current (a step 4 fault) of self-centered fear that has been around since earliest childhood (source: alcoholic parents, maintained by: me).  <br />
The fear is lingering around today. I am hesitating from email and work. Work involves students and I am frightened of being a bad teacher. Frightened of students and other teachers. It is stopping me. I can't get rid of it but HP can take it away. <br />
HP, I don't need this fear. Please take it. <br />
Must remember this: If there is a problem with me and them, then it is up to HP to fix or not.</div>

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			<dc:creator>grewupinabarn</dc:creator>
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