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.

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Alcoholism: An Addiction with a Twist

Dr. Neill Neill

Addiction to a drug like alcohol develops gradually. Drinking alcohol may start out as social fun, or it may from the beginning be a way of escaping pain and difficulty. Sometime I think of it as one of dissociation’s helpers, because alcohol helps a person to split off from reality. But that's an idea for another post.

The point is that people cannot know whether alcohol has become an addiction until they are deprived of it, either through circumstance or through an attempt to quit drinking.

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Filed under Alcoholism and Family, Alcoholism and Marriage, Symptoms of Alcoholism by Dr. Neill Neill

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When Drinking Becomes Alcohol Abuse

By Dr. Neill Neill, Registered Psychologist

Drinking alcohol is very much a part of Western culture.  It is almost a rite of passage. And most people who drink alcohol don't get into any real trouble with it.

But some do get into trouble.  As individuals and as a society we need to recognize when drinking alcohol becomes alcohol abuse, so we can do something about it.

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Filed under Symptoms of Alcoholism by Dr. Neill Neill

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