Stark Raving Sober

First of all, thank God for the steps! I wouldn’t be able to tell this story without them. I wouldn’t because I would be trapped in the story; sucked in to the familiar familial drama of the tree from which this nut fell.

Last Friday night I had dinner with my sister and her two boys, my brother and his growing family and my aunt and uncle. I don’t remember the last time all of us were together to break bread. I was especially happy to see my sister as she is moving to Iowa City this month where her husband is doing his fellowship. Other times this opportunity has presented itself I have been way too strung out to show up. Seeing me would have been more painful than not seeing me. So to be able to show up for my family, sober, happy and present, was really wonderful for me.

As the sister and children of an alcoholic and her husband, though, the conversation took a dark turn almost from the very beginning and mostly stayed there. My family has been very protective of me and very supportive. Knowing the seriousness of my effort and knowing the gravity of my mother’s condition, they have been vigilant about not disclosing any specifics of my life to my mother. They have never passed along my phone number which she has asked for several times. They only answer her questions about how I am in the most general way. And perhaps more importantly, they spare me the details of the insanity going on in mom’s luxurious little rabbit hole.

I had no difficulty sloughing off the story of her arrest in her own driveway a couple of months ago. The scene that had been described to me was really nothing out of the ordinary – except that there happened to be police at her home at the time. I actually took a little (guilty) pleasure from it, particularly since part of her ranting had been about them harassing her when there were people like me out on the street. At dinner, though, the scene was illuminated more fully and details of the continuing downward spiral were revealed. It was not the police at her home, not in the usual sense, but rather the S.W.A.T. team. More recently there have been public urination accidents, car accidents, accidental falls down escalators resulting in knee replacement surgery, accidental falls at home leaving her husband with his femur broken in two places and passed out on the floor until the maids came in and found him (when he was admitted in the ER his BAC was .38).

By all outside appearances the gates of insanity have swung wide open and my mom and her husband have passed through, sprinted up the walk, gone through the front door, fixed themselves some drinks and gotten comfortable. For three days afterward I hoped that death wouldn’t be far behind. I imagined ways it might happen. I tried to figure out if you could get a wheel chair over the Lido deck and if a life preserver would be visible at night.

This time it only sucked me in for a couple of days. I was spared any direct contact with the dark side. All I had to endure was a 30 hour headache, an evening of plotting a final scene to the tragedy, and a few hours of step work and in return I was given a miracle, a change in perspective and the 4th step promise of being able to view my mother and her husband as spiritually sick and to think of them with compassion. Genuine compassion. I actually discussed with my sponsor ways that I might be able to be helpful to them without placing myself in the eye of the hurricane. On principle he agreed but we both though it would be better to talk to his sponsor and his sponsor’s sponsor who happens to know my parents and had parents like them.

After becoming willing to send people to my mom’s house to see if she needed anyone to go to the store or make dinner or bring in the mail I was given specific direction about cleaning up my part of this insanity in my head and in my mom’s life:

“‘Fuck off’ is an amend.”

I can live with that. I’m grateful that I was given the change in perspective from resentment to compassion. And I’m grateful to know that the most compassionate thing I can do is allow them to be on their own path.

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  1. of course i went to dictionary.com and read all 14 definitions for the word amend. the one that conforms mostly to my idea of said word is: to change or modify in any way for the better; as, (a) by simply removing what is erroneous, corrupt, superfluous, faulty, and the like; (b) by supplying deficiencies; (c) by substituting something else in the place of what is removed; to rectify.

    it means taking an action to make something better or different. mending a fence, metaphorically speaking. not simply saying you’re sorry, it goes beyond being sorry. it is an action. a wise soul once told me for my first “amend” that i was to say i was “wrong – never say you are sorry since you have probably said that so often before,” and “what can i do to make things right?” and then wait for the answer.

    your sponsor, and your sponsor’s sponsor, and your grand-sponsors and great grand sponsors, and hell, anyone in the program longer than 24 hours probably has more wisdom than i do at this moment in my life, but “fuck off” being an amend escapes me. (just being rigorously honest.)

    please forgive me — if i you mean “fuck off” as in “used in the imperative as an angry dismissal” (as taken from urbandictionary.com), then that’s telling them to go away and not taking any responsibility for any harm you may have created (or potentially taken a part in) in your relationship with that other. if saying “fuck off” as in “Chris, fuck off,” then i get it. i get that in this sense, you are dismissing yourself from their lives and allowing them to live as they desire or choose their own path.

    *fuck off* or *detach with love* is a kinder way of saying it. i detached from my family a bit ago. i can hear of what is going on and simply remain neutral. i almost got sucked into it after a round of Easter happenings, but because of good sponsorship, i was able to see what i could do to make things better for all involved, and the advice was mostly to re-detach.

    (didn’t know i was a linguist, didya?)

    love you.

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  2. You know, Scottish courts have ruled that “fuck off” is not an insult. And Joe did go on to share much of his experience with his parents, both of whom died of alcoholism. My understanding is that the best action I can take right now is no action – an angry dismissal. He would also say not to beat myself up for being angry with my parents. I’m only human. And there is a huge difference between anger and resentment.

    Love you.

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  3. “we will intuitively know how to handle situations that used to baffle us”

    The best we can do is to recognize where we are with our recovery, including our current limits, and to strive for continued growth.

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  4. Thanks for opening up about the dilemma in your family, and your way of fording through the muck and mire. You write so freaking well that I feel like I got as much from this post as I would have from chatting with you in person.

    It touches me deeply that you all live with this “insanity” so deeply embedded. It gives me a twinge of guilt that I did not, and do not, face family scenarios of that sort. (I know I should not feel guilty about that, but I do. Maybe that is what happens when you have not yet really practiced self-forgiveness.

    I want you to know that this post helped me gain a little perspective on my own issues, a perspective that has allowed me to reduce my fears a tad (for today anyway.)

    Peace…

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  5. perception really does alter as life goes on. as i change, how i see the world definitely changes, too. i have been sharing a compendium of monet’s artwork with my groups. when he started out with painting all the images were clear and precise with a definite deliniation of form and color, but as he matured his perception shifted and became less about each individual image in his scope and more about the entire picture. the colors are blended more, the images are fuzzier, and the impression rather than the subject moves into the foreground.

    you my friend, are gaining perspective.

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  6. Wow. This story shows me the power of the steps. Congratulations! And may you take many more journeys along these steps.

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  7. i’m w/ boy grows up – great perspective story, and i LOVE the “there is a difference between anger and resentment” – needed that today!

    Reply

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