Entries Tagged 'Addiction' ↓

On: Choosing me (a novella, apparently)

This is the ninth year that he’s been in my life.

It hasn’t been all bad, and god knows a lot of our problems, whether we were on or off, were my fault too, but there’s always been the one not-so-silent pachyderm in the room: booze.

When we’d been together for a month an a half, he got ripped-to-the-gills drunk, drinking triple long island ice teas. On my birthday. He fell asleep that night, saying what a nice, good girl I was. I plotted dumping him. The next day, I walked out.

Then I came back.

He said he was going to cut back, that he knew he was out of line and he was so sorry. He said he knew he had a problem and that he was going to get it under control. I’d never lived with an active alcoholic before, and I had the ability at 20 to quit (and now, writing this, have been sober for 98 days) – even though some days, I still want to drink away the 18 hours I’m awake – so I believed him.

What a naive little girl I was.

He lasted two days, that I know of.

A year and a half later, I found irrefutable proof he’d been smoking pot the whole time, hiding it from me. After 18 months of arguing about the beer, I joined him and we became potheads together. Until I got pregnant. Then lost it. Then I’d start again, because at that point, sex, drinking, pot, and mutual adoration of stupid stoner comedy was what we had going for us, in a whole sea of what we didn’t. Then I got pregnant again. And quit again. And lost it again.

By 2004, we were broke, and on the verge of bankruptcy. The beer and weed were his priority. Everytime I tried to plant a foot about it, it became a larger hassle than just choking down the financial ruin. I’d never before had to switch service providers because the last had cut off my account for lack of payment. I almost bought a condo at 20, for fuck sakes. But now, I was. And everything, every bill, was in my name, because he had no credit history.

Then, I had a bipolar break, right before we went to visit his family – my first time meeting them. I needed to be in a locked-up room and instead, I was surrounded by strangers, telling me they loved me as they served him more alcohol. I heard the whispers about me, we had fights that couldn’t be concealed, and all I wanted was to drown myself in the lake.

Shortly after we returned, we broke up.

Ask me why I had stayed, why I fought for his sobriety, for our bank accounts and ultimately always backed down, and I could over-simplify it: I wanted him to be happy and I wanted to fix him. But that’s not the whole truth. I thought I owed it to him, for every insult I’d thrown his way. For every time that I told him that I loved him, knowing that I had no concept what the word meant, never mind owned the feeling. Because he needed me, and I needed him to need me.

It took him five months to want to be my friend again. Within two weeks, we were sleeping together. I didn’t want to be there, doing that, smoking that, drinking that, laughing then. Again. But I wanted him to want me, and he did need me, and I once again financially supported him while he decided to quit his job and get sober.

He thinks he lasted for three months, today. I know it was five weeks.

About a week after he started making up for lost drinking time, I was pregnant.

Selfishly, I told him that I was keeping it. Her. Zoë. Unselfishly, I told him that he could be as much a part of her life as he wanted. He said he wanted to. We talked about communication, and rules and boundaries. We talked about the drinking and how he would control it. It could be perfect.

What a naive little girl I was.

Pregnant and being called a stupid cunt doesn’t breed love, especially in me. He had became a mean drunk. Before, he’d always been a goof – someone who tripped over his feet and got a little too loud or emphatic. Then, with a belly weighing me down, the stench coming off of him making me gag, I lost the will to keep anything inside, so I unleashed full-bore.

But you know, he recognized that he had a problem and things would change when the baby came.

I did everything in preparation myself. I ruled pregnancy, and he failed. I took early maternity leave, so my income was half of what I was used to making, and he got a full-time income, plus an inheritance, and I still paid for every single thing for the baby.

And after she was  born, while I was suicidal with post-partum, he got to come home from work every day and listen to me cry or whine for three minutes while he gulped down his first beer, and then he got to complain that it really sucked for him that he worked hard all day and had to come home at exactly the time when Zoë was most colicky. He didn’t get up at night, unless I made him, because he had to work. And I had breasts, you see, and once he figured out that breastfeeding made Zoë stop crying, it was the go-to solution. For the first couple of months when we would share rocking and bouncing duties while she screamed, he would need breaks every 10 minutes or so, a fresh beer nearby, and to have smoked a joint, first.

After a few months, he stopped sharing duties and I stopped letting him do anything, even when he was willing.

