Alcoholism, Codependency and Intimacy

Dr. Neill Neill

In my previous post, Alcoholism: Addiction with a Twist,  I commented on how addiction can lead to addictive or co-dependent relationships. I ended with,

"The benefits to all of overcoming an addiction to the wellbeing of another are far reaching, but as always, the healing process begins with awareness."

Awareness alone doesn't remove the problem, but it may produce a roadmap to wholeness. And with wholeness can come real intimacy.

Codependency is full of opposites

Imagine a husband and wife where the man is addicted to alcohol and the woman is addicted to him and his well-being. She has an intense pull towards her husband. She loses herself in the intensity of the need to care for him.  On the other hand she has a strong need to pull away from him and get a life for herself.

We have all seen it: one of them leaves and comes back, and then leaves again and comes back again. There seems to be no middle ground. It's either total enmeshment or complete cut-off.

What isn't well understood is that the cut-off is just as much a part of codependency as the enmeshment. With the under-functioning alcoholic, compulsive drinking and compulsive abstinence are two sides of the same coin, and compulsive abstinence does not "cure" the alcoholism. Similarly, distancing from the alcoholic spouse will not cure the codependency. She is still over-functioning to compensate for his under-functioning. Although sex may be great or mediocre, there is little real intimacy between the two beings.

A recipe for staying stuck

What is the effect of the codependency on the under-functioning, alcoholic husband? To put it bluntly, he stays stuck in his alcoholism. When she's there and enmeshed with him, he has no incentive to change. When she distances herself, he declares his undying love and gives a hint of cleaning up. Nothing really changes, nor can it change as long as the non-alcoholic partner continues to overcompensate for the partner's shortcomings.

Helping yourself

If you are wondering whether you have codependent tendencies, just ask yourself,

 "Am I more of an expert on what he needs than on what I need?"

If your answer is "yes," then you are probably to some degree in the midst of a codependent relationship.

If you have become an expert on what your partner needs and are not really clear about your own needs as a person, you are a part of the dysfunction and are helping to hold it in place. The good news is that this understanding gives you a roadmap to find your way out.

Your central task if you want to overcome your addictive/co-dependent tendencies is your own self-development. I'm not talking joining the gym or taking up a hobby. I refer to your doing whatever it takes to become an expert on yourself and your soul's purpose.

When you have gained an understanding of and caring for who you are, independent of other people, and have developed your practice of self-care so it has become second nature, and you no longer turn to jelly or rage when an under-functioning person tries to suck you in, then you are capable of real intimacy with another.

And who knows, when you are no longer are a part of his dysfunction, he may change too.

Copyright © Neill Neill. All rights reserved. Dr. Neill Neill maintains an active psychology and life-coaching practice on Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. He is a member of the treatment team at Sunshine Coast Health Centre , a drug and alcohol addiction treatment facility for men. He writes regular newspaper and magazine columns on psychological healing and self-improvement. His goal is to facilitate growth in human consciousness and increase the human store of hope, happiness and generosity of spirit.

Filed under Alcoholism and Marriage by Dr. Neill Neill

Permalink Print Comment

Comments on Alcoholism, Codependency and Intimacy »

Charlotte Smith @ 9:56 am

Why do you name your book "Living with a Functional Alcoholic: A woman's guide" and assume that MEN don't need help in living with a functional alcoholic??? My soninlaw is in a living hell with a functional alcoholic/he being a lifelong "codependent" personality and my grandchildren and I are in the middle of this sick mess. What do you have for HIM and me as a grandmother???

Neill @ 10:06 am

Dear Charlotte, I realize that many men are in the same predicament your son-in-law is in and I intend to address this in my next book. I had to start somewhere, but I can understand your frustration. In the meantime, realize that many of the principles are the same and so are some of the details.

Renee @ 10:22 am

I have been living with a funtioning alcoholic for two years and I am codependent on him. Recently I have told him I am moving out. Of course this did not get a reaction from him and he thinks I am crying wolf, again. I am closing on my house this week and I am ready to make a fresh start. I feel tremondously guilty, because of course he claims he loves me and things will change and he doesn't have a problem.
Will your book help me to make a fresh start after leaving the alcoholic or can you make a suggestion for one that will. thank you

Dr. Neill Neill @ 11:01 am

Hi Renee.

Absolutely. If you are codependent, as you say you are, the guidance in the book may help you keep your resolve and not go back, only to do it all again.

Love and blessings,
Neill

Debra @ 5:35 pm

Dr. Neill
I recently married an alcoholic (1 year). To my surprise, the whiskey bottles are hidden randomly thru out the home. The drinking has increase since moving in, along with the verbal abuse. I have demanded that I not be a part of this life style, wether it be the drinking/passing out/neglect/mistrust/verbal abuse/making and breaking up cycle. Alcohol is destructive and all consumping, the reasons for drinking are masked to protect the guilty and insecure. The drinking lead to physical abuse, in front of my four children. So, considering the responsibility I have to myself and my four children, I have left. Demanding that he get help, holding to the principal. He has sought help - two meetings/counselling. He insist that he needs me home to help him get thru this and that he is not drinking. I want to go home, be a good wife/partner/supporter, however I will not until I know that he is not drinking anymore. How can I tell if he is not drinking? We talk at night (on the phone) and he seems fine, however I could not tell he was drinking all the time when I lived with him.
Does he know what he has done to us and our family, the kids, our marriage. Only when sober, right?
I am not sure I want to fight the battle of sobbering up and the cycles assoicated with the process. I am not sure if I want to put my young kids thru this mess, based upon an 'IF' he get sober. I am a mother and "IF' does not work. I love him and I am trying this 'tuff love' thing with him, and it is hard. What book should I read? Thanks

Leave a Comment

Subscribe without commenting