Addiction,
Lies and Relationships
Floyd
P. Garrett, M.D.
Addiction
means always having to say you are sorry and finally, when being
sorry is no longer good enough for others who have been repeatedly
hurt by the addiction, addiction often means being sorry all alone.
Addiction
is often said to be a disease of denial à but it is also a disease
of regret. When the addictive process has lasted long enough and
penetrated deeply enough into the life and mind of the addict, the
empty space left by the losses caused by progressive, destructive
addiction is filled up with regrets, if-onlys and could-have-beens.
In early addiction the addict tends to live in the future; in middle
and late addiction he begins to dwell more and more in the past. And
it is usually an unhappy, bitterly regretted past.
The
first casualty of addiction, like that of war, is the truth. At first
the addict merely denies the truth to himself. But as the addiction,
like a malignant tumor, slowly and progressively expands and invades
more and more of the healthy tissue of his life and mind and world,
the addict begins to deny the truth to others as well as to himself.
He becomes a practiced and profligate liar in all matters related to
the defense and preservation of his addiction, even though prior to
the onset of his addictive illness, and often still in areas as yet
untouched by the addiction, he may be scrupulously honest.
First
the addict lies to himself about his addiction, then he begins to lie
to others. Lying, evasion, deception, manipulation, spinning and
other techniques for avoiding or distorting the truth are necessary
parts of the addictive process. They precede the main body of the
addiction like military sappers and shock troops, mapping and
clearing the way for its advance and protecting it from hostile
counterattacks.
Because
addiction by definition is an irrational, unbalanced and unhealthy
behavior pattern resulting from an abnormal obsession, it simply
cannot continue to exist under normal circumstances without the
progressive attack upon and distortion of reality resulting from the
operation of its propaganda and psychological warfare brigades. The
fundamentally insane and unsupportable thinking and behavior of the
addict must be justified and rationalized so that the addiction can
continue and progress.
One
of the chief ways the addiction protects and strengthens itself is by
a psychology of personal exceptionalism which permits the addict to
maintain a simultaneous double-entry bookkeeping of addictive and
non-addictive realities and to reconcile the two when required by
reference to the unique, special considerations that àat least in
his own mind- happen to apply to his particular case.
The form of the logic for this personal exceptionalism is: Under ordinary circumstances and for most people X is undesirable/irrational; My circumstances are not ordinary and I am different from most people; Therefore X is not undesirable/irrational in my case - or not as undesirable/irrational as it would be in other cases.
Armed
with this powerful tool of personal exceptionalism that is a virtual
"Open Sesame" for every difficult ethical conundrum he is
apt to face, the addict is free to take whatever measures are
required for the preservation and progress of his addiction, while
simultaneously maintaining his allegiance to the principles that
would certainly apply if only his case were not a special one.
In
treatment and rehabilitation centers this personal exceptionalism is
commonly called "terminal uniqueness." The individual in
the grip of this delusion is able to convince himself though not
always others that his circumstances are such that ordinary rules and
norms of behavior, rules and norms that he himself concurs with when
it comes to other people, do not fairly or fully fit himself at the
present time and hence must be bent or stretched just sufficiently to
make room for his special needs. In most cases this plea for
accommodation is acknowledged to be a temporary one and accompanied
by a pledge or plan to return to the conventional "rules of
engagement" as soon as circumstances permit. This is the basic
mindset of "IÇll quit tomorrow" and "If you had the
problems I do youÇd drink and drug, too!"
The
personal exceptionalism of the addict, along with his willingness to
lie both by commission and omission in the protection and furtherance
of his addiction, place a severe strain upon his relationships with
others. It does not usually take those who are often around the
addict long to conclude that he simply cannot be believed in matters
pertaining to his addiction. He may swear that he is clean and sober
and intends to stay that way when in fact he is under the influence
or planning to become so at the first opportunity; he may minimize or
conceal the amount of substance consumed; and he may make up all
manner of excuses and alibis whose usually transparent purpose is to
provide his addiction the room it requires to continue operating.
One
of the most damaging interpersonal scenarios occurs when the addict,
usually as the consequence of some unforeseen crisis directly
stemming from his addiction, promises with all of the sincerity at
his command to stop his addictive behavior and never under any
circumstances to resume it again. "I
promise," the addict pleads, sometimes with tears in his eyes.
"I know I have been wrong, and this time I have learned my
lesson. YouÇll never have to worry about me again. It will never
happen again!" But
it does happen again à and again, and again, and again. Each time
the promises, each time their breaking. Those who first responded to
his sincere sounding promises of reform with relief, hope and at
times even joy soon become disillusioned and bitter.
Spouses
and other family members begin to ask a perfectly logical question:
"If you really love and care about me, why do you keep doing
what you know hurts me so badly?" To this the addict has no
answer except to promise once again to do better, "this time for
real, youÇll see!" or to respond with grievances and complaints
of his own. The question of fairness arises as the addict attempts to
extenuate his own admitted transgressions by repeated references to
what he considers the equal or greater faults of those who complain
of his addictive behavior.
This natural defensive maneuver of "the
best defense is a good offense" variety can be the first step on
a slippery slope that leads to the paranoid demonization of the very
people the addict cares about the most. Unable any longer to carry
the burden of his own transgressions he begins to think of himself as
the victim of the unfairness and unreasonableness of others who are
forever harping on his addiction and the consequences that flow from
it. "Leave me alone," he may snap. "I'm not hurting
anybody but myself!" He has become almost totally blind to how
his addictive behavior does in fact harm those around him who care
about him; and he has grown so confused that hurting only himself has
begun to sound like a rational, even a virtuous thing to do!
