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28.1 | can't thnk of a title | LYRIC::QUIRIY | Christine | Sun Apr 22 1990 10:27 | 128 |
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I found the following article to be interesting and thought provoking.
Again, I didn't know where to put this (either here or in the "News
Clips" note) but decided this was the better place for it.
I started going to a feminist therapist about 6 months ago. I think
she's absolutely _the best_ therapist I've ever had. As a well-worn
traveller of the self-help aisles in bookstores far and wide, and a
veteran of several unsatisfactory (and brief) alliances with counselors
of varying qualification, age, sex, and of uncertain theoretical
position, I'd started having my doubts about the "help" I was getting.
I suppose it started when I went to a presentation about the Stone
Center and heard about and then read Jean Miller's "Toward a New
Psychology of Women." All along I was reading WOMANNOTES. Then I
started reading a little "radical feminist literature" (this is
relative, of course -- most of the people I know think "Toward a New
Psychology of Women" is radical) and this led me to "say things" in
mixed company and to my mother and sisters that they found shocking.
(Oh my!)
I guess what I'm trying to say is that traditional therapy, the "fad
therapies" (rational-emotive, vanilla behvioristic stuff...), and
mongrels therefrom, ultimately, did not make sense to me and I got
Nowhere: Yes, I do need other people. I especially need supportive
people around me. I am affected by other people, and most affected by
those closest to me. Relationships are about connectedness and
interdependence. They're also about risk and trust and honesty and
vulnerability; they are not easy to maintain and they don't "just
happen", they need attention. Attending to them and being affected by
them is not "abnormal" or indicative of a parasitic ("dependent")
personality. I don't always feel quite so "flawed" anymore, even if
someone feels a need to tell me that I am! (This usually takes the form
of being told I'm "too sensitive", "too serious", "too complicated", or
"too" something.) I've begun to think more often: 'Well, maybe it's
_their_ problem.'
I rambled on more than I expected to and fear there is no focus here
or that this is just too personal for anyone to relate to. Here's the
article; maybe there's something to discuss?
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"Is Everyone Co-Dependent?"
[From the May/June issue of the Utner Reader, "In Brief" section
"Psychology".]
"Challenging the idea that codependency is a disease.
Every few years, the self-help movement touts a new illness to describe
our human failings and weaknesses: mid-life crisis, Type A behavior,
life passages, eating disorders, addictions of every stripe. The
hottest one these days is codependency -- the disease of people whose
problem is an excessive tendency to help other people.
If that sounds like a dubious disease to you, you're not alone. Asks
David Treadway in "Family Therapy Networker" (Jan./Feb. 1990), 'Does
that mean that altruism and unselfishness are diseases?' Equally
troubling is that, as it is defined by movement guru (and author of the
movement bible "Codependent No More") Melody Beattie, the label
codependent could apply to almost anyone. She defines a codependent as
"a person who has let someone else's behavior affect him or her and is
obsessed with controlling other people's behavior."
Sharon Wegscheider, an expert in the codependency field, says in Anne
Wilson Schaef's book "Codependence: Misunderstood--Mistreated" that 96
percent of us suffer from codependency. John Bradshaw, a
$700-a-seminar codependency group leader, says in "Texas Monthly"
(Feb. 1990), 'Codependency is a plague upon the land--the Black Plague
doesn't even compare to the ravages of our compulsions caused by
codependency.'
Even critics of the codependency theory admit that, to the extent that
the estimated 1,800 groups nation-wide of Codependents Anonymous can
help partners of alcoholics and drug addicts to extricate themselves
from painful, no-win relationships, the movement is performing a
positive service.
To support these people is one thing, argue some mental health
professionals, but to call it a disease is destructive. Says David
Treadway in "Family Therapy Networker", 'In some cases labelling
someone as codependent may perpetuate the process of blaming in a new
language.' Says Bette S. Tallen in "Sojourner: The Women's Forum"
(Jan. 1990), 'There's an implication [in calling it a disease] that
codependency may actually be a more serious condition than addiction
to a substance.'
Blaming the victim-- the codependent--takes on an especially ominous
cast because so many of the 'diseased' are females. Says Alison Humes
in the New York weekly "7 Days" (Nov. 1, 1989), 'Spooky echoes of
sexist logic can be found in the thinking of the codependency movement:
If you're unhappy it's your own fault.' Because the altruistic,
caretaking attributes of codependents are also traditionally female
qualities, adds Tallen in "Sojourner", 'Codependency teaches us that
femininity is pathology, and we blame ourselves for self-destructive
feminine behavior, letting men evade any responsibility for their
violent and abusive behavior.'
Even more fundamentally, argues Bette Tallen in "Sojourner" and Carol
Tavris in "Family Therapy Networker", concentrating entirely on inner
feelings and a higher power ignores the very real fact that women have
had these problems for decades in our society. 'Codependency adherants
argue that we can get "well" without fundamentally altering the very
institutions that created the situations in the first place,' says
Tallen. Somehow being 'diseased' becomes preferable to admmitting that
you're being treated unjustly, says Menninger Clinic Therapist Harriet
Lerner. 'Women are so comfortable saying, "I am a recovering addict,
the problem is in me." They are so uncomfortable saying the F-word:
"I am a feminist; the problem is also in society." Women get much more
support when they define their problems in medical rather than
political terms.' Ultimately, that's the biggest problem with
codependency, argues Hume in "7 Days": 'It makes the political
entirely personal.'
As troubling as the notion of universal codependency is, it's just
the latest wrinkle in a long line of self-help literature promoting
conformity, argues Wendy Kaminer in the "New York Times Book Review"
(Feb. 11, 1990). She traces back to Norman Vincent Peale's 1950s best
seller "The Power of Positive Thinking" '...the reliance on simple,
universal techniques to facilitate individual change and the belief
that we never need be victims of circumstance.'
At its worst, then, says Kaminer, the codependency movement supports
conformity--the hunger to belong to a group with identical problems
rather than to face the lonliness of the individual search for self."
-- Lynette Lamb
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28.3 | Thank you | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Tue Apr 24 1990 20:29 | 6 |
| Re: .1
That's a very powerful article; thanks for taking the time to enter it!
It's certainly something I want to think about!
Nancy
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28.4 | Poppycock | TLE::D_CARROLL | Sisters are doin' it for themselves | Thu Apr 26 1990 10:53 | 38 |
| My reaction: bah humbug.
Co-dependency *is* real. If it isn't, why is it so common for partners of
addicted/abusive partners to get out of that relationship, only to end up
in *another* relationship with addictive and/or abusive partners?
The problem with the article is this idea of laying "blame". I do *not*
believe that modelling co-dependency as a disease "blames" the victim. But
I think it enables the victim to recognize that they *do* have control over
the patterns of their lives.
If my life is dysfunctional, because I continually get involved with people
who I think I can help, who abuse me and don't appreciate me, if I seek
validation for myself from how much I can help others, I need to change my
life so that it *is* functional. Saying that "fault" lies with society, etc,
might be *true*, but it doesn't help *me*. Before I can do anything for
anyone else, I need to help myself. Blaming the problem on abstract constructs
such as "society" doesn't help me be happier and more in control of my life.
Recognizing that there is a problem, and that the problem is within (which
doesn't mean that the problem is my *fault*, just that it exist inside me)
gives me the power to *fix* the problem. If I try to fix society while my
life is dysfunctional, nothing will ever happen.
As a matter of fact, I think the article is doing what it claims society does.
It is putting society, and other people, *before* the individual person.
This is what society has been doing to women forever: "You aren't important.
It is your duty to help others, not yourself." The article suggests that
women who are co-dependent should try to fix society before they try to fix
themselves. And to that I say: bah humbug!
No, generosity and altruism aren't diseases. Giving of yourself until there
is nothing left for *you*, *that* isn't altruism, that's unhealthy.
Recognizing co-dependency as a disease gives those who's lives are affected
by it the power to heal *themselves*, rather than being dependent on the
ever-elusive society to "get better" and thus rid them of their problems.
D!
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28.5 | | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Thu Apr 26 1990 11:55 | 6 |
| I agree, D! Though I do think the article raises good questions.
My nit has to do with calling co-dependency a disease. I see it as
a behavior pattern, not a sickness.
Kathy
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28.6 | Re: .1 | CURIE::HAROUTIAN | | Thu Apr 26 1990 12:45 | 80 |
|
This article makes my blood boil. It presents a simplistic and
spurious approach to something that's a very serious problem.
( I've read several issues of
the Utne Reader, and they all seem to be written in a similar
simplistic, pseudoanalytical, "let's propose something-anything
and spend the article arguing the point", without establishing
base-line facts.)
Codependency is NOT "the disease of people whose problem is
an excessive tendency to help other people." Codependency IS
an unhealthy addiction to another person, or a style of being
addicted to other people, such that the individual lives through
that other person. Characteristic behaviors of codependents
include not knowing what they, as individuals, want for themselves;
putting other people ahead of their own needs, all the time,
without regard for how severe their own needs may be; not being
able to say "no" and set reasonable boundaries with other
people; chronic low-grade depression; inability to ask for, and
to receive, support and help when needed(to name just a few that
come instantly to mind). Of course, there's always sexual abuse,
which results in severe problems of lack of personal boundary.
Synonyms for "codependency" are "adult child of alcoholism",
"abused child", "sexually abused", and "adult child of dysfunctional
family". (It doesn't necessarily take alcoholism or abuse
in the family to turn out codependents.) Any family situation
where the needs, feelings, thoughts, etc. of the individual are
denied, belittled, put down, or downright abused...these families
produce codependent people, because the individuals don't learn
healthy separation.
The quote from Melodie Beatty is taken entirely out of context.
She talks about codependency in the terms I have described above.
Various other authors in the field focus on specific aspects of
codependency, for example, men-woman relationships, toxic parents,
sexual abuse, etc. Codependency is NOT a problem of letting
other people's behavior affect you; if we didn't allow ourselves
to be affected by the behavior of others, we'd be robots.
Codependency is when you're so enmeshed in the behavior of
others, you lose your sense of who "you" are.
Codependency work does NOT blame the victim. Codependency work
helps the individual unravel the past, in the sense of locating,
as much as possible, what the unhealthy messages are that the
individual internalized. Messages like "I should never question
my parents, to question my parents is to be a bad child"; "my
needs aren't important"; "if I leave the family, my parents will
not be able to get along without me."
Also, codependency has no particular affinity for one sex or the
other. Just as many men suffer from an inability to identify
and define their own needs, and get them met in an adult manner.
It's more socially acceptable for women to admit to having
"emotional" problems, and more women tend to go for help.
Codependency is NOT a medical problem; it is clearly a family/
social problem, and as such, I believe, is also a political problem.
Yes, our society encourages women to be dependent on "their man",
but it also encourages our men not to feel their feelings. Two
sides of the same destructive coin.
Finally, the codependency movement DOES NOT support conformity.
It encourages the development to the fullest of each individual's
unique, wonderful selfness. Belonging to groups with similar
problems is part of the therapeutic process, whereby codependents
learn, in supportive and safe environments, to identify and
express their own feelings, get "strokes" for doing same, and
learn how to accept support for their own unique selves.
I've been codependent for 40 of my 42 years and I'm breaking those
chains now. Until two years ago, I didn't even KNOW that I wasn't
feeling my feelings. It's taken me the past two years to begin
to feel my feelings, and start developing healthy boundaries for
me as a unique individual. This article does a terrible injustice
to myself and the rest of us, struggling with this problem.
Lynn
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28.7 | Sort of a me-too laugh... | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Mon May 07 1990 17:42 | 9 |
| At a presentation in the Critical Thinking 500 course I'm taking,
this thought was spoken, "If you're drowning, and someone else's
life flashes before your eyes, you're codependent!"
It got a laugh, from me as well as others, but I would describe
it as, in general, rueful laughter.
aq
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28.8 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Oct 25 1990 17:48 | 70 |
| <<< RANGER::$2$DUA8:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women---Volume 3 >-
================================================================================
Note 28.2 Emotional Health 2 of 3
ROYAL::NICHOLS "getting it right is SO complicated" 62 lines 22-APR-1990 12:54
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The comments in the article reproduced in 28.1 seem to be saying that
the concept of Codependency is somehow at odds with the true spirit
of the women's movement.
That somehow for a recipient of abuse to address potential issues of
Codendency makes the abusers less guilty.
e.g:
"It's YOUR fault that I beat you up. It's the KIDS fault that I beat
them. Why don't they stop crying! Its YOUR fault that I come on to
you. Why do you where such sexy clothes?!" And on and on and on.
