Your Role in Their Recovery
When discussing your role in your partner's recovery, it is necessary to take into consideration where that relationship stands. We will discuss the three most likely situations here.
Situation #1 Those Who Have Decided to End the Relationship
If you have already made the decision to end the relationship with your partner, your role should be extremely limited in terms of your involvement in his/her recovery. The healthiest thing that you can do for yourself is to accept that you made the best decisions you were capable of making at any given time--given the reality of the situations you found yourself in--and to move on. Which, incidentally, is what you have done in making the decision to end the relationship. You came to a decision--based on the information that you had available to you--and made the choice to move on. Was it the best choice? Who knows. Certainly not you. Certainly not your partner. Just like your choice to get involved in the relationship to begin with, you can only do what you think is in your best interest. Whether it was in your best interest or not is what life is all about. There will be no absolute right or wrong here.
For instance, you can make the decision to end the relationship which may trigger a reality check for your partner, who then motivates himself/herself through a permanent recovery by the loss of the relationship. Or, it might trigger a major relapse that ends in his/her death. It is impossible for you to know. And with each decision you make comes many additional unknown consequences--like how it will affect your children, your living arrangements, future relationships. It would be easy to believe that ending your relationship (well, not really ending...because if there are kids involved, it would be altering the relationship) would have a negative impact on your children, but this is not necessarily the case. There are many potentially positive outcomes from such a decision--especially as they relate to not only your own role-modeling, but your partner's as well. The point: all you can control is the decisions that you make now. And if you have made the decision to end the relationship...don't look back. Stop wasting your time analyzing all of the signs that you may have missed. Stop looking for the mistakes that you might have made. Stop trying to make sense of it all. At least for now. There may come a time, after you have moved on with your life, where it will be appropriate and healthy for you to look back and learn...but not now. Now, your role is to regain stability and begin moving forward again. One of the greatest consequences of such a decision is that you have freed yourself from having to deal with your partner's addiction. You are free to move on.
"Even though I've decided to end the relationship, I still care about him and want to see him get through this."
That is understandable and admirable...but for all but the rarest of couples, unrealistic. If you have made the decision to end the relationship...end it. You go your way, he/she goes theirs. And again, except when children are involved...limit the interactions that you have with this person. As strange as this may sound, that actually provides you both with the best way of pursuing a future reconciliation, as it allows your partner the time to change for the right reasons...and it allows you time to rebuild confidence in living your own life. Should there come a time when reconciliation is pursued, much of the baggage that those who choose to work through this recovery process with their partners will face, will have already been eliminated. And the reconciliation proceeds with a much stronger, healthier foundation. This has played out in couple after couple after couple. Learn from the pain and experiences of others.
A possible alternative? Ending the romantic aspects of the relationship, but continuing on as their support partner. You remain the person they lean on for social and emotional support...but secretly (and sometimes not so secretly), they have only one goal in mind: reconciliation. Everything they do during their "recovery", is focused on getting you to believe in them again and to give the relationship "one more chance". This, too, has been played out over and over...with the same devastating consequences. Such a recovery scenario places way too much pressure on you to offer support that you should be receiving, not giving; places you in an unfair position of "having" to reconcile should changes occur; and it takes away your partner's need to rediscover himself/herself. Any person struggling with an addiction would jump at the chance for an "If I do this, I get this in return" scenario. As in, "If I stop acting out, you must give us another chance." And whether you verbally agree to that or not, it will be how it is perceived by your partner.
If you have made the decision to end the relationship: take the focus off of your partner's addiction and focus only on yourself. You have earned that right. Especially if you have experienced what most partner's experience in such a relationship.