I thought it would get better after colick ended. Then he quit his job and we started living off of only my maternity leave, so the booze would have to go – we couldn’t afford it. But he bartered to just three a day, that’s all, just three. He would control it.

What a naive little girl I was.

By her first birthday, there were pushing and shoving matches. I hit him once, a back-hand when he told me to go fuck myself, which gave him a black eye. I poured a beer over his head, and a six-pack down the sink. I blocked doors and I yelled and I gnashed my teeth and called him a fucking loser.

Ask me why I stayed with a baby, why I fought for his sobriety, for our bank accounts and ultimately always backed down, why I took being pushed into doors while I was holding our daughter, and I could over-simplify it: I wanted us to be a family. But that’s not the whole truth. I knew that I owed it to him, for every insult I’d thrown his way. For every critique of his parenting, and how I’d shoved in his face how uninvolved and selfish he’d been. Because it was just easier. Because now, I had a daughter and he was her father, and I wasn’t allowed to take her away from him by moral code.

We broke up. And then we’d start being friends and sleeping together and he’d do something to fuck it up, like, say, not show up for a visit with Zoë because he was too hung over from the night before. Then I got pregnant again, and he threatened to hit me with our daughter between us while I was hemmoraghing to death.

I took him to court and rules were put into place by court order about his drinking. He agreed to them, no problem.

What a naive little girl I was.

But, then we’d start being friends, and start sleeping together and he’d walk all over me and I’d let him.

Ask me why I let him stay in our life, why I begged him to stop walking out on and failing our daughter when he was mad at me or drinking, and I could over-simplify it: I wanted us to be able to be happy together, even if we lived apart. But that’s not the whole truth. I wanted him happy enough that he didn’t drink himself into a stupor and further complicate our lives. Caring about him, getting continually disappointed and being consistently last priority – both Zoë and I – to his drinking and social life, was the price I’d chosen to pay, so that my daughter could have the benefit of two parents who seemed most of the time like they liked, and even maybe even loved, each other.

As long as it wasn’t in her face, and I didn’t promise her ahead of time that she would see him or get a call from him, everything could be okay, right?

What a naive little girl I was.

Today, a person who I wished didn’t have reason for the wisdom said to me, “You have my permission to love you more.”

Lightbulb.

What I’ve been doing in almost every other aspect of my life, but never this one, is to choose me. Not the family we could be, not the friend I could have, or the boyfriend or the husband or provider. Me.

Because, if you ask me why I’ve stayed in this toxic situation, it’s simple: I did it for five years for him; I did it for four years for her. I have a daughter I can’t live without because of it, and she got a father that she already has low expectations of, who walks in the door after not seeing or speaking to her for a week and says he doesn’t want to play because he just wants to drink his coffee.

I always thought that having him in her life, in whatever safe capacity was possible, even if it was only for 10 hours a week, even if he never called her to say goodnight, or attended a preschool meeting or doctor’s appointment, was important because I didn’t have the right to take it away until he gave me no choice.

I thought that choosing what I wanted – ultimately, to be free of him – was selfish, regardless of what bane he brought upon me. And then last night, he showed up drunk, broke and in need of charity. For the fourth time in a year and a half. Despite the no-alcohol rules around Zoë. Despite that he’s promised twice before it wouldn’t happen again.

I didn’t let him stay, but I gave him cab fare to go home. Zoë was the best excuse that I could have ever needed for him to not be here in that condition. But really, in hindsight it wasn’t about her at all.

I chose to love myself – not his happiness or acquiescence – more.

 

On tightening the noose

I need your help. Your opinion, more specifically.

I’ve been blathering for months about the upcoming renegotiations of my separation agreement. Part of that is how much child support and extras The Ex will pay. Part of it is about visitation. As it stands now, he pays about twice as much as I expect he’ll continue to, and he sees Zoë on both days of the weekend, between the hours of 10 and 3.

He wants to change the visitation. He proposed an evening visit during the week and one overnight visit a month, in addition to the weekend daytimes he already has. I said I didn’t agree and that we should meet with a third party to mediate the agreement negotiations. He agreed. I’m just waiting for him to set up the appointment.

I have other ideas in mind for how visits should be.

I think that visits should be about him wanting to spend time with her, not just during the best hours of the whole week, when she’s in the best spirits, he doesn’t really have to act as a parent and is minimally responsible for tasks such as feeding, clothing and bathing her. Right now, he gets her at her best, he feeds her some gelato and they do something fun for the afternoon and then he goes on his way – so that he can fit in his friends and partying.

