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Xantippe
Guest
I have actually heard many stories of people straightening up and flying right with regard to alcohol or other addictions after being threatened by their spouse. Nicey-nice is the approach that almost never works with addiction.Needs? Let us hope we all know that having sex often enough to get pregnant once every year or two says nothing about the health of a couple’s sex life. Procreative takes a lot less contact and pretty much a lot less of everything else than the unitive aspect. If you want to get to 60 years and laughing together as your grandchildren are toasted at their weddings, you have to find a way to unitive, too. This couple has to find a meeting of the minds over their perpetual problems if they are going to get there. The good news is that finding a ground of understanding and even an affectionate sense of humor about your perpetual problems has this way of being the most unitive thing ever to happen to your sex life.
What I’m saying has nothing to do with “fair.” The first thing you learn when you are from a family with eight or more children (which I am) is that you don’t worry about “fair” until you get to “good.” If you have to choose between unfair and good or fair and bad, you go with good and accept the unfairness of it as the price of admission.
As for the drinking problem, it is almost the rule that drug and alcohol abuse start as self-medication for emotional problems the drinker does not know how to handle and maybe cannot handle without support, affection, and a feeling of security in his own skin. **Have you ever heard of someone threatening their spouse into clean and sober? I haven’t, and I’ll bet you haven’t, either. When that ever works, it works right away and before the path has been traveled long. It doesn’t work on a wagon road with deep ruts.
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**They’ll only get out of this marriage happy and together if they find a way to a trusting friendship. You don’t get there with “you straighten up, then we’ll talk about being friends.” **That cannot work. How about, “you clean up, and then maybe you get one female friend, which will be me, the woman who has made herself your warden?”
Again, this has nothing to do with fair. Of course the OP has earned the right to be her husband’s warden. The truth is, though, she can be his wife and best friend or she can be his warden. She cannot be both. She has to choose one and renounce the other. Doing that, however, will require that she and her husband learn how friends go about having fights. If they can’t have real conflicts and still remain friends, their marriage is over, except for their address.
As a matter of fact, I don’t see the problem with “you straighten up, then we’ll talk about being friends.” After all, is it really possible to be “friends” with a rage-y drunk?
I don’t suggest that she be his warden–but he has to clean up. He has a lot of stuff to do, and she cannot do it for him.