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#1
Been married over twenty years. Been a tense relationship with dysfunction. Still, there’s a lot of love between us. How it all adds up, don’t know.
I don’t understand him much anymore. Feel like he’s never much understood me. I’m trying to repair the relationship or end it. He wants to hang on and not change anything. Or he says he needs more time before he can do anything about his marijuana addiction. Being high comes first every day. Can’t drive our child, can’t parent much. Doesn’t talk to me really. Does his own thing with some pleasantries with me here and there, or unpleasantries. Tried marriage counseling but that ended because the addiction issue was outside the scope of her practice. He’s been doing minimal addiction therapy that hasn’t seemed to make any difference yet. Hasn’t been doing the therapy long, but took a very long time to start it. Had maybe 6 sessions and no change, doesn’t say a peep about the therapy. Spent at least $270 on weed in the last ten days. Always high, daughter comments she’s never seen her dad sober and that she has no relationship with him really. He has trigger warning tendencies. Been a big factor of why I fear to leave him. I try to talk to him about things and he doesn’t respond. At all. Or he’ll say leave him alone or he’ll say who am I to demand things or he’ll just laugh. He’s abruptly said he’ll change something but doesn’t follow through. He just wants to keep things like this. I tell him there’s a problem and he just denies it everytime. He’ll say what’s the issue? Like he’s never heard it before. He said this morning “I can’t believe you bring this up right now.” Never the right time. I guess it’s not about repairing the relationship because it was probably broken from the start. I don’t know how I could love someone so much who has treated me poorly. Have I treated him poorly too? I just keep expecting (hoping) that he’ll get more help at least. But I guess he is happy how it is and thinks I’m trying to call the shots and wants to put his foot down and have me go along with things the way they are, just being satisfied that he is here and stop pouting about anything else and stop inventing problems. We no longer have intimacy except hugs and kisses and I love yous everyday. I don’t know what to do exactly. I could ask him to move out, but I keep hoping something will change. Why am I like this?? |
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NorthernMark, Orwellian Nightmare, Travelinglady, UnawareBS, Undecidedhubby
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NorthernMark
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#2
Have you tried therapy and support for yourself and your daughter? Al anon? At the very least buy some Al anon literature and read on your own. N-anon? Al ateen for your daughter if she is minor
No he won’t change. Unless of course he seeks treatment but even then he’ll always be an addict. You didn’t cause it though and you can’t cure it As about trying to talk to him about this or that. There is this passage in one of the Al anon books (don’t recall which ones, I’ve read them when I was in a relationship with alcoholic and needed more info on it deciding to leave) it asks you if you’d go to pastry shop to ask for produce? No. Will you go to auto parts shop and ask for bread? No. They don’t have it and never will have it so no point in asking. Then why do you go to actively using addict asking for things they don’t have and cannot provide? He cannot provide you with treatmet or relationship or insight that you want. He is a produce shop and you are asking for dairy products. Can’t answer why you are “like this”. There might be many factors at play. Was there substance abuse in your family of origin? Other dysfunctions? Again get into therapy for yourself. Not to fix him. Work on yourself Get help for yourself and your daughter. You can’t change other people. |
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Starlingflock
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#3
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Hello Starling My heart really goes out to you. I want to disclose right away that I'm a separated man who personally struggled with marijuana dependency/loss of intimacy and was utterly unable to see the damage his behaviour was doing to the family. Your post resonated with me on a deeply personal level. You ask: Why am I like this? I believe you are the only person who can honestly answer that question. FWIW, I'd like to offer my own perspective based on some of the things you mentioned which relate to my experience. I have no answers, only my perspective. Firstly I want to urge caution with regard use of the word 'Addict' or 'Addiction' relating to his marijuana use. I feel that, for some people, this can lead to confusion regarding how and why marijuana might be consumed. I wonder if 'Dependency' is a more appropriate phrase? Only yourself and your partner know the intimate details of your lives. From my own experience, I used marijuana for years as an emotional crutch/way to avoid intimacy. That's my story. However, I'd be very curious to learn a little of his past and to dig deeper into why he feels he needs to use so heavily. The fact that his most significant relationships are failing, and he's unable to respond ,suggests a deep-rooted denial which, I would guess, marijuana helps mitigate to some degree. I also want to challenge the notion that he won't change. No one can tell you that with certainty. You don't need me to tell you, of course, but the change can only come from him. Marijuana use can be stopped (I stopped after the shock of separation and never went back to it) or reduced. It might take therapy, then again it might just take his own willingness to change and willpower to achieve. I know heavy marijuana use can lead to emotional withdrawal and introspection. Based solely on the details you share it sounds like he has aspects of these. Again from my own exp, rationalising with him (our marriage! the children! the family home! your health! etc, etc), although understandable, might be futile. I'm going to stop