Author Archives: Michael

Codependency | An Addict’s Perfect Partnership

A guest blog written by Rachael – author and owner of http://www.RecoveringYou.com
A message from Rachel: “I don’t write here from theory. I write here as the wife of an addict, as someone raised by an addict. I write here from experience and I write here from my place of truth. I write here from the place of my own recovery, and the recovery of my husband – nearly 4 years clean.”

Codependency is a term often used in relation to the partner or spouse of an addict. There is reasoning that to stay and tolerate the destructive behaviors and actions of an addict in a relationship, that codependency must be present.

So what is codependency?

Codependency is defined as taking an excessively passive, controlling or care taking role in your relationship with another.

When someone is codependent they tend to spend the majority of their effort in their relationship, monitoring, controlling and attempting to enhance the feelings of someone they love. If a person is in a codependent relationship, there exists an imbalance that is both unhealthy, and ultimately destructive to the codependent whose self esteem, needs and self worth are sacrificed for that of the other person’s.

How does codependency show up in your relationship with an addict?

You might believe that they won’t cope on their own without you, that you are their only chance of recovery. You may feel that if you can just keep helping them, they will find their way eventually. Or you might believe that you have done things that make them want to drink, take drugs or gamble, and that if only you were a better partner they might not do it as much. You will likely diminish or deny your feelings about their problem, or the effects it is having on you.

Your main aim is to keep them happy, and make life as simple and stress free as possible for them, in the hope that it reduces the need for them to indulge in their addiction. Nothing that you need to do to keep the peace or provide for your partner is considered too much. The more you can do, the more validation you hope for. But it tends to backfire as your efforts are unappreciated or noticed by someone whose prevailing thoughts are on getting their next fix.

So you are probably failing miserably on all accounts and that makes you want to try even harder.

You are in a cycle of codependency. And isn’t going to save anyone.

Codependents believe that they are acting out of compassion and often become martyrs to the cause of their addict. Their intentions are good.

But in fact, if anything, you are enabling and you are protecting your addict from facing the full ugliness of their addiction as you provide excuses, deny the impact of their actions and let them continue to use you as their source of comfort while giving back nothing.

Codependency can be hard to identify because we often think we are just being selfless, caring and loving. We feel noble for loving someone at his or her worst. I never would have identified with being codependent but I see in hindsight that I definitely had codependent patterns which I always thought were me just being too nice for my own good. And I was right in a way.

It is known through research that a codependent person will probably have been raised to think that setting themselves aside for others is part of being in a relationship. Messages of this ilk can be strong in family situations, particularly if you were raised by an addicted parent. We learn to keep quiet, make peace, do what they ask and work around their addiction in any way possible. But there is a major difference to loving in these ways, and giving away who we are, for the sake of a relationship and the other person in it.

Are you operating with any of the following?

1. Desperate for approval
2. Uncomfortable being strong or assertive
3. Wanting to control others
4. Basing self worth on the approval of others
5. Denying or diminishing feelings
6. Struggling to make decisions in fear of upsetting others
7. Giving up interests, friends or hobbies for the sake of others
8. Feeling unnecessarily responsible for your loved ones actions
9. Mistaking the need to rescue someone, with loving them
10. Confusing being needed for being loved
11. Giving more of yourself than the people you love give back to you
12. Feeling upset when people don’t notice how much you are giving
13. Avoiding abandonment by staying in unhealthy relationships

You may be codependent and it is time to reset the habits that are causing you (and your addict) harm.

You are not wrong in wanting love, validation and respect. We all want these things.

But you must look to yourself first to find them. An addict is certainly incapable of giving you these things, while they are struggling to have them for themselves and in life your best guarantee of being given the appreciation you deserve is to expect it from yourself.

The opposite of codependency is to become the designer and director of YOUR life first. You can not, and do not need to, control any other life except you own and when you redirect the energy you have given away to living in someone else’s shadow back to YOU, the possibilities are endless and incredible.

You can be the most honest, loving and loyal person in your life.
And today is the day to begin getting to know that fabulous person.

So what do YOU want? Who do YOU want to be? What are YOUR needs and desires? And how will YOU make sure they are met?

