Step 1: We Admitted We Were Powerless
This is actually a post I wrote for another joint blog I'm on (Two Women Blogging), but I thought it applied here too.
We all like to think that we have control over our own lives. We like to think that if we just work hard enough or pray hard enough or act right, we can ensure that bad things don't happen to us. It's almost unbearably frightening to think that we're not the ones calling the shots: that it's God or the universe or random subatomic particles. So, we give lip service to our ultimate inability to control what happens to us, but deep down we never believe it, do we?
We'll say things like: "It's not his fault that he got colon cancer, but still, I do eat a lot of fiber. It's not their fault that their child is disabled, but still, I wouldn't have made the choices she did during pregnancy and childbirth. It's not her fault that she was raped, but still, I wouldn't wear that outfit. It's not her fault that her husband cheated, but still, she probably should have done more to satisfy him." We always think there really was a little something more those other people could have done. We would have eaten better, exercised more, prayed harder, worn different clothing, watched our children more carefully, done background checks on every last friend and neighbor, taken every precaution in every situation, right? We believe that we're luckier or smarter or that God likes us better. And as long as things go right, we can believe that.
My husband is a sex addict. He's like any other addict looking for a high, but his escape comes in the form sex and fantasy: affairs, pornonography, sex workers. There are people who blame him for being weak and immoral, but they also blame me, for somehow not satisfying him. I've met the wives of other sex addicts, and they too usually blame themselves to some degree: if only they were prettier, thinner, more exciting in bed...
Our culture constantly reinforces that stereotype: men are thoughtless pigs who will fuck anything that breathes if they aren't kept constantly satisfied by a beautiful, exciting woman with a ravenous sexual appetite. Look at the supermarket magazine rack. What does Cosmopolitan magazine (more aptly titled "Sexual Codependents magazine") tell us? Why do we love the stories of celebrity breakups? Is it because we know, beautiful as they are, there must be something wrong with them if they can't keep their lovers satisfied?
I was certain that my husband would never cheat on me, not only did he love me, deeply and passionately, we had a fabulous sex life. I wasn't like those other uptight women who couldn't orgasm or who had a low sex drive or who thought pornography was immoral or who wouldn't change up positions or wear kinky lingerie. I didn't need Cosmo to tell me how to make things hot in the bedroom; I was hot in the bedroom. I'd read, watch and look at pornography; I'd even create pornography; I'd send him stories and photos and videos of myself. I'd dress like a prostitute one night, a virgin the next. I'd ask him to tell me his fantasies and let me fulfill them. But more than in the bedroom, in all of our life, I was attractive, I was smart, I shared his interests and I let him be himself. Men cheated on women who hated action movies and sports and sci-fi, women who nagged them about leaving their socks on the floor and talked about shopping and wore frumpy sweatpants, women who were mindless and ultimately dull, women who were unattractive in their looks or their personalities. Men didn't cheat on women like me.
My husband was never faithful to me: not for a day, not for an instant. He was constantly looking for other women to have sex with, not because I wasn't satisfying him, but because nothing could fill the emptiness inside him. All the women and all the sex in all the world couldn't meet his needs. He couldn't control his addiction, and neither could I. We both had to let go of that illusion in order to heal. And I knew as soon as he came clean and told me about all the lies and cheating, knew in a way that I could feel at that deep down gut level, that his actions had nothing to do with me or his love for me.
Of course, we all know that that's because I'm luckier than those other addicts' partners or I did the right thing by trying so hard or God likes me better or something like that...
8 comments:
" I... knew in a way that I could feel at that deep down gut level, that his actions had nothing to do with me or his love for me."
This is the gift you keep on giving me, MPJ. Thanks.
I have difficulty with the admitting I am powerless. Whether this stems from me believing that no one can recover for me or that my power is in my ability to make the right choices, I do not know. And I have done nothing in my recovery to make me think differently—I did it myself and no one did it for me... so far. But still, the draw to admitting powerlessness is there. I think it is my need to have a form of faith that saves me from myself. That is being powerless in a way and it's a way I am becoming more and more comfortable with.
As always, a very though provoking post. You are quite gifted with how to use words in a meaningful way.
WS
It's my understanding that you are not admitting you are powerless, it's that you are admitting you are powerless over your ability to drink or use drugs, that when you do, your life becomes unmanageable.
I am able to make that concession. It's that impulse or feeling of being irresistibly driven toward the performance of some action which is irrational that I am powerless over, I have proven this to myself over and over and over again. I can concede that notion.
I don't believe it is a requirement to completely admit powerlessness over one's own life, keeping in mind that the main problem of an addict lies in his mind, not his body, and what we are dealing with is the mental state that precedes a relapse into which is the crux of the problem.
It's that itch, the one that says "Let's get high." and the next thing I know I am loaded, it's that , that I am powerless over. I think it's important to look at the fundamental principle behind the step; hopelessness and surrender regarding the use of drugs and alcohol, not complete powerlessness over ones own life.
I disagree that we are powerless just over our substance. That is the first step: to admit that we are powerless over our drug of choice. However, when we work our program effectively, we realize that we are powerless over people, places and things...it's the beauty of the program...we learn that we need to have a dependence on God for everything in life.
I don't think we are powerless over every aspect of our life; sure I am powerless over say, how someone treats me, or acts towards me, but I do have the power to choose my reaction. I understand the thought of complete powerlessness over every aspects of an addicts life, but I think it's a cop out and removes personal responsibility.
To say that God is going to magically fix every aspect of my life (addiction related or not), by completely surrendering my life over to him, to me, is just way more than I can chew. I understand the theory, and even have practiced it before, I just don't think it is something that fits for me.
Well duh, MPJ, that was your magical pussy fixing your husband. Nothing else could have worked.
I know that for me, the language of the first step saved my life. I was a mess when I went to my first meeting, and I've been better ever since. That powerlessness over my husband's disease made me stronger and stronger...it was such a relief to learn that I didn't have to care, didn't have to worry, wasn't responsible for fixing it...
JW -- yes, this definitely ties in to the magical pussy post!
Ej -- I had to admit that I was powerless over my husband's addiction, but it's been helpful for me in my life and recovery to admit that I'm powerless over anyone else's behavior -- or over the weather -- or anything else outside of myself. I have the power to change me. I actually think you and Jennifer and I are essentially in agreement.
And I did leave out the part about life becoming unmanageable, because that's a sticky one for me. I still haven't been able to admit that -- I don't think my life was unmanageable -- or not unmanageable as a result of trying to control my husband's addiction. I don't know. I still haven't gotten my mind around that one. Yes, folks, after four years, I have not finished Step 1! But maybe that's it's own post someday.
I found this to be VERY helpful.
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