ZoSo's Laws For Surviving a Breakup With an Addict

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Old 01-05-2013, 06:56 AM
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ZoSo's Laws For Surviving a Breakup With an Addict

This was written by a member who posts in our 'Friends and Family of Substance Abusers' forum. It shares in detail what he went through and how he survived the breakup of his relationship with his addicted girlfriend. With his permission, I am sharing it here in hopes that it may help some who are struggling right now.


Originally Posted by zoso77
ZoSo's Laws For Surviving a Breakup With an Addict

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It's been a long time since I've done an original post. Mostly because there's really been nothing to talk about...until tonight.

Tonight, I started graduate school again. I'm currently two courses shy of my MS in Electrical and Computer Engineering. When I was dealing with my AXGF, I was so sick myself that doing that level of work was impossible. In fact, my career took a hit as well. Now that my career's back on track and I've restarted graduate school, I figured a post like this would help Newbies who've been knocked sideways by the actions of their addict boyfriend or girlfriend.

Call it: ZoSo's Laws for Surviving a Breakup With an Addict

1) Decide that you're going to be OK. Let's say hypothetically the addict drops the bomb on you. You're pissed, you're hurt. After everything you've done for them, they pull this. Don't be surprised. He or she is sick. So it can go one of two ways: you can roll over and die, or decide that you're going to get through it. In my case, I woke up two days after the bomb was dropped on me, decided my AXGF did me a favor, and said aloud to myself, I'm gonna be OK. And once you decide that, it's No Contact from that point forward.

2) Accept You're Going to Have Your Down Moments. It's inevitable. You've been betrayed and hurt. This is something you have to face, and this is something you have to accept. The good news is it's not forever. You have to keep pressing forward, tell yourself this is where you are now, admit it sucks, and keep going.

3) Reconnect With Friends. This is important. Very important. Your friends may be pissed at you because you allowed yourself to stay in an unhealthy, compromised situation. Accept their feelings and what they tell you, and acknowledge it to the best of your ability. Enjoy their company. If you're comfortable doing so, share with them what their friendship means to you. However you do that is up to you.

4) Reengage With Your Bliss. What gave you joy before the addict was in your life? For me, it was music and the guitar. My bliss includes my band. There's five of us, and when I'm with them, I'm not an engineer or a student or a codependent. I'm one of the boys and I act like I'm 15. I laugh. I make sick jokes. I torture someone. It's all good...and believe or not, it changes your brain chemistry for the better. Find what you love, do it, and thank God you've got that in your life.

5) Attend Al Anon/Nar Anon Meetings. When you're down in the dumps, it's important you go to meetings. You have to go with an open mind and open ears. There is a high probability that one or more people will share an idea that can turn your day around. These meetings aren't about the addict that left you. They are for you and how you respond when the bomb is dropped on you. Allow others to comfort you in this setting. And offer your support if someone needs it.

6) Recommit to Your Career. When the bomb is dropped on you, you don't want to be at work. You can't concentrate, you're sad, you're angry, and the last thing you want to do is a, b and c. Guess what? Use work as a distraction. Engage with your colleagues. Engage with your boss. Set manageable goals for yourself every day and meet them. Give yourself credit when you do.

7) Pray. Every. Night. If you're in Al Anon, this isn't that foreign. If you're not, read carefully: part of getting well is accepting you have no control over the addict and their behavior. And in that moment of surrender, you turn to a Higher Power to restore yourself to sanity. You can't handle the addict anymore. The pain they've left in their wake is overbearing. Give it to God and let Him shoulder it for you. Thank Him for the gifts and the people you do have in your life. Pray for the addict if you want, too. But do this every day. It helps. Believe me, it helps.

If you do these steps, little by little, hour by hour, day by day, you will reclaim your life. It may take weeks. It may take months. But what you will notice is a good day here and there turns into two good days. Two turns into three. Three turns into four. And the pain, while it's still present, isn't as sharp. You know it's there, you accept it's there, and you sit with it.

One year ago, I was essentially not functioning. I allowed myself, my career, and my education to be hijacked by a person that, in hindsight, only cared about her needs, her wants. She didn't care what I thought, what I needed, what I wanted. Suicide threats, cognitive distortions, lying through her teeth...

...then leaving me for another addict, via text message, while confessing with glee she f**ked two other guys.

Yeah, that hurt.

And guess what? Almost 8 months later, I've got my life back. I've got all of it back. I'm stronger, I'm wiser, I'm more honest with myself...and I recognize my part of what was truly a sick, dysfunctional relationship. It's lessons learned. She gave me a gift.

God Bless.

ZoSo
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Old 01-05-2013, 09:27 AM
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Awesome! Great advice, even if the A in your life isn't a significant other. Reclaim yourself, vow to get better, learn who you are...Great Stuff!!
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Old 01-05-2013, 10:25 AM
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One of my favorite postings
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Old 01-05-2013, 01:06 PM
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Thanks, this is awesome.
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Old 01-05-2013, 06:21 PM
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Wow! Between this post and Shooting Star's, I am getting exactly what I need here, thank you.

Out of sadness, loneliness, and codependency, I have opened the door to my AXF, gone 11 months. Now I feel caught between the fantasy that our illusory relationship could be healed, and shame at not trusting my better angels (literal and figurative).

One thing, of many, that struck me about this post was the instruction to Pray. Every. Day. I came to Alanon as an agnostic years ago. When this last, terrible betrayal by the alcoholic in my life came, I started praying and have not stopped. I pray in gratitude with my first breath, and with my last thought at night.

I also pray for strength, for guidance, to be held, to be shown the path, for patience, for my alcoholic. It, along with my daily reading, SR, Alanon, church, and good friends is helping me tremendously.

I'm in kind of a cocoon now, gathering strength to be the person I'm meant to be. Zoso77, I have a demanding professional life, which is suffering. But I do know that I can and will emerge and re-engage with professional success.

What a post!! Hope it's a sticky. Just what I needed.

Thank you!!!
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Old 01-05-2013, 08:00 PM
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Originally Posted by celticgenes View Post
... What a post!! Hope it's a sticky. ...
I agree, it's awesome. And yes, it is stickied at the top of the forum "next door"

Friends and Family of Substance Abusers - SoberRecovery : Alcoholism Drug Addiction Help and Information

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Old 03-28-2013, 11:48 AM
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This is a great post. I have a feeling of dread that I'm going to be using this advice in the very near future.
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Old 03-28-2013, 01:32 PM
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Yeah, I'm with ya Charlie. We can't live like this forever.
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Old 03-28-2013, 08:46 PM
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I just feel that she never really loved me to begin with. After being together for 7 years she moved out and came back after 4 months. 5 months later she became pregnant and now after 8 additional years I've realized she's an alcoholic after finding her wasted in a truck with another guy. That isn't love.
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