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Feel like I have to be supportive all the time

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  • #144553
    Mike
    Participant

    I’ve been in addiction recovery since 2014, with the occasional slip, but went from everyday use for a decade to probably using under 50 times from early 2014 to now (I had a couple of slips where I went back to everyday use for a few weeks a couple times). I’ve been doing really well and am happy with the amount of progress I’ve made. A big reason for this has been a great relationship that I’ve been in since late 2015 where openness, honesty, trust and respect have been at the forefront of what we have been doing.

    Lately though, things have been going downhill for me and I’ve been thinking about use as well as leaving the relationship, two things that I really don’t want to do.

    I’m nearing 30, my partner is 26.  We are both social workers working in counseling for mental health. I struggle with anxiety and ADHD, she struggles with depression. We have been huge supports for each other. We have had some rough patches, but in December she completed two applications for graduate school, one in the city we were both living in, and one in the city where we both dreamed of living and starting a family.

    Naturally, my anxiety kicked in. I’m in a significantly better financial situation than she is (I have zero debt, a pension, and a significant amount of savings, while she is 20k in debt still from school and has about $3000 to her name).  I started to get significantly worried about our financial future because I knew that I would have to be supporting her financially while she went to school and while I wasn’t 100% comfortable with it, I was comfortable enough and do so.  However, I was extremely worried that if she got into our preferred school it would mean a move and a job change and I did not want to move to this new city without something secured for us financially since it was me who was going to be taking the huge risk in September if I didn’t find a job.

    So I talked to her about this and we decided that I would start looking.  Just looking, not applying. After about a month I found a job at an amazing place, good pay, good benefits, the dream job, and after talking to her about it, we decided for me to apply. I applied on January 20th and started on February 13th. It was a fast turn around and we had to pack up our lives, quit our jobs and move. It was stressful, but we got through it.

    And for the first few weeks it was okay. My partner was looking for work during the days, going out for walks, exploring the new neighborhood and city. But then she started to run out of money, and I am now stuck with paying for the rent, the car, the food, and all the bills.

    Then, she gets rejected from the school in the city we are now living in, and gets accepted to the school in the city we were in. We jumped the gun. She wants to commute (it would only be class 3 days a week) but doesn’t have the money to do so, so I would have to pay for her gas as well as my bus pass for the month to cover transportation expenses. I’m not a fan, but what am I supposed to do?

    Then she gets a job interview yesterday and no longer wants this job because it has components that she doesn’t like. It’s valid, it is a job very similar to what she was doing before and she hated it, but we need her to start working. She is depressed, never goes out anymore, has no money, doesn’t interact with friends. It’s so draining and I try to talk to her but she will take things so personally because these issues are all her own right now and I can’t do anything about it.

    I don’t know what to do. I feel like I’m supporting someone who I care about and that is fine but I don’t know when too much is too much. I don’t know if I should be okay with this situation because she has been a huge support for me and took a huge risk moving with me and setting up here when we didn’t know what the outcome was going to be and it just seems to be going so quickly downhill.

     

    #144557
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mike:

    You wrote: “Lately though, things have been going downhill for me and I’ve been thinking about use as well as leaving the relationship, two things that I really don’t want to do.”-

    Leaving the relationship may be the right choice for you, maybe. But using- definitely not the right choice. I hope you eliminate the using as an acceptable option to your dilemma. This is really an opportunity for you to become stronger in abstinence: you can challenge yourself to go through this conflict, this challenge, without using.

    You are clearly uncomfortable with supporting her financially, especially when you see a pattern of financial irresponsibility or lack of attention, on her part. You are also, clearly conflicted. This has been a good relationship for the most part.

    But you were not in the situation before where you had to support her financially, like you are now. You knew of her debt, but you were not in the position of actually paying her bills, not to this extent and not on an ongoing basis. So this is a new situation, correct?

    Now that you are experiencing this new situation, and that you see that this new situation may be a lasting situation because of her depression and financial history, it is time for you to make your choice regarding this relationship.

    At this point, this is not a good relationship for you, not anymore. It may become one but it is not at this point, because of your distress. Your thoughts/ feelings?

    anita

     

     

    #144585
    Mike
    Participant

    “You are clearly uncomfortable with supporting her financially, especially when you see a pattern of financial irresponsibility or lack of attention, on her part. You are also, clearly conflicted. This has been a good relationship for the most part.

    But you were not in the situation before where you had to support her financially, like you are now. You knew of her debt, but you were not in the position of actually paying her bills, not to this extent and not on an ongoing basis. So this is a new situation, correct?”

