"No Intimate Relationships During the First Year of Sobriety!" by Daniel Linder MA, MFT,
as featured in March 2007 issue of Recovery Today.
Recovering
addicts hear this all the time in 12-step programs. However, this sound bit of
wisdom is rarely heeded. Many have a hard time accepting that a hiatus from intimate
relationships is necessary. In their minds, dating and new relationships seem
benign. “As long as I’m not using and
we’re not using and are in a program,
I’m safe.” Not so fast. Getting into an
intimate relationship prematurely is, as my mother would say, “Ill-conceived,
ill-advised and ill-consummated.”
Odds
are more than fifty percent of marriages will end in divorce for the general
population. Want to venture a guess as to the odds for those in early recovery
who test this cardinal rule?
Despite
one’s best laid plans or intentions to not re-enact the same dysfunction and
failures of previous relationships, the odds are overwhelmingly against the
relationship -- doomed to be dysfunctional or have a shortened life expectancy.
Of
course, there are always exceptions to the rule, but assuming that we would not
want our emotional and mental well-being to hinge on a miracle, is it worth the
risk? But this is not what the recovering addict is thinking about. When it
comes to delaying gratification, when it comes to ‘choosing’ between ‘one step
at a time’ versus ‘all at once,’ thinking in terms of gradual and taking time
to develop and being objective and realistic are not how addicts are wired.
There is no point of reference. Most recovering addicts don’t realize that
admitting to being out of control and surrendering to their powerlessness, as
having done so in Steps I and II, also apply to their emotions when dating and
in early stage relationships.
The
problem is not the relationship or the intimacy. It’s the sex. Sex tends to
increase one’s level of emotional involvement and intensity of feelings,
especially for women. Men tend to cope by splitting off from their feelings;
that is, are more likely to engage in sexual relationships while remaining emotionally
divorced or superficial. Sex is a trigger for emotional over-involvement or
under-involvement relative to the stage of relationship. Either way, each one’s
inability to manage his/her own emotional needs and provide self-nourishment
will eventually jeopardize the developing relationship.
What
often happens is that sex, exciting enough as it is, often leads to an infusion
of romantic feelings, which can further heighten the excitement, which then
awakens the “sleeping giant” -- the backlog of unmet emotional needs from
previous relationships. The “giant” awakens (emotionally) ravenous and is not
aware of the extent his/her hunger drives the relationship. Our unmet emotional
needs reside in our unconscious and are sealed off from our awareness.
It’s
during the first year of recovery that the addict is to learn how to break the
cycle of addiction. A year of sobriety and ‘relationship abstinence’ are meant
to allow a sufficient amount of time to deal with one’s own emotions without
having to resort to his/her addiction, to build self-awareness and to become
responsible for one’s own emotional care. Rather than relying on an external
source for relief or emotional gain, which is what s/he is accustomed to do,
s/he begins to look internally, to rely on oneself as a source of emotional
nourishment.
“The
most important relationship is with oneself” poses a complete paradigm shift to
the recovering addict. If the necessary amount of time to grow the relationship
with oneself hasn’t lapsed, chances are the recovering addict will do what
they’ve been accustomed to do all of their lives; that is to look outside of
oneself for relief or to make up for what is missing emotionally.
When
unmet emotional needs begin to get played out in the relationship, the relationship
can become an addictive or dysfunctional one, which further perpetuates the
cycle of addiction. There may be excitement and hope at the beginning, but it’s
only be a matter of time before increasing strife, stress and dysfunction lead
to the relationship’s demise. An additional factor of concern is that
dysfunctional and failed relationships dramatically increase the risk of
relapse.
At
the 5 month point of a sustained period of ‘relationship abstinence,’ Linda, a
recovering alcoholic, proceeded to date a man, Jack, whom she met at a 12-Step
meeting. Jack had been sober 10 years.
After
approximately 5 dates during 3 weeks of dating him, the “writing was on the
wall.” Linda had sex with him on the third date, which felt like quite an
accomplishment that she was able to wait “so long.” When I asked her to assess
the level of her emotional involvement, she thought about it awhile before
saying in a tone of wonderment, “Not too much I hope. Noticed myself checking
my phone messages more frequently than usual. That’s all.” She was referring
his anticipated return from being out of town for several days. She didn’t want
to fret about whether he would call her upon his return, but she did. She
didn’t want to end up calling him before he called her, but she just couldn’t
wait.
