Things can improve if you change your behaviour If you are a mum, dad, husband or wife; girlfriend or boyfriend or best friend and your loved one is in the grip of addiction, do you have the power to control their behaviour?You may be able to temporarily put restraints on the addicted individual with some form of control or other, but this in no way deals with or solves the problem.I spoke to a young man the other day who told me: “I’m secretly drinking at the moment; my wife would kill me if she knew. When I get the chance I know I will drink a bucketful. Left to my own devises I would be completely out of control.”Control only delays the inevitable return to out of control drinking or addictive behaviour. By definition an addicted individual has lost control and choice. He or she may still have it some of the time but they are increasingly losing control as each week and month roles by. When we try to control their addictive behaviour we engage an inner struggle between the addict inside the person and the loved one we are trying to help. The ‘inner addict’ tends to become more powerful when this happens and the sufferer becomes more lost inside, more hopeless and feels even weaker in relation to the pull of the addiction.We have to learn to behave contrary to our impulses; we have to let go of control and begin to make choices for our own sanity. By fighting with addiction our own behaviour tends to become unreasonable and irrational.
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