From Courage to Change of January 18;
When I first heard that the best way to help an alcoholic was to focus on myself, I thought Al-Anon was a heartless place where I would be forced to stop caring about my loved ones. I had decided never to return, but someone shared a thought that changed my mind. He said that although the desire to help another person can be well-motivated and compassionate, our old ways of “helping” don’t necessarily help. Al-Anon offers a new way to help.
I examined my version of helping the alcoholic. I saw that when I covered her bad checks or made excuses for her, I kept her from facing the consequences of her actions. I actually was depriving her of opportunities to want to change.
I also had to consider why I felt so desperate unless I was helping. When I took a look at my motives, I found that it was my anxiety I didn’t want to face.
Today’s Reminder
Is the help I offer truly loving or do I have other motives? Am I trying to change another person or get them to do what I want? Talking it over with my Sponsor can offer perspective. My best hope for helping those I love really does begin when I focus on myself.
“In Al-Anon we learn:
-Not to create a crisis;
-Not to prevent a crisis if it is in the natural course of events.”
Detachment
END OF QUOTE———————————————-
I do not understand my own motives at times. I am often blind to what pushes and paralyzes me. It has been natural to live a life exhaling panic and inhaling apathy.
I know that I can take this concept of detachment and use it to withdraw into a puddle of morbid self-reflection. I know that I can take it as license to protect myself from pain only to find myself fearing all intimacy. Detachment cannot become isolation.
So what am I detaching from?
The active alcoholic/addict is a true personification of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Ingest the chemical and Mr. Hyde is on center stage and the Doctor is a paralyzed captive.
I will not support the living death of an active, breathing Mr. Hyde, in myself or others. That is what detachment is to me. I do not want to inadvertently perpetuate the doctor’s captivity by paying Mr. Hyde’s ransom.
Detachment also requires attachment to an aggressive, positive selfishness on my part. I am not speaking of the isolating, suicidal selfishness. I have to want to live and prove it in my own acts of self-care. This takes time and practice and self-evaluation. I have to chose to carve out this time to grow or surrender to the waste of time involved in crisis management.
Art Credit: Manuel Bejarano of Spain









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