These may not all apply to you as an individual. However, by and large, most of these will and do
apply to the "unrecovered adult children of
alcoholics". May this list help you if you are one of these "children". May it help you to understand why
you do some of the things you do and some of the ways you behave. May it bless you with self understanding
and the strength to start healing. If you are a
family member or spouse of one of these adults I hope that this will help you to understand and help the
one you love. It greatly helped me to understand and
find the strength to stand beside and support my
husband through his healing.
1. We guess at what normal is. We don't recognize it
when we see it.
2. We have difficulty in following a project through
from begining to end. We have the ideas but no
concept of the steps necessary to carry the idea out. Life was chaotic and we had no one to show us how to
plan.
3. We manage time poorly and do not set priorities in a way that works well.
4. We lie when it would be just as easy to tell the
truth.
5. We judge ourselves without mercy.
6. We have very low self esteem.
7. We have difficulty having fun. We never learned
how to play.
8. We take ourselves too seriously. Life is hard
work.
9. We constantly seek approval and affirmation from
others. We can't give it to orselves.
10. We fear failure but sabotage our success.
11. We have difficulty with intimate
relationships.
12. We fear abandonment and rejection, yet we are
rejecting of others.
13. Also, being terrified of abandonment, we are
dependent personalities, willing to do almost
anything to hold on to relationships we have in order to not be abandoned emotionally. This is a result of
haing lived with people who were never there for us
emotionally.
14. We are exceedingly loyal, even in the face of
evidence that the loyalty isn't deserved. Thus we
make devoted friends, employees, ect. We learned from practice with alcoholic parents.
15. We keep choosing insecure relationships because
they match our childhood relationships with alcoholic parents.
17. We are super responsible or super irresponsible.
We can't say "no" because of our need for approval.
We set no limits. We are prime candidates for
burn-out. We have to get sick to break this cycle.
18. We have no sense of cooperation or working with
others. We are used to doing things alone and for
ourselves. That's how we survived in a chaotic
family. We give the appearance of cooperation
though.
19. We are often impulsive. We lock ourselves into a
course of action without serious consideration to
alternatives or possible consequences.
20. We tend to look for immediate rather than delayed gratfication. We learned as a child, that if you wait for it, you don't get it.
21. We become isolated and afraid of people, and feel like we don't belong.
22. We are afraid of athority figures.
23. We fear angry people and personal criticism, yet
we judge others.
24. We become alcoholics ourselves or marry them, or
both. Or we found another compulsive personality,
such as a workaholic, with whom we could continue the kind of relationship we had with our alcoholic
parents.
25. We live life as victims and are attracted by that weakness in our love, friendships, or career
relationships.
26. We have an overdeveloped sense of responsibility. It's easier for us to be concerned with others than
with ourselves. This enables us to avoid looking too
closely at our faults and at the responsibility we
owe ourselves.
27. We feel guilty when we stand up for ourselves and don't give in to others.
28. Having denied our feelings during our traumatic
childhoods, we lost the ability to feel or to express our feelings because it hurt so much. This includes
our good feelings such as joy and happiness.
29. As a result of our condiioning, we confuse love
with pity, tending to love those we can
"rescue".
30. We are addicted to excitement, seeking tension
and crisis and prefering constant turmoil to workable relationships. We aggravate or avoid conflict, rarely do we deal with it.
This list was originally from the Adult Children of
Alcoholics support group in Michigan. To them I send
my thanks and prayers of support.