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The Evolution of the Term "Codependence"
"The phenomenal growth of AA and the success of
the disease concept in the treatment of Alcoholism generated the founding
of treatment centers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. These early treatment
centers were based on what had been successful in early AA. They focused
on getting the Alcoholic sober and paid very little attention to the families
of Alcoholics.
As these treatment centers matured and evolved,
they noticed that the families of Alcoholics seemed to have certain characteristics
and patterns of behavior in common. So they started to pay some attention
to the families.
A term was coined to describe the significant
others of Alcoholics. That term was "co-alcoholic" - literally "alcoholic
with."
The belief was that while the Alcoholic was addicted
to alcohol, the co-alcoholic was addicted in certain ways to the Alcoholic.
The belief was that the families of Alcoholics became sick because of the
Alcoholic's drinking and behavior.
With the drug explosion of the sixties, Alcoholism
treatment centers became chemical dependency treatment centers. Co-alcoholics
became co-dependents. The meaning was still a literal "dependent with,"
and the philosophy was much the same.
In the mid-to-late seventies, however, certain
pioneers in the field began to look more closely at the behavior patterns
of families affected by addiction. Some researchers focused primarily on
Alcoholic families, and then graduated to studying adults who had grown
up in Alcoholic families. Other researchers started looking more closely
at the phenomenon of Family Systems Dynamics.
Out of these studies came the defining of the
Adult Child Syndrome, at first primarily in terms of Adult Children of
Alcoholics and then expanding to other types of dysfunctional families.
Ironically this research was in a sense a rediscovery
of the insight which in many ways was the birth of modern psychology. Sigmund
Freud made his early fame as a teenager with his insight into the importance
of early childhood trauma. (This was many years before he started shooting
cocaine and decided that sex was the root of all psychology.)
What the researchers were beginning to understand
was how profoundly the emotional trauma of early childhood affects a person
as an adult. They realized that if not healed, these early childhood emotional
wounds, and the subconscious attitudes adopted because of them, would dictate
the adult's reaction to, and path through, life. Thus we walk around looking
like and trying to act like adults, while reacting to life out of the emotional
wounds and attitudes of childhood. We keep repeating the patterns of abandonment,
abuse, and deprivation that we experienced in childhood.
Psychoanalysis addressed these issues only on
the intellectual level - not on the emotional healing level. As a result,
a person could go to psychoanalysis weekly for twenty years and still be
repeating the same behavior patterns.
As the Adult Child movement, the Family Systems
Dynamics research, and the newly emerging "inner child" healing movement
expanded and developed in the eighties, the term "Codependent" expanded.
It became a term used as a description of certain types of behavior patterns.
These were basically identified as "people-pleasing" behaviors. By the
middle to late eighties the term "Codependent" was associated with people-pleasers
who set themselves up to be victims and rescuers.
In other words, it was recognized that the Codependent
was not sick because of the Alcoholic but rather was attracted to the Alcoholic
because of his/her disease, because of her/his early childhood experience.
At that time Codependence was basically defined
as a passive behavioral defense system, and its opposite, or aggressive
counterpart was described as counter dependent. Then most Alcoholics and
addicts were thought to be counter dependent.
The word changed and evolved further after the
start of the modern Codependence movement in Arizona in the mid-eighties.
Co-Dependents Anonymous had its first meeting in October of 1986, and books
on Codependence as a disease in and of itself started appearing at about
the same time. These Codependence books were the next generation evolved
from the books on the Adult Child Syndrome of the early eighties.
The expanded usage of the term "Codependent" now
includes counter dependent behavior. We have come to understand that both
the passive and the aggressive behavioral defense systems are reactions
to the same kinds of childhood trauma, to the same kinds of emotional wounds.
The Family Systems Dynamics research shows that within the family system,
children adopt certain roles according to their family dynamics. Some of
these roles are more passive, some are more aggressive, because in the
competition for attention and validation within a family system the children
must adopt different types of behaviors in order to feel like an individual.
A large part of what we identify as our personality
is in fact a distorted view of who we really are due to the type of behavioral
defenses we adopted to fit the role or roles we were forced to assume according
to the dynamics of our family system.
