Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. My sister finished the medical detox part and still have three weeks of therapy visits with the outpatient center. She also went to her first AA meeting. I hope she takes this seriously and so far she has.
I don't think she was on opioids but she was taking benzos which is also a controlled substance. The center had her on valium during her detox which she now has finished.
My main concerns are her children and my parents, both sets have really been suffering. I understand this is a day-by-day situation. I appreciate the sincere advice and words of encouragement and for the posters who had negative things I hope you can find peace in your day and your own decisions because as for mine I am there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know you love your sister but paying for her rehab is totally codependent behavior.
I know you want to pat yourself on the back for paying the money but it doesn’t matter if it’s $1 or $10K ... you saving her is a toxic move.
I’m not going to convince you of this on DCUM.
See a therapist who specializes in ALANON.
It would take a whole day to explain this to you.
Pat yourself on the back? I’m not getting that from OP at all. Why be nasty?
Funny! I'm not being nasty. Have you dealt with addiction. Have you been through Alanon?
You sound super naive.
OP is in for a long hard road and it is longer and longer the more you let people use you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you did the right thing. I would make it clear this is a one time offer and she better take it seriously. And I would stick to that.
I agree. Even if the program doesn't work for your sister (and you know the odds make that the likeliest scenario right?) you will know that you did this. And you can be clear that you're not doing it again, and you are not bailing her out financially, emotionally, physically, etc.... The cost is worth it for your peace of mind, IMO.
I would not have paid up front, I would have paid at completion as a reward for finishing. That's said you did the right thing OP. I would also do this for an in law or family as a one-time gesture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how much was it?
About $2,500 for a 30 day outpatient program and medical detox. I thought it wound be more. I paid the center directly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you did the right thing. I would make it clear this is a one time offer and she better take it seriously. And I would stick to that.
I agree. Even if the program doesn't work for your sister (and you know the odds make that the likeliest scenario right?) you will know that you did this. And you can be clear that you're not doing it again, and you are not bailing her out financially, emotionally, physically, etc.... The cost is worth it for your peace of mind, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know you love your sister but paying for her rehab is totally codependent behavior.
I know you want to pat yourself on the back for paying the money but it doesn’t matter if it’s $1 or $10K ... you saving her is a toxic move.
I’m not going to convince you of this on DCUM.
See a therapist who specializes in ALANON.
It would take a whole day to explain this to you.
You are completely off base here. Paying directly for a sibling’s rehab is not codependent. Giving her cash to pay for rent while knowing her sibling would use it to buy pills or booze? Sure. Paying for her third stint at out-patient when it’s clear out-patient isn’t working? Yep. But paying for one stint of out-patient rehab to give her sister an opportunity at sobriety is not enabling her.
NP here. Op is being codependent. OP you need alanon. Sister isn't really committed to this and you've probably just thrown your money away. Why are you responsible for fixing this. You can't rescue your sister. You can't rescue your parents.
You need alanon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know you love your sister but paying for her rehab is totally codependent behavior.
I know you want to pat yourself on the back for paying the money but it doesn’t matter if it’s $1 or $10K ... you saving her is a toxic move.
I’m not going to convince you of this on DCUM.
See a therapist who specializes in ALANON.
It would take a whole day to explain this to you.
You are completely off base here. Paying directly for a sibling’s rehab is not codependent. Giving her cash to pay for rent while knowing her sibling would use it to buy pills or booze? Sure. Paying for her third stint at out-patient when it’s clear out-patient isn’t working? Yep. But paying for one stint of out-patient rehab to give her sister an opportunity at sobriety is not enabling her.
When the sister has insurance and is refusing to use it for reasons that don’t have anything to do with reality—yes, it’s a kind of enabling. Not the worst kind, but a kind.
OP, community-based/outpatient rehab can be just as effective as inpatient (if not more), so despite the seemingly anomalous price, it may be good.