West Great Lakes ACA Intergroup

Chicagoland, SE Wisconsin, NW Indiana

Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Families

What it was like

I grew up in a constant state of fear of my alcoholic stepfather’s unpredictable, explosive anger. I felt like a cinder block was five feet above my head at all times and could fall on me at any second, for any reason.

Messages I came to believe as a kid:

  • I’m not safe and learning something new is terrifying.
    I didn’t know how to swim. Every time we went swimming, before I could play on my own, he would hold my head under water and count. He would let me up if I couldn’t hold out, but I had to do it again and again until I met the number he designated. The number increased with each trip. It felt like all of Lake Michigan was trying to push its way into my eight-year-old lungs.
  • My best is not enough.
    When his car was stuck in the snow he yelled after me to come and dig him out. He got more and more angry as I shoveled and shoveled while the tires spun so fast and loud against the pavement and wet snow a couple feet from my face. I can still smell the burning rubber.
  • My body and self-respect are not important.
    Once I threw away a piece of old hardened cheese. He made me get it out of the trash and eat it. I could taste the coffee grinds on it. Another time, after he made me eat a bowl of oatmeal (which I hated), I threw up. He forced me to eat another bowl.
  • It’s not safe to relax.
    Every day I would start to feel anxiety knowing he was about to come home. Every sound of that routine is still vivid to me: his slowing car up the hill; out of gear; turning into the driveway; gravel under the tires; car stops; engine off; emergency brake up; door open; door shut; eight seconds of silence; work boots up the steps; screen door opens; main door opens; screen door shuts; main door shuts; keys, thermos, and lunch box on the table. He walks into the living room and I find out what kind of night I’m going to have.
  • No one can protect me, I have to take abuse.
    My mom stayed in the relationship until I was seventeen. Her attempts to stand up to him were usually ineffective. Standing up for myself was always ineffective.

I thought the abuse would stop if I would just behave the way he wanted or somehow prove I was a good person. It didn’t.

What Happened

These messages became part of my self-image. How could they not? I spent 6000 days living like this, in the most formative years of my life, with the people that I was wired to trust and model my behavior after?

My number one life goal has always been: do not become like my step dad. I put tremendous pressure on myself to monitor every thought, feeling, and voice inflexion – to never be angry, unfair, selfish, or unempathetic. When I failed, I felt anxiety and panic that I was becoming a monster.

As a kid I tried to be unnoticeable. I learned to not have feelings, wants, never need from people, and be self-sufficient. I spent hours outside or in my room by myself. When I was left home alone it was heaven! I could finally relax and be myself.

In school I felt a sense of belonging that I was missing at home, especially with sports. But when I didn’t have a role to play, I often felt like an outsider and played class clown to feel comfortable.

In college it was hard to make new friends. I felt that if I didn’t have fascinating or funny things to say, why would someone like me? I isolated by going to movies and taking long drives.

Romantic relationships were difficult. During arguments I shut down and became unaware of my feelings and thoughts. Eventually I would go numb and leave the relationship.

Hitting a bottom.

At thirty, I quit my job to be self-employed and work from home. It felt safe with no authority figure (like being home alone as a kid). I felt powerful and safe to be self sufficient, but I became a slave to my work. I was so afraid of not doing good enough work that I would agonize over decisions, spending extra days and weeks on projects. I coped with this stress by eating, going to movies, excessive internet, video gamesโ€“ things that put my work further behind. The coping mechanisms that worked in my teens and twenties stopped working.

The results:

  • Constantly broke from getting little work done and not asking to be paid what I was worth
  • Staying with clients who mistreated me and didn’t pay
  • Ignoring emails and bills
  • Procrastinated paying taxes for six years resulting in $40,000 of debt
  • Consistently full voicemail
  • Jumping every time the phone ring or I a door closed
  • My car always falling apart
  • 100 lbs. overweight and pulling my back twice
  • Ashamed of my appearance
  • Procrastinated seeing the doctor for twenty years and dentist for ten years and lost a tooth
  • Eight years without a romantic relationship
  • Bottling up my feelings because I didn’t believe my friends wanted to hear my problems
  • Didn’t see friends much (unless they needed my help)
  • Was distracted by unfinished freelance work when I was around friends and family
  • Very lonely (a feeling only now can I actually recognize)
  • Depressed and didn’t care about living

By my mid-thirties, I knew I was stuck and unhappy and desperately wanted to change. I was looking for something else but didn’t know what. Spirituality? Anything. I just knew this wasn’t the extraordinary life I always wanted and expected for myself.

A friend, who was in ACA, showed me the 14 ACA traits in the Red Book. I had every single trait (except, I thought,  “fear of abandonment”, because I believed I didn’t need anybody. It turns out that’s my biggest trait). I felt a tremendous sense of relief and affirmation when I saw in print all issues I had always struggled with. I went to an ACA meeting with my friend and finally found where I belonged.

I started going to meetings every week.

What it’s like in recovery

At first I was out the door as soon as the meeting was over. Eventually I started developing relationships. Now I have a support network. When something upsets me (an interaction at work, fear of a potential problem, etc.) I call an ACA friend. Without fail, the problem becomes more manageable. This still difficult because I can feel shame for needing someone and for even having the problem, but it’s becoming normal.

I started learning to manage problems that before just seemed part of life. Example:

I wanted to be not so constantly afraid of people. I was afraid to ask questions of my boss or to knock on a public bathroom door. I was paralyzed, imagining people yelling at me for not “knowing better.”

Before recovery, I would avoid, isolate, eat, and keep my fears inside where they stayed big and scary.

In recovery, I learned I was expecting others to behave like my step dad and was terrified of re-experiencing traumatic childhood situations. I’ve learned to shine a light on my fears through talking or journaling, making them manageable. I talk to my inner child with encouragement to replace the old abusive messages with new healthy ones. The result is many situations no longer faze me. When they do, I manage better and I bounce back quicker.

After four years in ACA:

  • I have a job where I’m around actual people
  • My job treats and pays me well
  • I exercise, eat well, and have lost 90 lbs
  • I’m paying off my taxes
  • I feel financially secure
  • I have insurance and see a doctor regularly
  • I got my teeth fixed
  • I’m much more comfortable around people and am better at being myself rather than saying what I think they will like
  • I state my opinion even, if it’s contrary to others (including a boss)
  • Instead of trying to “fix” friends and family, I work at loving, supporting, and accepting them as they are
  • I see a therapist
  • I have a reliable car
  • I’ve been dating
  • I don’t date or spend time with people who mistreat me
  • I have better boundaries
  • I say no when something isn’t good for me
  • I don’t feel as much that I have to provide something for someone to like or love me
  • I answer the phone and emails
  • I’m reliable, present, and more emotionally available
  • I’m no longer afraid I will turn into my step dad
  • I feel more like myself.

I still have lots of growing to do, but progress is steady. I’m so grateful to have found ACA.

» If you can relate, consider coming to a meeting

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