Anonymous wrote:Bump. Same problem. Different family but same situation. Struggling.
Anonymous wrote:This could take me hours to tell our story but the gist of it is we have a 26 year old bright, handsome son from a "good" family who fell into addiction about 5 years ago. Its been a very slippery slope, with him being close to death twice. Yes, the absolute worst nightmare for any parent and the pain that we have suffered has aged both my husband and myself beyond measure.
You think you do it all right, giving up a career to raise my kids, thankfully 3 of the 4 are thriving but not sure what happened with my son. Until late high school, he had it all together, top athlete,recreuited for his sport to a top college, really thriving. One accident got him hooked onto painkillers and then the rest is history, same textbook story that you hear every day. He has such potential and as I speak we are between him "being clean" for 2 weeks now and us at a point where we decided him living at home is not conducive to his well being nor ours. We have gone to several therapists who all say the same thing. So we are trying to find a sober living facility or we recommend he goes back to rehab for 30 days. Won't even go into the amounts of money we have spent, could have bought a nice home with the money we have shelled out.
Just wondering for anyone else who has "been there" if you have one or two pieces of sage advice, what would it be? We are extremely private and I. know we are approaching it wrong but we are not comfortable going to meetings though I am getting close (my husband is not). I may go to one on my own because I am in such pain internally and feel that being able to be open and honest with people who can relate would take a huge load off of the dark black cloud that hangs over me.
Sadly this is a problem that affects all demographics and most certainly does not discriminate, my husband is a doctor, I have advanced degrees, we thought we did everything right to the best of out ability and somehow we still could not prevent this from happening. It is heartbreaking but every day I wake up trying to find a reason (the success of my other 3 kids is a big one) to find joy in the day. Any advice here for someone struggling to make sense of what to do/how to move on.
Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Bump. Same problem. Different family but same situation. Struggling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot have an actively using drug addict living in your house without living a life of total chaos. So: you are right, you cannot have him living in your house.
But you also have to examine why you were comfortable with enabling another adult in this way at your expense for so long. Stop avoiding going to Al-Anon—this doesn’t have to be as hard as you are making it.
All good thoughts to you, OP.
The "another adult" is the infant that was born of her womb. This is the baby she nursed at her breast. This is the toddler she cuddled at night when he was scared. This is the child she ached for when he felt he couldn't quite fit in when he was a middle school. This is the little boy she had big dreams for a dedicated her life to. This is someone she would lay her life down for. And you ask this question? This is not just "another adult".
As a mother with young boys that I have hopes and dreams for, as a mother who feels physical pain when my kids are hurting, my heart aches for this mother. This is a nightmare come true.
Best of luck to you mom, I cannot imagine, I don't want to imagine. Just be there for him without judgement without condescension and without reproach when he is ready to battle this powerful and ugly monster once and for all.
Anonymous wrote:You cannot have an actively using drug addict living in your house without living a life of total chaos. So: you are right, you cannot have him living in your house.
But you also have to examine why you were comfortable with enabling another adult in this way at your expense for so long. Stop avoiding going to Al-Anon—this doesn’t have to be as hard as you are making it.
All good thoughts to you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I had words to help... but my words will hurt.
At some point you just have to say... you are an adult, we have done all we can and let the chips fall where they may.
The person you knew is gone, he is somebody else now.
I do suggest having your son do DBT counseling.
I suggest you read Buddhist bootcamp.
I have 3 brothers with addiction issues... you can't "help" them, and all the "help" you give stunts their growth to help themselves.
1 brother is great, thriving, sober owns a company make tons of money
1 brother is in and out of rehab (at least 10 times)... lawyer making $350k/year
1 brother died
This generation of 20 year olds. I know so many families who have a child addicted to opioids... White rich educated families.
There are support groups for moms... you should join one. They can give you the most up to date help and support when you need to say to your child... you are an adult this is your life you have to fix this yourself.
People think that this disease is like cancer. It's not .. the more attention you give the worse it get, not better. It's hard.