Situation #2 Those Who Have Decided to Remain Committed to the Relationship
First, if this decision was made in the context of what you believe to be in your best interest over the course of your life (socially, economically, personally)...if it was made after considering all that you have already invested in this relationship...if it was made after considering all of the wonderful qualities that your partner possesses--apart from the addiction...if it was made out of the sincerest love for your partner and the desire to see him/her through this "illness"...then you have made it for the right reasons. You deserve the utmost admiration and respect for your ability to see the forest through the trees, and--as long as your partner maintains their desire and effort to make a healthy transition in their life--you stand an excellent chance of being rewarded many times over for your decision to stay. And most often, you will end up gaining so much more from your existing relationship than you would have by starting over with someone new. But again, this almost exclusively pertains to couples that have invested much in each other over the years.
If, however, you have made the decision to stay in the relationship because you feel as if you are partly responsible for your partner's behavior...you believe that it is in your children's best interest to remain in the relationship...you feel that your partner would be devastated without you...you feel that your partner couldn't recover without you...or that your self-esteem is so low that you believe that you deserve to be in such a relationship...or if you feel that because you will never experience the love that you want, "something is better than nothing"...then you have made the decision to stay for unhealthy reasons. You still deserve compassion, guidance and support to help you through this difficult time, but where you are headed will remain a mystery. And of special concern, is the common scenario where such a relationship survives the recovery/healing process...but then dissolves soon afterwards.
Why after? Because when the relationship is built (or rebuilt) on a faulty foundation, the very essence of a healthy relationship--mutual respect, equality, admiration--is never experienced. Even in a best case scenario, where the personal growth achieved by the individual in recovery is extensive...it will be this very growth that triggers their glaring awareness in the faults that exist within your relationship. The differences that your partner sees between him/her and you will be amplified considerably; your personal weaknesses magnified intensely. And, they will expect something to be done about it. Just as they have overcome their weaknesses, the expectations will be there for you to do the same. Doesn't seem fair, does it? But it will happen. At least to those couples that remain together for unhealthy reasons. Just remember, it has nothing to do with fairness...and everything to do with human nature. And also remember, it can be avoided...but only by you playing a healthy role in your partner's recovery. A role that begins with you making the decision to work through this for the right reasons. This same phenomenon involving the perception of the person in recovery occurs in the first group as well--those choosing to remain in the relationship for the right reasons. But because that relationship is being rebuilt on a sound foundation, the partner in recovery has a much different reaction. Rather than to focus on "how much they've grown, but their partner has not"...they look upon their partner's strengths and suffering with respect and admiration. They look upon their partner's weaknesses with compassion and forgiveness. They understand and appreciate the role that their partners have played in their recovery, and feel genuine remorse for what they have put their partner's through during the addiction--a remorse that often triggers the feelings of unconditional and admirational love.
Which will you experience? You need look no further than the following two areas for the answer:
1) The role you take in your partner's addiction 2) The role you partner takes in his/her addiction
And since you can only control the first, that is what we will expand upon.
No matter what your reasons for continuing the relationship, the following is an overview of the roles that you should play in assisting your partner through his/her recovery to give the relationship the best chance for long-term success and personal fulfillment:
Communication
The roles you should/shouldn't play:
Managing Their Recovery
Assessing Progress in Recovery
What you should/shouldn't do:
Sexuality/Intimacy
Forgiveness
There is an entire lesson on this later in the workshop and so we will only discuss here the reality that you will never forget what you have experienced as a result of their behavior. And, you should never be expected to forgive. Forgiveness is not something you intellectually offer someone, it is something that you intuitively feel. And such feelings cannot be controlled...merely experienced.
Yourself
Situation #3 Those Who Have Decided "Not to Decide"
This is actually a temporary category--as eventually, there are only two healthy choices that you can make: you can stay or you can go. Those who do not feel comfortable with making such a decision just yet--and there is no reason to rush such an important choice--will remain in emotional limbo until that decision is made..unable to commit to their future. As always, there are healthy, and unhealthy reasons for remaining in this category:
Unhealthy Reasons for Indecisiveness:
Healthy Reasons for Indecisiveness: