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Love Over Addiction

8 Helpful Tips for Children of Alcoholics or Substance Abusers

Love Over Addiction

Michelle Anderson

Society & Culture, Wifeofanalcoholic, Codependency, Relationships, Recovery, Alanon

4.8 • 1.5K Ratings

🗓️ 28 January 2018

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Talking with your kids about addiction is extremely important. Your children are a lot wiser and perceptive than you think. They might not know drinking, drugs, pornography, or infidelity are going on under your roof, but they know when things don’t feel right.

But you might be wondering...

How do we communicate without worrying them?
How do we tell them the truth without upsetting our partners?
What should we share and what should we leave out?

Inside the Love Over Mistakes program, you’ll learn how to communicate with your children. We cover what to say and how to avoid feeling guilty or worried about their future if you decide to leave or to stay.

The advice you’ll hear in the Love Over Mistakes program goes for children of all ages, so even if your kids are older or even out of the house, you’ll still learn some helpful tools that will bring you great peace.

Loving someone who is suffering from this disease causes trauma on all of us. It’s a family disease. But let’s not lose hope. There are many blessings that our children can experience while loving someone suffering from addiction.


Today, I am sharing some helpful tips that we don’t cover in the Love Over Mistakes program. These were sent to me from my sister-in-law who is a doctor of child psychology in New York City. I think you will find them very helpful. These tips were pulled from the National Child Traumatic Stress Network - an organization that has many great resources and I highly recommend.

Here are 8 tips to help children of alcoholics or substance abusers:

1. Each child reacts differently. Understand that reactions to trauma vary widely from child to child. Children may regress, demand extra attention, or think about their own needs before those of others. These are natural responses should not be met with anger or punishment.

2. Remember that the presence of a sensitive, nurturing, and predictable adult is one of the most important factors to children’s well-being.

3. Create a safe environment where basic needs (shelter, food, and clothing) are met and where routines exist to provide children with a sense of safety and predictability.

4. Keep children busy. Boredom can intensify negative thoughts and behaviors, but children are less likely to experience distress when they play and interact regularly.

5. Limit children’s exposure to images and descriptions of the trauma (e.g. in media and adult conversation). Talk with children about what they see and hear.

6. Make sure that adults and other caregivers receive the necessary attention, support, and care. Seek professional help if a child’s difficulties do not improve.

7. Find age-appropriate ways for children to help. Even when very young, children benefit from being able to make a positive difference in others’ lives while learning important lessons about empathy, compassion, and gratitude.

8. Emphasize hope and positivity. Children need to feel safe, secure, and positive about their present and future. Seeing and hearing stories of people helping people in difficult times is both healing and reassuring.


I hope you found these eight tips helpful. I know it can feel exhausting when you’re worried about the one you love getting sober and how their poor choices affect your children. But have hope - good things will come out of this. I promise.

If you’re looking for hope, consider joining the Love Over Mistakes program. We are here for you. Every step of the way.


Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the wife of an

0:19.6

alcoholic podcast. We have so much to talk about today. First of all, I wanted to make sure that if

0:27.4

you are a regular listener to this podcast, you probably already know this. But for those of you that are new we have another

0:36.1

podcast called Love Over Addiction and it is the stories the brave and courageous stories of the women who are in our community.

0:47.0

So once you join one of our programs over at loveoveraddiction.com. You get a private invitation to one of our secret

0:57.1

Facebook groups and this group is filled with some amazing women. Now we believe in Cross Talk. So if you're sitting there

1:07.5

going Michelle I have no idea what Cross Talk is. It's if you go to any kind of small groups, typically the rules are that you are allowed to share your story, but then after you share, you have to, nobody can comment.

1:26.0

Nobody can give you advice.

1:29.0

Nobody can come alongside of you and speak directly to you. They just kind of hop to the

1:36.7

next person and their next story and the reason why I know this is because I used to

1:41.4

actually lead a small group for over a year I helped

1:44.6

start a celebrate recovery in our community and it always used to frustrate me.

1:52.0

Now I am not speaking badly about any groups at all.

1:56.0

I believe that if there is any organization out there that is bringing light to this

2:02.0

to addiction, to this to addiction to this topic

2:06.3

Amazing like we all need to join hands and help each other

2:10.3

But for me I used to sit in these meetings and get super frustrated because I wanted people

2:18.0

to share their experiences with me after I shared.

2:22.2

I was looking for advice. I wanted to know what to do. I mean that

2:26.6

was the whole point of why I was in that meeting. And I just thought, okay, if I ever create my own community I will make sure that I will give

2:38.9

women the opportunity to to share their experiences directly and to offer encouragement and hope.

2:47.4

So that's what the Sacred Facebook is.

...

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