    I am a bit frustrated. I don’t mind supporting her while she looks for work. She dropped her life to move here with me and I get that there is a transition period. It’s only been 2 months. I was well aware of her financial situation so I knew that I would be supporting her for a bit and paying most of the bills for a bit.  This is very much a new component to it. We were living together and I was paying about 65% of the bills but that was because we decided together that that was okay because then she could commit more to her debt (which she was able to reduce by about half in 8 months)

    What I don’t like is that she is expecting to commute to school 2 hours a week come September when she doesn’t have any money for gas (so I’ll be paying for it) and then she will also be taking the car so I’ll be required to take public transportation, another expense that I’ll have to cover.  I’m already covering 80% of our expenses and it will jump to 100% by the end of May if she doesn’t find work.  Then those expenses will go up by $300 a month if she decides to drive back and forth every week. Plus come September she will be having class as well as doing placement so she will 100% not really be working so I’ll have been covering all the expenses for us both from mid Feb of this year until summer next year. Probably around 16 months. And when I bring this up and try to talk to her about how it would maybe be better if she lived with her sister for the 10 months she was in school so she could get a job there and pay for her own expenses and be stable she thinks I’m trying to get rid of her and leave the relationship.

    Then she gets a job interview and starts having second thoughts because it involves going into clients homes and she is (naturally) uncomfortable with that. I don’t want her doing a job she hates and having anxiety and getting depressed about it, but I also don’t like that she is so quick to dismiss this potential job when I am the one who is covering all the bills. It makes me feel taken advantage of and I have talked to her about it on occasion and she talks about how much she hates being unemployed and it isn’t enjoyable for her. And I know it isn’t. I don’t want to not be supportive but I don’t think she understand how difficult this if for me.

    “At this point, this is not a good relationship for you, not anymore. It may become one but it is not at this point, because of your distress. Your thoughts/ feelings?”

    That’s the issue. It isn’t positive right now. But I also am well aware that it is impossible for it to be positive forever and never hit rough patches and I can’t tell if this is a rough patch or if it is just going to continue along in this way for a long period of time. It feel very situational because of the move and she isn’t working and that is messing with her mental health, and I know that once she starts to work it will get better, but this is really taking a toll on me and it’s impacting my mental health and is making me think of use. I know that isn’t the right choice but it is still where my brain goes automatically when in get in high stress situations and this doesn’t appear to be resolvable until she gets a job that “she wants” and I don’t know if that is going to happen any time soon. My mind is that she needs to just suck it up and work for a bit and stop being so selective and feeling entitled to work that she completely enjoys, but that is easy to say from the position I am in.

     

    #144593
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mike:

    There is a part I didn’t understand: didn’t you move to the current city because she was planning on attending a school there, and so, it was you who accommodated her by finding a job where you are and moving there (and then she was not accepted by that school)?

    You wrote: “She dropped her life to move here with me” –  didn’t she quit her job and move so to start school in the current city where the two of you live?

    anita

    #144599
    Mike
    Participant

    She applied to two schools. One where we were currently living and one where we were hoping to relocate to.  After this happened I started to look for work because me not working in September in this new (more expensive city) would drain my financial resources while she was in school and I was’t prepared to not be working while supporting us.

    I got a job in this new city BEFORE we found out that she was accepted to the school in our old city and was rejected from the school in this new city. They are two hours apart.  It doesn’t make sense for her not to go because the city we are in now is a larger city and not having a Master’s degree is hurting her applications for work, so deferring the school for a year, to me, makes no sense.

    She dropped her job life to move here with me with the intention of doing school here too. It has not worked out in that way. I guess she didn’t drop her life for me but she took a huge risk (leaving a job for the potential of school) while I simply left a job for a job.

    I suppose I am, in a way, feeling responsible for this not working out for her, even though I know I shouldn’t. I also don’t know what to do though because it feels situational. That if she was going to the school in this city and had found a job it would be okay but because it hasn’t moved in that direction it isn’t going well, and I don’t want to drop a relationship that is otherwise solid because of this current situation that I know will change at some point. It just feels like it might not change for awhile, and it feels like she might be taking advantage of the situation financially a bit, even if that is not her intention.

    • This reply was modified 7 years, 7 months ago by Mike.
    #144743
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Mike:

    I am thinking that she is 100% responsible for her choice to move to the new city, and you are 100% responsible for your choice to move to the new city.

    Again, clearly, you are not comfortable in the current financial situation, a situation that may last for a long time, with no set expiration date. Possibly, this may be it. Not necessarily, but possibly.

    You may want to come up with a date for yourself, figuring if the situation is the same at that future date, then you end the relationship. If the distress of waiting for such set date is too much, you may have to come up with a resolution sooner. Maybe the idea of her living with her sister, which you mentioned, should be re-visited.

    It is your level of comfort vs distress that is most significant here. Do what you reasonably  can do to lower your distress. Take care of yourself first.

    anita

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