When we split up over two years ago, I told him that he could have overnight visits with her when he could go an entire night sober (and be sane while doing it).

Since that time, during fights he’s threatened to go to court for joint custody – it hasn’t happened. Even when things have been better than fine, he’s said he’ll move out to his own place and have a room for Zoë, for sleepovers – he’s still at his mom’s, sleeping on the floor. When I said she was staying with my friends while I went to Chicago, he freaked out for about an hour – a week later, he decided to go camping that weekend instead of trying to talk me into letting him take care of her. At his most open, he’s admitted that the way things are with visits works for him – he doesn’t have to do more, spend more on her, have a place for her, spend a weekend sober.

He’s an alcoholic who drinks daily. He smokes pot pretty much daily. He’s said that he wouldn’t do those things while she stayed with him, and I’m supposed to just take his word for it, yet when he’s been here past his usual visit hours he’s still smoked and drank. He’s never been solely responsible for her at night time, except for the two times he’s watched her here while I’ve gone out for the evening – he drank and/or smoked, then.

I have a pretty good case against overnight visits at his place: his history of disinterest in them and lack of parenting, the lack of space or sleeping area, and his addictions and his mom’s enabling of them.

But.

I’ve been on-duty for her entire life.

She doesn’t know that he’s the parent. She knows he’s the dood she can push around and get stuff from.

I’m a little resentful that these chunks of awesome that I should get to partake in are his visit times and he doesn’t have to deal with any of the hard stuff that being a parent means you should deal with.

I’m tired of saying to friends that we can’t participate in things on the weekends because the thing starts during his time.

He needs to grow the fuck up.

I have a new idea, being as I said two years ago and several times since, “You can have overnight visits when you can go an entire night sober and be able to handle it” and he hasn’t. (In fact, I’ve even said at some points when berating his lack of responsibility in her life, that he could have lied to me about doing it, but he’s still chosen not to.)

This idea is basically for me to say to him grow up now, or fuck off.

I propose the following:

  • He must, by mid-October, have a safe and secure place for her to sleep. Ie. A bed. Of her own. At his place.
  • He must take her each and every weekend from Friday night to Sunday afternoon.
  • He must refrain from drinking and smoking pot for the 12 hours before and during her visit with him.
  • He must educate himself about her food allergies and nutritional requirements in order to make appropriate decisions about what to feed her.
  • His mother is not responsible for Zoë’s care, even to the extent that he has a drink out with friends (because he is solely responsible for Zoë {and his sobriety} during her visits).

The fine print:

  • If I hear of him drinking or getting high – because Zoë tells me everything, literally, without me having to ask, and he’s a horrible liar who is aging disgracefully (aka I can see the booze in his face, the day after) – he waives his rights to visitation;
  • If she is fed improperly – meaning foods she’s allergic to – same deal;
  • If he makes the grandiose ‘mistake’ of drinking and/or smoking and his mom does not inform me of it and return Zoë to me as soon as it happens, his mom loses her visitation rights as well;

until:

  • He enters into a drug and alcohol program; and
  • attends and completes courses relating to parenting, alcoholism’s effects on children, and nutrition in relation to food allergies; and
  • he attends a session with me and an unbiased third-party who advises that they’d feel comfortable with Zoë being in his care, again.

The clincher:

If this is too much to ask of him, if it’s too much time or rules, or he gets his back up about being called an alcoholic in front of a stranger and refuses this agreement out of pride, he waves the right to regular, twice-per-weekend visits.

He gets stuck with the same deal that all of the people she has playdates with have: When we’re available and it’s convenient/wanted.

It could go either way.

He could tell me to fuck myself and I could bring in pages of documentation about all of the times he’s already broken the agreement we have about him not drinking around her. And I could refuse for things to continue as they are, we end up back in court, and he could lose the visits, anyway.

He could agree and fuck it up at some point – I’d predict sooner, rather than later.

He could agree and then not end up getting her a bed and try to pull a fast one on me – which is why I’d ask for a receipt as proof, as well as a picture of the room where it’s set up.

He could agree and it could go completely fine, and she could have an actual father and I could have some actual time off and the world could be a beautiful, non-exhausting place where we could co-exist as the adults we’re supposed to be, co-raising the happy child we should be.

What say you?