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And now, a Very Special Shout Out
Last week, Feeling Adolescent wondered how many
steps to take with a flirty fellow recoverer. BG and BR basically said,
"Who-hoo!" But a reader named Christine stepped in to say,
"Whoa!"
There most certainly is a "rule" about dating in the first year of
recovery in 12-Step programs, and for a good reason. It leads to big emotional
upheavals that dramatically increase the chances of "relapse," or the
return to the use of drugs and alcohol. The suggestion that a woman with only
two months of clean time from drugs should get involved or pursue a romantic
relationship is seriously in error.
I've been sober a modest eight years, but in that time I have known a number
of people to drink or use drugs over "relationship" issues. The
consequences of that happening are much greater than most people realize. A
number of people close to me have died from heroin overdoses or having shot
themselves while in a blackout. I will see that again, I'm sure. Recovery for
an alcoholic/addict is really life or death, not a romantic puzzle. A relapse
for an alcoholic or addict has greater consequences than is often portrayed on
TV. It isn't just "falling off of the horse and getting back in the saddle
again," a characterization I saw on that show "JAG" about
military lawyers. Many never come back to recovery, or they try and never get
more than a short period of sobriety again. I have seen this time and
again.
I've known people who, after years in AA, froze to death on the streets of
DC, across the street from the White House! Make no mistake, it could happen to
your reader. And her sobriety is not the only one at risk. Many times, the
person with longer sobriety who has a relationship with a newcomer also
drinks.
There is a mechanism in 12 step programs called "sponsorship."
People can get help and emotional support from someone with more recovery
experience and emotional stability. It has been my observation that newcomers
(people with less than a year of continuous sobriety) are especially needy and
vulnerable. The reaction/temptation is to attach to someone else as a
distraction. Often it is a sadrepetition of previous poor relationship
patterns. I seem to recall something you wrote about a new insight into oneself
does not necessarily mean everything will be better with the next one. [See Duderino Rides Again.] You can double that for early
recovery.
It never seems that way, though. I remember what it was like. Suddenly I
didn't have a hangover every day and I started to notice flowers and sunny
days. Why not the sunny days of my heart? Can't that awaken now, too? Yes. Just
not yet. A little more time. It's tough to see now, but severe damage has been
done mentally, spiritually, and emotionally. We keep ourselves from really
seeing how bad it got for a couple of years. So waiting a year is the least she
can do. Thank you.
BG responds: Thank YOU, Christine. Our bad. So many people
have trouble finding a natural buzz with someone in the first place, you
see, we just get a little excited when someone actually does. So, FA, you may
not be able to shut down your feelings entirely (nor he his). But yes, looks
like you should discuss them with a sponsor to find out where to put them -- if
anywhere -- 'til, oh, November 1999 at least. And let's hope that the promise
of "reawakening the sunny days of your hearts," clean and sober, with
him or whomever, helps all of you stay strong and well.
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