That is not my understanding of Codependency at all.
To my thinking, a 'correct' view of Codependency ENRICHes the
women's movement. That insight into codependent issues has the
potential for accellerating the movement.
This view holds that -as an example- some people are more subjected to
abuse than others. Why? Happenstance is clearly one! But, in addition,
some people keep finding themselves in abusive situation over and
over again. One that Bradshaw mentions...
As I remember it, one of his patients -the daughter of an alchoholic-
has been married four times. Each of her husbands was an abusive
alchoholic. Now she brought SOMETHING to those marriages! She brought
HERSELF. She married the bums!
To say that it would be helpful for her to understand HER issues
in NO way minimizes what the four husbands did.
It does however, probably give her additional resources in her fight
against the abuse of alchoholic husbands. Sure if they abuse her,
they should suffer appropriate legal consequences. THEY ARE BAD
GUYS.
But she is a 'bad' guy too. (Please note the quotes.) It is certainly
at least plausible that the behavior of her alchoholic father
conditioned her to put herself into abusive situations. (A lack of self
worth perhaps? She feels she doesn't deserve any better?) Isn't
one of the tenets of the women's movement, "You are a good person,
treat yourself like one?"
To understand what one brings -if anything- to an abusive situation
IN NO WAY excuses the abuse!
But it may be an additional tool in constructing a safer life and
a more wholesome society.
In terms of the womens movement.
1)Understand yourself and people well enuf to recognize the bastards!
Don't marry them. (the signs of abuse seldom start only after marriage.
Don't go to work for them
Don't date them
Don't let them dominate meetings
etc
2)When they abuse you, involve the authorities AND get away from them.
Ain't easy!
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28.9 | Spring Hill | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Espresso mornings, lasagna nights | Sat Feb 16 1991 00:42 | 65 |
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Spring Hill
432 Columbia Street
Cambridge, MA 02141
617-252-0905
I attended one of their weekend workshops last week. I think it's one
of the best things I've ever done for myself and I intend to go back,
when the time is right.
You can get a brochure by calling the office. Workshop fees are on a
sliding scale. The weekend Opening the Heart workshops are held at
their center in Ashby, Mass. (Just north of Fitchburg, Mass. It's a
beautiful place!)
They have Opening the Heart workshops for: individuals; couples; adult
children of alcoholic and/or abusive parents; women survivors of sexual
abuse; gays, lesbians, and bisexuals; men in recovery; sexual abuse
survivors and their partners; and many other specialty workshops.
From the brochure:
The Heart-Centered Approach
"This approach recognizes love as the greatest healing force. While we
all want to love and be loved, anger, hurt, and fear often stand in our
way. The heart-centered approach looks to dissolve these blocks to our
natural, loving selves. To this end, we draw upon many different
techniques and traditions, all of which support the value of love and
personal truth. The heart-centered approach calls us back to the
wisdom of the human heart, which is the ultimate source of our healing
and the key to our transformation."
And...
"What do we really want? Most of us want love and acceptance. We want
to feel listened to and understood. We want to feel more alive. We
want to live in the moment. We want to be more real. We want
closeness, belonging, and community.
Spring Hill is a psychological and spiritual growth center dedicated
to helping people fulfill these desires. Through the nationally known
Opening the Heart workshop and our other activities, we help people to:
resolve emotional issues that hinder them; cope with stress; build
self-esteem; address spiritual concerns; improve communication and
relationships; and live more authentically.
In addition to the workshop, Spring Hill offers trainings, specialty
workshops, celebrations, ongoing support groups, mini-heart gatherings,
and more. We hope you'll join us in this community of the heart."
You can "get a taste" of Spring Hill on the first Thursday of each
month. From the brochure:
"...On the first Thursday of each month, Spring Hill hosts an evening
gathering for Spring Hill style singing, celebration, sharing, dancing,
games, and more, led by staff members....Bring friends, a desert or
(non-alcoholic) drink to share, and $5 per person (suggested donation).
The Cambridge evenings are slated for 8:00-10:30 p.m."
I'll be going the next time they have one, which I figure must be March
7th (but I'm going to call and check). If anyone wants to check it out
with me, send mail.
Christine
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