Saturday, January 21, 2006

Can you say "out of control"?

My lunch with my sponsee went pretty well. I stressed how I was not going to enable his smoking anymore. He took it all in, agreed, and we had a decent time. We then went to the coffeeshop up the street and he bought me a chai. He had a large coffee with lots of milk and sugar. Of course it didn't really cross my mind that he wasn't allowed to have coffee because of his meds. So I have enabled him yet again.

Tonight at the meeting I spoke to his 'host' and she told me about his coffee drinking, his smoking, and his lying. She is very worried about him, because without the mental health program that he is currently involved with he would go to a state-run group home with constant monitoring. There he would not have caffeine, nicotine, or sugar, all chemicals that he consumes as if they were (and they are!) drugs. It is safe to say that he will always be under the watchful eye of the state in one form or another. He cannot live without it.

I am worried for myself now. It's as if I have suddenly acquired much more than a drunk trying to stay sober. I am dealing with a drunk trying to get sober who is also schizophrenic and is on a thrice-daily cocktail of massive amounts of anti-psychotics to keep him stable. He lies and sneaks to get his coffee, sneaks around to get cigarettes, and is not trusted to stay by himself, alone, in the house where he lives. His host is worried that something may happen to him and she will get the blame. What about me? I'm the one driving him around to meetings! Am I now supposed to be his babysitter and medical orderly as well? I feel this situation spiraling out-of-control. I do not want to be involved with this anymore.

This goes against everything I have been taught in AA so far, but does it? I know that I must carry the message, not the drunk. I know that I cannot "cure" anyone. I also know that I am not even a mental health amateur, let alone an expert. I can see myself becoming so involved with this situation that it takes on legal proportions and I become stuck in the middle. I can see it ruining my life and effecting the lives of my family members.

I need some real advice and I need it now. I'll be speaking with my sponsor tomorrow, and, I hope, with my therapist on Monday. I will also be picking the brains of other drunks and asking their advice. This sounds fucked-up, but I'm really glad he doesn't know where I live...

Johnnyboy

1 Comments:

Blogger Aravis said...

Take a deep breath. Exhale. Repeat, but do not hyperventilate. *G*

Remember that while you are his sponsor, you are not responsible for his sobriety, his mental health or the choices he makes. He is. You can make suggestions and set boundaries, but you can't control him or his behavior. Nor should you try. If he doesn't comply with the boundaries you set, you can choose to cut him loose if you choose to do so, depending on how serious the infraction in your view. But it isn't your job to fix him, just guide him to the best of your ability.

I'm glad you're talking to your sponsor about this. Good choice. I'll be thinking of you! :0)

3:23 AM  

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