Corresponding
in a mirror image fashion to the addict's sense of unfair
victimization by his significant others may be the rising self-pity,
resentment and outrage of those whose lives are repeatedly disturbed
or disrupted by the addict's behavior. A downward spiral commences
of reciprocally reinforcing mistrust and resentment as once healthy
and mutually supportive relationships begin to corrode under the
toxic effects of the relentless addictive process.
As
the addictive process claims more of the addict's self and lifeworld
his addiction becomes his primary relationship to the detriment of
all others. Strange as it sounds to speak of a bottle of alcohol, a
drug, a gambling obsession or any other such compulsive behavior as a
love object, this is precisely what goes on in advanced addictive
illness. This means that in addiction there is always infidelity to
other love objects such as spouses and other family - for the very
existence of addiction signifies an allegiance that is at best
divided and at worst -and more commonly- betrayed. For there comes a
stage in every serious addiction at which the paramount attachment of
the addict is to the addiction itself. Those unfortunates who attempt
to preserve a human relationship to individuals in the throes of
progressive addiction almost always sense their own secondary "less
than" status in relation to the addiction - and despite the
addict's passionate and indignant denials of this reality, they are
right: the addict does indeed love his addiction more than he loves
them.
Addiction
protects and augments itself by means of a bodyguard of lies,
distortions and evasions that taken together amount to a full scale
assault upon consensual reality. Because addiction involves
irrational and unhealthy thinking and behavior, its presence results
in cognitive dissonance both within the addict himself and in the
intersubjective realm of ongoing personal relationships.
In
order for the addiction to continue it requires an increasingly
idiosyncratic private reality subject to the needs of the addictive
process and indifferent or even actively hostile to the healthy needs
of the addict and those around him. This encroachment of the
fundamentally autistic, even insane private reality of the addict
upon the reality of his family and close associates inevitably causes
friction and churn as natural corrective feedback mechanisms come
into usually futile play in an effort to restore the addict's
increasingly deviant reality towards normal.
Questions, discussions,
presentations of facts, confrontations, pleas, threats, ultimatums
and arguments are characteristic of this process, which in more
fortunate and less severe cases of addiction may sometimes actually
succeed in its aim of arresting the addiction. But in the more
serious or advanced cases all such human counter-attacks upon the
addiction, even, indeed especially when they come from those closest
and dearest to the addict, fall upon deaf ears and a hardened heart.
The addict's obsession-driven, monomaniacal private reality prevents
him from being able to hear and assimilate anything that would if
acknowledged pose a threat to the continuance of his addiction.
At
this stage of addiction the addict is in fact functionally insane. It
is usually quite impossible, even sometimes harmful to attempt to
talk him out of his delusions regarding his addiction. This situation
is similar to that encountered in other psychotic illnesses,
schizophrenia for example, in which the individual is convinced of
the truth of things that are manifestly untrue to everyone else.
Someone who is deluded in the belief that he is the target of a
worldwide conspiracy by some organization will always be able to
answer any rational objection to his theory in a fashion that
preserves the integrity of his belief system. Even when he is
presented with hard and fast data that unequivocally disproves some
of his allegations, he will easily find a way to sidestep the
contradiction and persist in his false beliefs. (He can for example
easily claim that the contradictory data is itself part of the
conspiracy and is expressly fabricated for the purpose of making him
look crazy!
Anyone who has ever tried -uselessly- to reason with
delusional patients knows the remarkable creativity and ingenuity
that can be displayed in maintaining the viability, at least to the
patient, of the most bizarre and obviously erroneous beliefs.)
The
addict's delusions that he is harming neither himself nor others by
his addictive behaviors; that he is in control of his addiction
rather than vice versa; that his addiction is necessary or even
useful and good for him; that the circumstances of his life justify
his addiction; that people who indicate concern about him are
enemies and not friends, and all other such beliefs which are
patently and transparently false to everyone but himself, are seldom
correctable by reason or objective data and thus indicate the
presence of genuinely psychotic thinking which, if it is more subtle
than the often grotesque delusions of the schizophrenic, is by virtue
of its very subtlety often far more insidious and dangerous to the
addict and those with whom he comes into contact.
For in the case of
the delusional schizophrenic most people are quickly aware that they
are dealing with someone not in their right mind - but in the case of
the equally or at times even more insane addict, thinking that is in
fact delusional may be and commonly is misattributed to potentially
remediable voluntary choices and moral decisions, resulting in still
more confusion and muddying of the already turbulent waters around
the addict and his addiction.
In
many cases the addict responds to negative feedback from others about
his addiction by following the maxim of "Attack the attacker."
Those who confront or complain about the addict's irrational and
unhealthy behaviors are criticized, analyzed and dismissed by the
addict as untrustworthy or biased observers and false messengers.
Their own vulnerabilities may be ruthlessly exposed and exploited by
the addict in his desperate defense of his addiction. In many cases,
depending upon their own psychological makeup and the nature of their
relationship to the addict, they themselves may begin to manifest
significant psychological symptoms. Emotional and social withdrawal,
secrecy, fear and shame can cause the mental health of those closely
involved with addicts to deteriorate. Almost always there is fear,
anger, confusion and depression resulting from repeated damaging
exposures to the addict's unhealthy and irrational behaviors and
their corresponding and supporting private reality.
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