He was valedictorian of his HS class and had a full college scholarship. He dropped out after a year or two.
my addict kid wasn’t valedictorian, but close… had the scholoarship and blew it. I get it.
Back in the day we called it "tough love", but it’s really just boundaries 101. With my addicted kid (who also has a borderline personality Dx), I ultimately found a simple boundary that works for me: resentment. If I am gonna resent ANYTHING I do, I have to say no. I’d rather deal with whatever pain/anger an addict has about saying no than deal with my own resentment (you know, the drinking poison and hoping the other person dies drill). ANYTHING I do for the addict is done without any expectation of reciprocation, and no "deals" that involve the future (eg buying a car and expecting an addict to make payments….sounds to me like a pretty good recipe for resentment AND having to pay for someone else’s car).
I’ve learned that boundaries with an addict can actually feel GOOD. I like that I can simultaneously hold immense love for my kid AND not get hoovered into what is THEIR crap. I guess you could say that holding my boundaries gives me more space to actually feel that love, w/o getting bogged down with my frustration or fear about the addiction, w/o spinning my wheels trying to figure out the "right" words so they’ll "get it" (which I had to "get" myself when dealing with the infidelity).
And I DID kick my kid out, in a -literally - ‘your stuff is on the front porch, you can pick it up when you want, but I’m not responsible’ kind of way, and the reason was bc they would not abide by my Covid needs/restrictions by regularly going to bars & parties, at a time when I was still freaking out about a simple trip to the grocer (Summer of 2020). And if faced with the same situation today, I’d do the same thing.
I think it’s also important to remember that not keeping our boundaries / enabling is NOT doing the addict ANY favors (any more that rugsweeping an A does any favors to the WS).
this thread has a lot of references to "priorities" - and if something is a priority to another ADULT (even one with mental health or addiction issues), that ADULT will figure out how to make it happen. And while being an addict or having mental health issues is not that person’s “fault’, it IS their RESPONSIBILITY to figure out how to manage it. Again, my kid has a BPD Dx, which is not fun. I can provide all the love & support in the world, but it’s up to them to figure out how they want to address & manage it all. It’s not MY life…. It’s theirs, including their choices.
Anyhow, just some ramblings off the top of my head :)
[This message edited by gmc94 at 6:59 PM, Wednesday, February 9th]