short of telling you what you should do but some details mirror those of my own marriage: You suggest there has always been difficulty in your relationship. You appear to have made unsuccessful attempts to save your marriage via therapy etc You have supported him for a long time. There's still a closeness yet a chasm between you. There is a child. Ultimately my wife could no longer put my emotional need/demands before those of the kids and herself. One day she told me I had to leave. It was a terrible shock yet also a personal awakening. Perhaps the best thing she could have done for all of us. Some very tough decisions present themselves in your case. From the sound of things, it'll be YOU making them as he is currently unable to. Whatever happens it'll demand sacrifice, emotional strength and perhaps sheer force of willpower. DO foreground the needs of you and your little one in whatever decisions or actions you take - I can't stress this enough. This isn't to suggest you ignore your partners needs, however. It's a balance you'll have to consider for yourself. But everyone's well-being has to be accounted for in particular the little one. We're all here to support you. __________________ If you're going through hell, keep going... |
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Rose76, Starlingflock
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#4
There might be 'a lot of love' between you but love is not enough when there is addiction in the relationship. He clearly doesn't want to change (as his behaviours reflect), so your choices are pretty clear: stay with him knowing he is happy as things are or or set firm boundaries and remove yourself from the situation. If neither of you makes a change, this is your life for the foreseeable. As you can't make him change, the change has to come from you.
IF you want to know why you are like this, that is something you can explore in counselling. No one here could answer that question for you. At the end of the day, there needs to be action, rather than not doing anything or wishing/hoping for things to (magically) be different. |
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Have Hope, Starlingflock
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#5
Hey starling.
Orwellian shared a lot, we all know no one experience is just like another, nonetheless there is a valuable perspective there. This is not advice, just a question..Have you told your partner that you are considering leaving him? |
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Starlingflock
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#6
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Doesn’t matter how much I beg, no stopping. My husband says it’s pathetic to leave someone over weed. He says smoking like he does is better than killer depression, anxiety, ptsd. I guess my relationship with my dad really messed up how I view things. I feel so stuck. |
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#7
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He is “utterly unable to see the damage his behaviour was doing to the family.” His ego can’t take the truth. He is habitual and enjoys his routines. His family routine is short and superficial. I do think intimacy is an issue, or vulnerability, although he has talked about problems thousands of times. He thinks I will never leave. He doesn’t take me seriously and has considered my ultimatums as betrayal. Asking him to leave seemed impossible before. I think I’ve been preparing internally for leaving. At the same time I keep hoping things will get better. The truth is he is quite happy how things are. He has his routine and clings to it. Upsetting his routines brings heat, so I’ve probably avoided doing that. He has been very unstable. Currently he is more stable than before. I think he has self worth and power issues that he seems to use our family to feel better about. I empathize with him because of his mental health. But he doesn’t empathize with me because it’s about him. Addiction or dependency may be the same thing? I don’t know. Not sure he would stop if we separated. I seriously doubt it. |
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Member
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#8
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Member
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#9
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Recently I said we have to separate and he said if it’s because of weed, then “do whatever I want.” Then he acted like nothing happened. Although I noticed he suddenly did a couple minor chores around the house. He did tackle a big chore he has been putting off for years. It was a trigger for him. |
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#10
It’s difficult when the choice is yours alone to make. Have you discussed seperating from him with your daughter?
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UnawareBS
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Starlingflock, UnawareBS
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#11
It’s concerning that marijuana being legalized is contributing to people thinking it’s ok to be dependent on it. A person still has mood challenges and can be out of touch depending on how much they use it. It’s a form of escapism as is the case with other drugs including alcohol.
It sounds like given your past of growing up with an alcoholic parent that you learned how to be codependent and your husband feels that you should continue to be a codependent. So in effect you are passing down this dysfunction to your children. You have a right to live your life no longer having to be the codependent. |
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Starlingflock
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#12
Some pot users claim that there is no marijuana addiction. There’s absolutely and widely recognized cannabis addiction. Not just dependency (which is pretty much the same thing) . Also it’s not true that marijuana just mellows people down. Cannabis psychosis is also well known reaction to pot. So every pot smoker could become potentially dangerous at any point.