There
were other indications of emotional over-involvement. When Linda talked about
how she reacted when a couple of overtures she had made to him, i.e. expressing
a desire to celebrate his birthday together and a dinner invitation, he
suggested they “play it by ear,” she noticed herself getting angry and
responding sarcastically to him.
It
was apparent that Linda was looking for assurances that he is still interested.
When his assurances weren’t forthcoming, she reacted as if he wasn’t being
truthful, that he really wasn’t interested in her or the relationship, which
wasn’t the case. He might have been taken aback by the edge in her voice. Linda
couldn’t see that she was reacting from wounds of past relationships, from a place
of insecurity, and the extent her mental and emotional well being hinged on how
he responded to her.
The
challenge for Linda remains the same as for any other recovering addict; taking
the time -- how ever long the process of self-reclamation takes, before
entering into a sexually, intimate relationship.
“No intimate relationships during the
first year of sobriety” is merely a reminder that it takes a year or so of
rigorous participation in a program that is sobriety and self-based before one is emotionally ready to get sexually
involved. If entering into such a relationship prematurely, the recovering
person, and anyone else for that matter, runs the risk of unresolved dependency
issues tainting the newly developing relationship.
Thank
you for your email..... Several inquiries have been made to me
regarding the above article: Below is an example of one such email and
my response. Daniel
Dear Mr. Linder,
I was given your article to read regarding, "No intimate relationships during the
first year of sobriety." My partner of 3 1/2 years was given this by
his therapist and asked that I read it. During the past 7 months my
partner has been told not to make any changes in our relationship. Now
he is given this article. My question is this... After sharing this
with four different psychologists, (2 that specialize in substance
abuse, and 2 that do not, 2 men, 2 women,) all were a little confused.
Ours is not a new relationship. And following this would require a
major change in our relationship, which his therapist has consistently
said not to.
Would
it be possible for you to just provide me with some insight (my partner
and I have a strong, loving, relationship) as to what a couple is to do
in this situation?
Thank you for your time and help with this. I eagerly await your answer.
Daniel's Response....
First
off, the recent spat of similar inquiries made me realize that I didn't
specify the audience I was addressing by, "No Intimate Relationships
During the First Year of Recovery." My alert was directed towards those
in early recovery who are single, not currently in a relationship, and
whose primary focus and goal is to develop coping skills to live a
sober life, learn to handle emotions, and most importantly strengthen
the relationship with oneself without the distraction of a sexually
intimate relationship. I realize that given you are already in a
sexually active 3 1/2 year relationship, one you consider to be strong
and loving, you're wondering how such a dictum might apply to your
situation. Certainly I don't mean for you and your partner to suddenly
become celibate. The point is to clarify the challenges during first
year of recovery so that you both can align your priorities and purpose
accordingly. The key is for the recovering person to do the necessary
self-work, which will pay huge dividends by improving the chances that
one creates solid, emotionally and sexually intimate, nourishing and
lasting relationships. As you may already know, relationship
dysfunction and problems are the most common cause of relapse. Also
understand that a basic implication of any addiction is that addiction
is a primary relationship (with a source of relief, be it with
substances, gambling, porn, or sex), and that this relationship is
overpowering and supersedes
all other relationships. Until recovery, all other relationships may
compete with the addiction, only to lose every time. In other words,
you can look forward to developing a new and qualitatively different
relationship with your partner, which will continue to improve over
time. However, rule of thumb is that it takes a year or so of steady
adherence to a program that enables the recovering addict to transition
from dependence on a source of relief to reliance on oneself, and one
in which the recovering person develops much needed relationship
building skills. The quality of any relationship depends largely on the
quality of the relationship the two people have with themselves. Feel
free to continue this dialog with questions or comments.
Daniel Linder MFT is a licensed
psychotherapist in the San Francisco Bay Area, Relationship Trainer, Addiction
Specialist; Author: Demystifying
Addiction, Relationship Recovery
and numerous related articles; and to be released April 1, 07, Intimacy, The Essence of True Love.
CEU’s: Relational Recovery Training (8 CEU’s), The Relational Model
of Addiction (6 CEU’s), Stigma, The Game of Appearances (3 CEU’s), Diagnosing
Addiction and Mastering Intervention (2 CEU’s each).
Website: http://www.RelationshipVision.com
Email: Daniel@RelationshipVision.com
Addiction, Recovery and Relationships Blog: http://www.sober.com/blogs/relationship_recovery/