A guest blog written by Rachael – author and owner of http://www.RecoveringYou.com

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Making Others Wrong

This week’s guest blog is by frequent contributor: Cinnie Noble. Cinnie is the founder of CINERGY™ Coaching, a division of Noble Solutions Inc in Toronto, Canada. She is a lawyer-mediator, a certified coach and a former social worker, who has studied and practiced a range of conflict management services, for over 20 years. Cinnie is a much sought-after speaker and regularly presents internationally, on conflict management coaching. Cinnie  is a guest lecturer at Osgoode Hall Law School, in their Masters of Law (Alternative Dispute Resolution) program. She is the author of “Conflict Management Coaching: The CINERGY™ Model”, available through Amazon.com
 

One of the things that sometimes happens when we are embroiled in an interpersonal conflict is that we perceive the differences between us as a matter of right and wrong. That is, that we are right and the other person is wrong! That perspective may be the other person’s too, of course. In many cases, such attributions do not apply and mostly, they don’t serve us well. Yet, when there is a need to find fault, it seems many of us think in positional terms of black versus white and hold strongly to those oppositional views.
Insisting on being right and making others wrong is one way of managing conflict. However,  the reality is this approach doesn’t advance resolution, reconcile the relationship, clear the air or achieve positive outcomes, there are other ways to proceed if we want to. This blog will include self-reflective questions for those who want an outcome that helps to make amends and is based more on thinking about the grey in between the starkness of black and white positions.
Please consider a dispute in which you and another person have disagreed or are currently disagreeing, and ask yourself these questions:
• What makes the other person’s viewpoint ‘wrong’?
• What is ‘right’ about it?
• What makes your viewpoint ‘wrong’ for him or her?
• What is ‘right’ about your perspective that he or she doesn’t seem to understand?
• What seems to be keeping him or her from understanding your perspective?
• What if anything may you both agree on?
• What is the main thing (do you think) that is keeping you two from accepting each other’s point of view (and even agreeing to disagree)?
• What do you think it would take for him or her to acknowledge the way(s) you are ‘right’?
• What do you think it would take for you to acknowledge the way(s) he or she is ‘right’?
• What approach may you take that is neither black nor white but a shade of grey, to help you make amends?

Try asking these questions when the next right/wrong battle comes up for you.

Cinnie Nobel  is the founder of CINERGY™ Coaching, a division of Noble Solutions Inc in Toronto, Canada. You can contact Cinnie at: 1-866-335-6466, cinnie@cinergycoaching.com or visit her web site at: http://www.cinergycoaching.com/
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Hit Bottom? Time to Get Up!

This week’s guest blog is written by Craig Ing, an International Performance and Personal Development Consultant and writer for the Huffington Post. For over 20 years Craig has been working with professional athletes, individuals and corporations focusing on developing, increasing and maximizing high performance as well as creating harmonious environments. You can contact Craig at: craig@craiging.com or visit his web site: http://www.craiging.com/

When I started writing for The Huffington Post, I considered working my articles up to a crescendo full of helpful steps. Setting the stage with the first few articles, where I would cover some basic principles of living life, followed by increasingly intense topics tackling everyday issues head on. However, I have been receiving emails from readers that have caused me to reconsider this approach. So I’m throwing away the slowly but surely style, and jumping straight in to try and provide some much sought after guidance. So where do I start? At the bottom, of course.

Hitting rock bottom is a scary and often confusing time. It is that moment when nothing makes sense, and you cannot understand or interpret your own thoughts, let alone the circumstances you find yourself in. It is the moment when you don’t know which way to turn to get help, or even if there is any help to be had, whilst all the while not really sure whether you even need that help. It brings powering feelings of being alone, yet standing in the brightest spotlight with everyone looking at you. You feel so apart and distant from yourself that it is hard to contemplate that your own heart, arms or legs are even part of you. Previously perceived small, simple tasks feel like climbing Everest. You know when you hit bottom.

