During this stage, families are preoccupied with the addict's or alcoholic's behavior. They protect the addict by lying to other family members, employers, or to others about his behavior. While tolerating the addict's behavior, they feel increasingly responsible for the family problems. The result is the "blockouts" increase, too. They can't remember all the negative behavior of the addict and tend to minimize the consequences.
After repeated "blockouts" comes the Adaptation Phase. During this phase, family members try to change their own behavior to adapt to the chemically dependent person's behavior. This is a critical phase that may cause family members to either become obsessed with the addict, or they may begin to drink or use drugs themselves.
Family members may attempt to become "the perfect person" hoping that will make the addict/alcoholic happy and change his/her ways. It is at this time that family members may begin to feel they are "losing their minds," become absent minded, feel like failures, and need medical or mental health care. They often give so much to others that they have nothing left to take care of themselves.
Next comes the Exhaustion Phase, when family members defend their use of intoxicant emotions, just like the addict defends his use of drugs or alcohol. They lose their self-worth and experience severe anxiety or depression. All excuses fail and fear rules their lives. They have reached their "bottom."
Just as when addicts reach their bottom, family members must choose to admit the problem and recover, face insanity or death. They absolutely cannot go on the way things are. When they reach this point, family members must admit their problems and accept help in dealing with them.
(Portions of this article are adapted from the poster "Affected Family Syndrome" by CompCare Publishers, 1990)
Henry Tarkington
The F.A.C.E. program meets each Monday evening at 6:00 at First Step. There
is no charge.