Showing posts with label respect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label respect. Show all posts

Thursday, March 10, 2011

enable him

i struggle with the difference in being a respectful, loving, and supporting wife and enabling my husband.  there's some sort of fine invisible line between the two.  one is good and the other is completely counter-productively bad.  however, they're really not too different.
  • i respect my husband.  i may not 100% agree with everything he does, but in everything i say and do, i aim to be respectful to the man i married. 
  • i support my husband's fight for sobriety.  but i won't support his addiction.  i am a supporting wife, either way.
  • i love my husband.  addicted or not, i love him.  *i'll write a post on LOVE sometime soon.*  i may not love his actions or his choices, but i love him.  that's my choice.  i am a loving wife.
so, am i enabling him to be a drug addict, because i married him and i love, respect, and support him? 

when my husband was arrested and incarcerated, i was very upset.  i still loved him, but i believed that he deserved to be in jail and he deserved his punishment.  the kids and i were also being punished, but so goes life.  i wouldn't have bailed him out of jail, even if we DID have the money!  he was unemployed as it was, so in my angered mind it was only one less person to feed at our house. 
was i being loving and supportive then? 

he was bailed out of jail, against my will.  i was very upset.  i told him that i loved him and wanted to be respectful, but i didn't want him to come home until i had time to sit down and talk with him about EVERYTHING.  
was that loving or respectful?

currently, my husband counts me as his support team.  when he feels triggered, he will call me to get his mind off the trigger and onto me and our family.  this puts me in a strong position of support.  if i'm not home, or don't answer the phone, he could follow his trigger and mess up his sobriety.  that would put our family in jeopardy. 
is that too much support pressure for one individual? 
if i don't take that opportunity, am i still being supportive?

both of us are adults.  i can't speak for him, but i've come to grips with the reality that i have no affect on his sobriety.  i cannot make the decision for him to choose or choose not to partake in drugs.  if i can help him choose not to, i would like to help... but! in the end, it's his choice (WITH or WITHOUT my help). 

here's what i do:  i pray.  that's the only help that i can really give him that's worth anything. 
here's what i don't do:  i don't judge him.  i am no better than he.  i don't hold the addiction over his head. 

here's what i want:  1=sobriety for him.  2=our family together.  3=to be a loving, supportive, and respectful wife.
here's what i don't want:  1=him using drugs.  2=him to feel disrespected.