What Are You Going to Do Now?
Jul 10, 09- (by Mama MPJ)
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I shared in a meeting recently about my fear around my husband’s business trips and how that fear is a reminder to me to connect with my Higher Power. After the meeting a newcomer asked me what I’m going to do now: I mean, he’s going on a business trip soon, right? So what do you do now? Check his phone records? How can you make sure he’s not acting out in his addiction?
Of course, I had already said what I was going to do: recognize, accept and take responsibility for my own emotions, pray and meditate, work my program, let go. However, as I watched this woman’s brow cloud with genuine befuddlement as I repeated this, I remembered how hopelessly inadequate that answer seemed to me in the frantic struggle of those early days. There I was, standing in the wreckage of the-life-I-thought-I-had thinking, “What the hell just happened? And how am I going to rebuild this?” And the “answer” didn’t even register as a solution at all. I’d think, “Ok, ok, I know you said something about some useless, flaky spiritual stuff and keep coming back. Blah blah blah. But what do I DO?”
It was as if my home had just been leveled by a natural disaster. Pray? Sit around meditating? That’s not any kind of an answer at all. What was that going to do? I knew what I needed to feel better again; I needed my house back or rather a better house, one that wouldn’t fall down again. I couldn’t envision a world where my happiness was not dependent on that house. And to get that house back, I had to do something: get on the phone with the insurance company, get the Red Cross and the National Guards in, interview contractors, analyze where the structure had failed and build reinforcements to ensure this could never happen again. All the spiritual mumbo jumbo in the world wasn’t going to help with that, and there wasn’t any God out there who was going to make a new house magically appear with the wave of an invisible hand.
Likewise, when I first started recovery, I simply couldn’t yet envision a world in which the answer to my problems didn’t involve having an husband who never acted out again. As long as I could make sure he would never act out in his addiction again, everything would be ok, right? And I could achieve that by somehow doing things the “right” way. In pre-recovery that meant being sexy and passionate and sweet and smart and just generally amazing and perfect enough to fully satisfy him. And when that didn’t work, I moved into early recovery, where it meant somehow learning to do this recovery thing (whatever it was) right enough.
And oh, was it annoying when people told me the answer was God, as if God were the ultimate addict to please. I’d tried that game before, the one where God held the key to my happiness but wouldn’t give it to me until I did everything perfectly according to some arbitrary and unspoken set of rules. But God hadn’t given up the key any more than any of the other people in my life had. That’s what made me lose faith in the first place. And now I was supposed to believe things were going to be different? Ha! Those 12 Steppers were deluded! Give up trying to control my husband and try to control God into controlling him instead? I thought to myself, “No, I think I’ll stick with controlling him myself rather than handing that over to some non-existent magical being, thanks.”
It took years to see that all the flaky spiritual stuff wasn’t about changing the world and the people around me to make it all more comfortable for me; it was learning how to be comfortable in the world as it is. My God wasn’t going to rebuild the metaphorical house of my life or make sure it would never fall down again; my God was going to help me let go of the pain of losing the house and be ok whatever happened around it in the future. My God doesn’t control the things I can’t; my God helps me let go of the need to control them in the first place.
Each week we read the promises of our 12 Step program, and my favorite is: “We will intuitively know how to handle situations which used to baffle us.” And I realized, when I saw myself reflected in that look of pain and confusion in a newcomer’s face, that I didn’t used to know what to do when I was filled with fear at Mark’s actions, but I do now, even if it doesn’t seem much like doing anything at all. When Mark gets on that plane, I’m going to try to stay connected with my Higher Power: not so that he doesn’t act out or so that I can find out about it if he does, but so that, whatever he does or doesn’t do, I can stay present and centered in my own life.
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M.,
I get what you are sharing…:)And it takes a while for newbies to get recovery stuff…i know.
I have to ask, what would you do IF he ever acts out again w/ prostitutes/live woman again?..or in other ways?
Scribblingmum, I get that question a lot. I keep thinking I’m going to post about it and keep not being able to articulate it. I will try this weekend.
Thanks, Mary- this is so where I’m at right now. After 2 1/2 years of “recovery” (where I eventually stopped seeing change and started seeing a slipping away again) my husband actually HAS just recently acted out to a degree that has crossed a line for me: he approached a woman for sex (although he didn’t have money to follow through). I’m glad that while this journey seems to have been wasted on him, it has brought me to a place of freedom, where I can “stay present and centered in my own life.” And I certainly long for heaven, where all this centering crap isn’t necessary!
It hurts, it’s stupid, but it doesn’t define or destroy me. I just make decisions and boundaries accordingly! Yay for me!
“We will intuitively know how to handle situations which used to baffle us.”
This one’s my favorite promise, too! The longer I’m in the program, the more that I see it’s true. I’ve been really happy to be spending less time thinking about worst-case scenarios and working myself into a frenzy over stuff I have no control over anyway. I just tell myself, “I’ll know what to do if and when that happens.”
This is a really good description of the spiritual transformation that happens in the 12 steps. Thanks MPJ. It makes me think about the similarities and differences for the addict. In one sense it’s very different for me: If the house falling down represents acting out in my addiction, then I actually *am* trying to rebuild the foundation and keep it from ever happening again. I’m not learning to let go of the problem - I am the problem.
On the other hand, my work is exactly the same in that I’m learning to let go of the illusion of control in my life, stepping away from resentments, and turning over to God the problems that come from other people and those that are inside of me (fear, anger, addictions…)
I don’t know - just thinkin out loud.
Scribblingmum, I do appreciate the question. I’ve given it some thought over the weekend and find I can’t answer it at this time. I do know the answer for myself. My husband knows the answer. But I don’t feel comfortable sharing my particular boundaries outside my own marriage.
Thanks for this post.
Living my life with an addict for a child. Being an addict myself.
It’s not, for me, about the problems going away, it’s finding a measure of peace and serenity through humility. Humility that’s learnt through the pain I go through.