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Chy
04-17-2008, 05:21 PM
Though often unrealized, help for codependency, alcohol and drug addiction should many time be a family affair. As people read through the addiction family roles presented they can often identify the person in their life who plays each role. Roles though present in situations without addiction, often become more apparent when an addict is present. Members will unknowingly take on specific stereotypes that can many times be classified as:


The Addict.
The Hero.
The Mascot.
The Lost Child.
The Scapegoat.
The Caretaker (Enabler).


The following information on each role, defines how many people are instructed when taking basic steps to begin overcoming roles individually. Each role is given a brief description for understanding one basis of family addiction recovery. A summary follows with information on how and why the roles lead to codependency.


Addiction and the Family Role 1, The Addict
The person with the addiction is the center, and though the key to alcohol and drug addiction recovery, not necessarily the most important in family recovery. The "world" revolves around this person, causing the addict to become the center of attention. As the roles are defined, the others unconsciouslytake on the rest of the roles to complete the balance after the problem has been introduced. Recovery many times on this person.

Addiction and the Family Role 2, The Hero
The Hero is the one who needs to make the family, and role players, look good. They ignore the problem and present things in a positive manner as if the roles within the family did not exist. The Hero is the perfectionist. If they overcome this role they can play an important part in the addiction recovery process.
The underlying feelings are fear, guilt, and shame.


Addiction and the Family Role 3, The Mascot
The Mascot's role is that of the jester. They will often make inappropriate jokes about the those involved. Though they do bring humor to the family roles, it is often harmful humor, and they sometimes hinder addiction recovery.
The underlying feelings are embarrassment, shame, and anger.
Addiction and the Family Role 4, The Lost Child


The Lost Child is the silent, "out of the way" family member, and will never mention alcohol or recovery. They are quiet and reserved, careful to not make problems. The Lost Child gives up self needs and makes efforts to avoid any conversation regarding the underlying roles.
The underlying feelings are guilt, loneliness, neglect, and anger.
Addiction and the Family Role 5, The Scapegoat


The Scapegoat often acts out in front of others. They will rebel, make noise, and divert attention from the person who is addicted and their need for help in addiction recovery. The Scapegoat covers or draws attention away from the real problem.
The underlying feelings are shame, guilt, and empty.
Addiction and the Family Role 6, The Caretaker (Enabler)


The Caretaker (Enabler) makes all the other roles possible. They try to keep everyone happy and the family in balance, void of the issue. They make excuses for all behaviors and actions, and never mention addiction recovery or getting help. The Caretaker (Enabler) presents a situation without problems to the public.
The underlying feelings are inadequacy, fear, and helplessness. As with any recovery, it is sometimes necessary and helpful to gather information, to better understand what others are seeing or feeling. For a family, information and help must be sought for the whole family before the recovery can be complete. Information and understanding may be all that are necessary to bring about recovery, but a specialist might also be necessary, since there may be grief and loss to overcome in the process. The quiz section outlines some of the negative effects roles have and leads into codependency.
Addiction and the Family Roles - A Short Quiz
Healthy Family System:
Self worth is high.
Communication is direct, clear, specific and honest and feelings are expressed.
Rules are human, flexible and appropriate to change.
It is natural to link and be open to society.
Each person has goals and plans to get there, and should be supported by the family.
Rules in a dependent or addicted family
Dependents use of drug is the most important thing in a family life.
Drug use in not the cause of family problems, it is denial which is the root.
Blaming others, don't make mention of it, covering up, alibis, loyalty of family enables.
Nobody may discuss problem outside the family.
Nobody says what they feel or think.
If the second set of rules describes your family, please continue.



Family Roles Lead to Codependency

Addiction and the Family Roles How the They lead to Codependency
The parts played by family members lead to codependency. Members make decisions concerning what the other person needs. Codependency leads to aversion and lack of self orientation in a situation where an addiction is present. Ultimately people "become" the part they are playing.
The goal in alcohol and drug addiction recovery is to bring each member as a whole into a situation where the problems can be dealt with. Individual talents and abilities should be integrated into the situation, allowing emotional honesty about the situation, without guilt or punishment.
* The overall goal in overcoming codependency is to make each person whole.
People become familiar with and dependent on the role they play in families. In overcoming the family roles, you will begin to overcome issues, and what could be classified as the addiction to the role. While the conquering of the substance is important to the person with the addiction. A point to remember is the substance(s) is not the key to family recovery, removing the underlying roles are.
In beginning recovery, each family member must become proactive against the addiction to the role, and learn to become their true self. The goal is for each to person to become independent, and then approach the substance addiction recovery as a group of individuals, rather than as people playing a part. Whole, independent people can freely contribute to the recovery of the person overcoming the addiction, while a person playing a part can only perform the role.
Starting Points:
Begin with yourself.
Find, and write a list of your strengths and weaknesses.
Build on what you have.
Let go of trying to be perfect and realize all people have some weaknesses.
* A true person utilizes strengths, while building up their weaknesses.


