Hi, everyone...hope everyone survived the holidays relatively pain-free. (Whew! Glad those are over!) I have started therapy recently and my therapist asked me to list things that really bug me about myself. (i can't let things go, feel guilty constantly, impatient, control freak, worry-wart etc.) She told me that these are typical responses from children of alchoholics and asked me if anyone in my family drank. My father drank almost every day (beers after work), but I rarely remember noticing that he had been drinking or acting weird. I think my therapist thinks he was an alcoholic (he died nearly 10 years ago). I definitely think he drank too much, but I never considered him to have a problem with it (never missed a day of work, never got violent or mean etc.). I'm not sure if my therapist is right and I'm just in denial or what. At any rate, while being far from perfect, he was the only stable figure in my life growing up.
I'll get to the point now! (Sheesh, I CAN ramble!) Anyway, my therapist gave me a book to read "Adult Children of Alcoholics" to discover why I react to things the way I do. The weird thing is that most of the things in the book I really connect more with my mother who never drank at all! (I'm pretty sure she's an N). Here's some points from the book:
Adult Children of Alcoholics:
guess at what normal behavior is.
have difficulty finishing things.
lie when it would be just as easy to tell the truth.
judge themselves without mercy.
have difficulty having fun.
take themselves very seriously.
have difficulty with intimate relationships.
over-react to changes over which they have no control.
constantly seek approval and affirmation.
feel they are different from other people.
are super responsible or super irresponsible.
are extremely loyal, even if loyalty is undeserved.
are impulsive.
While a lot of these are true for me, I don't identify them with my father. Are the symptoms of being the child of an N similar to these? javascript:emoticon(':?')I wanted to see if I'm way off base before bringing it up with my therapist tomorrow.
Thanks so much for your help! Y'all are wonderful!
Avery
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