Behavioral Defenses
I am now going to share with you some new descriptions
that I came up with in regard to these behavioral defenses. We adopt different
degrees and combinations of these various types of behavior as our personal
defense system, and we swing from one extreme to the other within our own
personal spectrum. I am going to share these with you because I find them
enlightening and amusing - and to make a point.
The Aggressive-Aggressive defense, is what I call
the "militant bulldozer." This person, basically the counter-dependent,
is the one whose attitude is "I don't care what anyone thinks." This is
someone who will run you down and then tell you that you deserved it. This
is the "survival of the fittest," hard-driving capitalist, self-righteous
religious fanatic, who feels superior to most everyone else in the world.
This type of person despises the human "weakness" in others because he/she
is so terrified and ashamed of her/his own humanity.
The Aggressive-Passive person, or "self-sacrificing
bulldozer," will run you down and then tell you that they did it for your
own good and that it hurt them more than it did you. These are the types
of people who aggressively try to control you "for your own good" - because
they think that they know what is "right" and what you "should" do and
they feel obligated to inform you. This person is constantly setting him/herself
up to be the perpetrator because other people do not do things the "right"
way, that is, his/her way.
The Passive-Aggressive, or "militant martyr,"
is the person who smiles sweetly while cutting you to pieces emotionally
with her/his innocent sounding, double-edged sword of a tongue. These people
try to control you "for your own good" but do it in more covert, passive-aggressive
ways. They "only want the best for you," and sabotage you every chance
they get. They see themselves as wonderful people who are continually and
unfairly being victimized by ungrateful loved ones - and this victimization
is their main topic of conversation/focus in life because they are so self-absorbed
that they are almost incapable of hearing what other people are saying.
The Passive-Passive, or "self-sacrificing martyr,"
is the person who spends so much time and energy demeaning him/herself,
and projecting the image that he/she is emotionally fragile, that anyone
who even thinks of getting mad at this person feels guilty. They have incredibly
accurate, long-range, stealth guilt torpedoes that are effective even long
after their death. Guilt is to the self-sacrificing martyr what stink is
to a skunk: the primary defense.
These are all defense systems adopted out of a
necessity to survive. They are all defensive disguises whose purpose is
to protect the wounded, terrified child within.
These are broad general categories, and individually
we can combine various degrees and combinations of these types of behavioral
defenses in order to protect ourselves.
In this society, in a general sense, the men have
been traditionally taught to be primarily aggressive, the "John Wayne"
syndrome, while women have been taught to be self-sacrificing and passive.
But that is a generalization; it is entirely possible that you came from
a home where your mother was John Wayne and your father was the self-sacrificing
martyr.
Dysfunctional Culture
The point that I am making is that our understanding
of Codependence has evolved to realizing that this is not just about some
dysfunctional families - our very role models, our prototypes, are dysfunctional.
Our traditional cultural concepts of what a man
is, of what a woman is, are twisted, distorted, almost comically bloated
stereotypes of what masculine and feminine really are. A vital part of
this healing process is finding some balance in our relationship with the
masculine and feminine energy within us, and achieving some balance in
our relationships with the masculine and feminine energy all around us.
We cannot do that if we have twisted, distorted beliefs about the nature
of masculine and feminine.
When the role model of what a man is does not
allow a man to cry or express fear; when the role model for what a woman
is does not allow a woman to be angry or aggressive - that is emotional
dishonesty. When the standards of a society deny the full range of the
emotional spectrum and label certain emotions as negative - that is not
only emotionally dishonest, it creates emotional disease.
If a culture is based on emotional dishonesty,
with role models that are dishonest emotionally, then that culture is also
emotionally dysfunctional, because the people of that society are set up
to be emotionally dishonest and dysfunctional in getting their emotional
needs met.
What we traditionally have called normal parenting
in this society is abusive because it is emotionally dishonest. Children
learn who they are as emotional beings from the role modeling of their
parents. "Do as I say - not as I do," does not work with children. Emotionally
dishonest parents cannot be emotionally healthy role models, and cannot
provide healthy parenting."
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