Step One – We admitted that we were powerless over our addiction, that our lives had become unmanageable.
The question and answer below are from my first run through at working the steps with a sponsor. Please note that only the question itself (in purple) is from the NA “Step Working Guide” while the answer (in red) is my personal response. Only the questions (in purple) will be found in the NA “Step Working Guide” and when you work the steps for yourself you should formulate your own persnal answers and not strive to make your answers “match” anyone elses. If there are similarities then so be it, but in order to recieve the full benefits recovery has to offer the work you do must be your own and the answers you find must come from your own heart.
· What is it like when I’m obsessed with something? Does my thinking follow a pattern? Describe.
I know when I was in the thick of my addiction I was obsessed with drugs. I guess my pattern was to get them as fast as I could and use them, but I didn’t want to use them fast. I would try to make them last by doing smaller portions than everyone around me, but that really wasn’t satisfying. I wanted to use large amounts at a time, but I hated the ways in which I obtained money to get the drugs (mainly prostituting), so I would try to stretch them out. It really only served to keep me awake and wanting more.
Another obsession I had when doing drugs was my “ritual” of how I did them. Everything had to be just so. Once I was all set up I would go around the area one more time and make sure everything was “secure” as could be so I could get high in peace, but of course it was never a peaceful thing. As soon as I did a hit I would think I heard something and, although I wasn’t the kind to start running around looking out windows, I would begin geeking in my own way. Measuring and re-measuring my stash and going through my pockets over and over, so sure I had something else in them, but there never was. It was a vicious cycle and I was caught in it for years.
Now that I’m in recovery I guess my biggest obsession still is having a place for everything and having everything in its place. It drives me nuts to live in clutter and my husband is a clutter bug. If I clean and completely clear off the kitchen table and desk it will only take him several days to fill it with clutter again. This drives me nuts.
I ask him to keep it clean, but he never does. I ask him to clean it up and he says he will, but he never does. Or, if he does, he doesn’t do a complete job. There will always be a small pile of papers left that he will “go through later”, but he never does. This drives me nuts!
I guess my pattern of behavior in this situation is to just give in and clean it myself (at least several times in a row) before I get agitated and start asking him to address it, or to at least have some respect for me when I take the time to clean and not mess everything up again. He always says he’ll try, but he never succeeds. This drives me nuts!
Then I get more agitated and I start nagging at him about it and eventually it becomes an argument. Sometimes I stop cleaning for weeks at a time just to see how long it will take for him to do something about the mess, but it’s as if he is oblivious to it. It doesn’t bother him at all and I end up with an even bigger mess to clean up. This really drives me nuts!!
The thing is I don’t know why I continue to let it bother me. I mean, it’s not like we’re just getting to know each other. We’ve been together for years and I know this is how he is. I guess I just keep hoping against hope that he will change when I know he won’t and it drives me nuts!
This must be at least one form of obsession because I can’t seem to stop seeking a change in him that I know will never come (much like I couldn’t stop doing drugs); both of us are stuck in a “pattern” of behavior and expectation. As much as I have grown and changed in recovery there are just some expectations/[obsessions] I have in life that I can’t seem to let go of. I sure hope I learn how to not be obsessive before I go completely insane over dumb little stuff like this.
Christine C. (me)