I
don’t remember when I actually became codependent. It may have been when
I was the child of an ill mother constantly worrying. I always felt that
if I could make her feel like everything was OK, then she would be OK.
Every day I asked her if she was “happy” because after suffering a mental
breakdown and telling me that she “wanted to go away and be with God,” I
needed reassurance that she would not leave me. My happiness hinged on
her medicated happiness.
I grew
up always being “good,” “happy,” “exciting,” a “mover and a
shaker”—always bringing something interesting to the table to complete my
mom. My codependent jobs were: count the change; feel the mood in the
air; search parents’ faces for feelings; be a responsible adult at age 7.
My
codependency fully blossomed when my brother became a heroin addict. I
now juggled my mother’s moods, my father’s daily dose of self-pity and
sadness that ensued at my inability to fix my brother. I was the “good”
kid, so I had to be “on” at all times. I was living proof that my parents
were valid people to the neighborhood and the universe. I was living to
validate others. Overcompensation had become my middle name, my identity
and my mantra. I tried to “fix” everything because I could not fix
anything. I created a false illusion of happiness and an augmented
reality. I can boldly accept, fight and overcome the dread of drug
addiction and the acceptance that we are totally powerless behind closed
doors. Guilt and shame enveloped me. This is why I think I always walk
with my head down.
My
codependency exploded and I was: ashamed of my family; guilty for feeling
ashamed; guilty for being a sibling of a drug addict; guilty for not
fixing a sibling on drugs; overachieving to fix the guilt of my parents’
alleged bad parenting; worrying 24/7 about what “could” happen next;
desperate to detach; desperate to attach; living out of obligation to
make others happy; shoving my feelings into hidden mental compartments;
obsessing about the death of a sibling on drugs; mentally attending
sibling on drug’s funeral every morning; obsessing about my mother’s
anguish should sibling die; hiding my sorrow and wearing masks of makeup;
saying “yes” when I meant “no” saying “no” when I meant “yes”;
over-helping; fake over-joying; false over-being.
When I
married, it was to a codependent alcoholic adult child of alcoholics who
validated all of my codependent attributes and watered them daily. I
could not fix others, so in him I sought out a new project. I knew I
needed help when I found myself at the doctor’s office with a locked jaw
and pneumonia because I had failed to complete a task on time and was
berated, belittled and told I was not living up to expectations. He
thoroughly enjoyed that control over me. I let myself be controlled
because I could not control anything. I am always half to blame for my
failed marriage and totally to blame for my codependency. Codependency
morphs into enabling. I lost my “self.” I entered an Al-Anon meeting for
the first time at my mother’s insistence. She said, “Al-Anon saved my
life.”
I felt
like I was dragging my own corpse into the church meeting room that
evening, as if everyone was watching me drag a plastic garbage bag out to
the curb. And again, stuffing my feelings deep into me, I lied to my kids
and said I was going “food shopping.” I had disappeared and was barely a
faint whisper of me. I was nervous, afraid, weak, hopeless, worried,
shaking, insecure, desperate and actually felt like I was “cheating” by
being there. And again stuffing my feelings deep into my broke, empty
core, I lied to my kids and said I was going “food shopping.” A sponsor
took my hand as I entered the room and when she touched my hand, I began
sobbing uncontrollably. I was starved for human touch and also true and
real affection. We sat on the floor of Al-Anon, my new home, and I cried
for what felt like hours. She silently listened and absorbed all my pain
through my heaving and heavy crying, accepting gracefully and knowingly
what was inside each of my purging breaths.
I
learned in the program that taking steps to fix yourself and being honest
about that are the most important things you can do for your “self” when
you are programmed to do nothing for yourself. It’s so hard to unlearn
how to “be” as I have always been in “service” to others. I have never
serviced myself. I have never known exactly what I want or need. I was
the emotional and physical helper half-version of a person. I was never
taught to value myself as much as or more than I valued others. This is
the hallmark of codependency.
Al-Anon
helped me realize that I was codependent and needed Codependents
Anonymous. I feel that this saved my life. My sponsor told me: “Others
will need help, and you’re not it.” I felt transformed by the love of my
higher power that I call GOD. It feels freeing to let go of the constant
daily responsibility of everyone and everything. I don’t have to fix
anymore. I don’t have to feel guilty, although that is the hardest part
for me—guilt. My therapist told me that guilt is “the gift that keeps on
giving.”
Guilt
and shame directed me and now I am working to direct them. I am trying
each day to overcome codependency by validating that we are each a
beautiful entity, valuable and entitled to happiness on our terms. For
me, overcoming codependency means valuing myself more than I value the
happiness of others. I am a work in progress.
Donna
T. - 2016
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