Addiction recovery for the codependent role, is tough. You must be personally honest and decide what you like or dislike. This may be as simple as defining how you wish things were, without playing the part, and adding support or friends in areas, or as encompassing as rethinking the path of your life.
Refraining from forcing yourself to engage in activities, because of the codependency, is important to successful recovery from the addiction. There are many resources for codependent roles and overcoming these roles. Please, be honest in deciding if you have an addiction to a specific role in a relationship and find resources to help you in your recovery.
As you begin to understand, breaking the family role should become easier. Remember to be understanding of others also.
Source: http://www.hopelinks.net/addiction/family/roles.html

Velvet
04-18-2008, 11:00 AM
Two years ago: Caretaker/enabler = Velvet

Today: Learning; saying NO; setting boundries; improving on self = Velvet

Velvet
04-18-2008, 12:49 PM
I like this forum, Chy. What you posted, above, is very helpful info. Thanks.

Velvet
04-18-2008, 08:36 PM
Two years ago, I was the Queen of enbabling. I enabled my daughter to continue her drug use. Here are some of the things I did.....

Call her to wake her up for work. (She couldn't lose her job....where would she be then?)

Leaving my job (which was just down the street, but non the less, leaving my job....taking the chance of getting fired) to make sure she was out of bed and ready for work, when she wouldn't answer the phone.

Call her off of work, when she wouldn't get up.

Always bought acouple extra bags of groceries for her house. (wouldn't want my baby to go without eating. I wanted to make sure she had some protein in her system to counteract the drugs.)

Drive past her house, on my way home from work. (just to make sure the cops or unwanted 'guest' weren't there, while she was at work.)

Drive past her house, when I went out. (just to check up and make sure the cops weren't there, or to make sure I didn't see the dealer's car in her drive.)

Go into her home, if I did see any 'undesirables' around. (whether she was home or not)
I would proceed to kick the undesirables out, if she was passed out or too high to know they were stealing from her.

Sleep with my phone.

Never go away for any length of time, without knowing what she was doing, first.

Steal the gun off her 'boyfriends' chest while he was sleeping, so that he couldn't put it in her mouth again, to 'scare' her.

Pick her up from work, when she had 'loaned' her car to someone in exchange of a high.

Bring her some food, to her work, so she wouldn't be hungry.

Paid numerous bills, so that she could keep her electricity, water, car, etc....

Crawl into bed with her, so that I could stay awake all night, just to make sure she kept breathing....when she was high on heroin.

Go over to her house and clean the horribly dirty kitchen.

Do her laundry.

Pick her up, whenever she called from the dealer's house or wherever....just so the cops wouldn't get her first.

Buy and install several new outer doors, to her house, when 'boyfriend' kicked them in.



Hummm....let me see, I know there is more....but it is hurting my heart to type them and remember them.
You see, I have changed. I no longer do any of those things. She lost her house, her car, her job, her self respect, the bf is in jail, and now she is living with me.
I didn't need to do any of those things, because even though I did them and could sleep, some nights, knowing that "I was keeping her alive", the end result was the same.

I've learned to set limits and boundries. I've learned to say NO. I've learned that my other kids and myself come before drugs and drug users.

My daughter has 17 months free of heroin and meth. I do believe she would be dead, had it not been for me. But most of what I did, I shouldn't have done. It only prolonged her drug use.
I would never turn my back on her. I would never quit loving her. I still would never, not, go pick her up, if she were in danger. I love my daughter. That is one reason I will continue to not enable her to kill herself.
It's a daily job to stick to the boundries that I have set and remind myself to not do those 'little' things for her.
I thank Chy for Sober Village and the members there. And now for this great place. For Miss Done, in my early days of 'getting my sh*t' together. They saved me from killing my daughter.
I hope others find the strength and support, that I have found.

Chy
04-18-2008, 09:00 PM
Thanks for sharing a piece of yourself V in helping other with their addicted loved ones.

indigo
04-19-2008, 04:38 AM
I'm hoping and learning to detach with love and setting boundaries and so far things are so much better. I love this place already.

Wolfstarr
01-05-2009, 05:14 PM
Bump

Chy
01-06-2009, 03:22 PM
Thanks for bumping Wolfie I was looking for these the other day trying to remember the different roles.