He’s not going to stop because of your begging. You didn’t cause it and you cannot cure it. No it’s not pathetic to leave someone due to substance abuse. You have rights to live your life the way you see fit. Your children have rights for healthy life style. Addiction and substance abuse is a very serious and valid reason to leave a relationship. It’s not like you are leaving him because he leaves a dirty coffee cup on the counter. This is serious |
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Starlingflock
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#13
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I told him we need to separate the other day and she saw me flustered afterwards. I did tell her what I said to him, and she was fine with it. She’s told me it’s what she wants because she wants to have her life not be overshadowed by his illness and addiction. She did interact with him quite a bit afterwards and came to me for many hugs. |
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#14
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I have been picturing a different life and different way of being. |
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Open Eyes
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Open Eyes
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#15
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#16
I'm sorry you're in a failed marriage, which is what you're in. You're willing to be ever so patient and supportive and would do anything for this man - as you have been doing - if only, if only . . .
You do have a ton of insight. You seem to totally get that he's just fine with things exactly as they are. You may have a problem, but he doesn't. He lets you adapt to him, which you do well enough to keep this marriage going. You don't want to keep adapting to what you need not accept. His main problem is not the marijuana addiction. It is the profound immaturity that colors his attitudes about everything. That is as mature as he is ever going to get. He's had 20 years of marriage and a long span of fatherhood. Those responsibilities often mature a man. They didn't mature him. Nothing else is going to. Let go of the delusion that, if he got enough "help," he could transcend his challenges and move forward. There isn't that much help on the planet. Therapy and rehab have to have something to work with. In his case, there's nothing there to work with. Profound immaturity combined with severe lack of character in an adult his age is a terminal illness. Some mental illness is "terminal," just like end stage COPD, or widely metastasized cancer. He will die in this state of mind. I wouldn't judge him. He may truly be incapable of having done things differently. Who knows? If you're wondering how you could have gotten into such a relationship, the truth is that it is possible to fall in love with even the most severely damaged, zero-potential persons. I don't doubt you find him lovable. He was, and he is. Loving someone is not a sufficient reason to form a partnership with that person. Love does not conquer all . . . . . not in the absence of one party lacking any capacity to be responsible. You didn't used to know that. Now you do. Let him go. Resolve to pray for him, if you are so inclined, and live your life. His future is sad and will be hard for your daughter and you to watch. Watch it from a distance. You have no moral obligation to allow his self-destruction to unfold in what you call your home. Let where your daughter and you choose to live be a "home," not a venue for this impossible behavior. And don't put this on her. It's your call. He's been crapping in this home. Tell him to take that down the road. Get a lawyer. Make the arrangements. Don't expect him to lift a finger to coordinate this separation. Your life can be better. |
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Starlingflock
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#17
If you're worried that he may not survive outside the marriage, your worry is well-founded. In it, or outside it, he is self-destructing. You can choose to continue having a ruined life, so that he self-destructs in the comfort of your home. That would be foolish of you. Society has resources for persons like him. When he applies for them, he will be told there are rules he must follow. They will enforce that. That might force some change. Just understand you're never going to get him back, "fixed."
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Starlingflock
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#18
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If I tried to point any of that out he would NEVER be able to grasp it. It would irritate him, anger him, because he’s trying to be seen as good. He’s been randomly pointing out his contributions lately; he’s transparent. His behavior can be impossible, very true. He absolutely has been crapping in this house, even though he so enjoys parts of it, he neglects/ignores the rest. His self worth is so low, which I know as his wife, but he acts so arrogant and sure of himself. I’m not religious, but I do keep hearing the Bible phrase in my head lately that talks about asking for a fish and getting a serpent. That’s how it is with him. I’m so unhappy with the relationship but I care so much about him. I can’t understand myself, and I’m struggling to make sense. I guess I know it’s about fear not love. I don’t want to put anything on my daughter. He has no idea what she wants (that he not live with us). I had a counseling session yesterday and it was mostly intake; the counselor advised not to make any big decisions until we can talk again next week. Im disappointed in myself that I am so skeptical and discerning about things outside my home, but not so in my home with him. I’m so disappointed in myself that my kids have to tell me his behavior is enough to separate; enough to limit him from the home for their growth and wellbeing. I feel like a failure that I can’t identify the correct answer on my own. Im so unsure. It’s like my goal is to prevent or minimize his self destruction. |
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Rose76
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Rose76
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#19
Your goals are for you to choose.
It is perfectly okay for you to care about him. You must choose what you have to do to take care of first priorities. Refusal to choose is a choice. I'm glad you found a counselor. You need support. The responsibility for resolving your situation is yours. I've known parents who've barred alcoholic/addicted sons from their homes. These were sons they loved. If they could buy a solution, they would spend plenty. They've had to say, "No. Our home is not a place where anything goes. You cannot hang around here drunk/high/stoned. Go be where that is what goes down. Find a hangout where that is par for the course." Loose the term "codependent." It serves no purpose. 12 step programs often discourage dwelling on that label. It's a distraction . . . a rationalization. Think more concretely. |
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Starlingflock
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#20
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Rose76
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