However, the first thing to realize about “the bottom” is that everyone has a different threshold as well as definition for it. Secondly, that threshold and definition will keep changing through your life as you experience more and more challenging circumstances. The “benchmark,” as I call it, will evolve as you get older. When you were a child, hopefully the worst thing you experienced was falling over or falling off your bike. Then a few years later, your benchmark may have been altered to when your boyfriend or girlfriend dumped you. Later still, you may have lost your job and had to deal with the challenges that introduces.
And so your benchmark keeps changing. What doesn’t change though is the feeling of utter shock, confusion, fear and all consuming distress that is always present at the bottom. Have you heard the expression “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger?” I truly believe that as your benchmark changes, so too does your ability to “deal and heal.”
Was I better prepared to deal with my sister’s tragic death because I had already experienced my dad dying? Was I better prepared for my dad dying because I had already experienced my parent’s divorce? Was I better prepared for my parents divorce because I had experienced break-ups in my own relationships and could understand that sometimes things don’t work out?

My first article was about preparing for suffering, and whilst this is really great advice to put into practice, I do know that it does not help those people already dealing with such challenging circumstances. It does not help people get out of the dark holes they are finding themselves in right now. When I work with new clients, we first focus on creating a stable, happy existence. To achieve that we must deal with anything current that is even slightly putting our sensitive scales of happiness out of balance. I say again, preparation is the key to future suffering but we must deal with the here and now. So below are the pointers I provide to clients to help start the “dealing, healing process:”

  • Give yourself a break. This is about creating a mental attitude where it is okay to be confused, to be scared, to not understand. Just because your situation may not be as serious as being diagnosed with a terminal illness, it does not mean you don’t have the same mountain to climb to deal with your particular present circumstances. Just because you have an alternative benchmark, does not mean you are not allowed to feel the same feelings and have the same emotions as someone with a terminal illness. Forget what others may be dealing with and allow yourself to deal and heal with your own suffering, your own benchmark. If you have lost your job, very quickly the mental conveyor belt will sprint a race towards “not earning an income equals not paying your bills equals losing the house equals losing your family”. This is very similar for those diagnosed with a terminal illness, with the exception that they also have the mortality perspective to deal with. Giving yourself a break means allowing yourself to prioritize your own challenges and take steps towards dealing and healing. If you ignore your own plight with the view that “what have I got to be moaning about,” you will definitely create a deeper seated issue to bite you later. Give yourself a break!
  • An alternative perspective. It is very important that you focus on the positives and on alternative perspectives when trying to deal with challenging circumstances. It allows you to envisage that things could be worse. Preparation is by far the best tool for proactively helping you deal with future suffering, however, we do not all have the luxury of “future suffering” as we are dealing with it right now. So a slight change to the technique can also be used when in the motions of dealing with something in the here and now. By focusing on finding out how your particular situation could be worse, you are in effect altering your benchmark in real time. This step allows you to gain a little positivity in the absolute present because you know that the situation is not as bad as it could be. It does not matter what you are facing at any time, if you have not prepared for it, you can definitely find some elements that could be worse. From a little positivity you can produce life changing or situation altering results. An alternative perspective creates positivity.
  • Move and Do. Nothing is going to change if you don’t create movement. So from a position of positivity, even if created in real time, you will find yourself more capable of making a change. You must put one proverbial foot in front of the other to better your situation. Move and do, and your situation is at least in danger of becoming a better place in which to live.

I am under no illusion how tough things are right now; that is precisely why I am focusing on providing some guidance that will hopefully make a difference. If you have lost your job and have applied for 50 vacant positions without success, I know how hard it can be to post another application with any amount of positivity. I know how hard it is to pick yourself up when it feels like the banks and financial industries around the world not supporting us, and the governments not implementing any real support policies that make a difference to the people on the street. But, things will not change in your own individual playground by itself.

Create a positive place by considering an alternative perspective and move!

Craig Ing, is an International Performance and Personal Development Consultant and writer for the Huffington Post. For over 20 years Craig has been working with professional athletes, individuals and corporations focusing on developing, increasing and maximizing high performance as well as creating harmonious environments. Visit Craig’s web site at: http://www.craiging.com/

Craig would love to hear from you, so please leave a comment or send Craig an email at craig@craiging.com.

Follow Craig Ing on Twitter: www.twitter.com/craiging

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