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Betrayal: A Case Study
Beverly and Chris were married
for 7 years. Chris was a recovering
alcoholic and drug addict
who had been clean and sober
for several years before he
met Beverly. Beverly was a
successful professional and
Chris was a hard-worker in
a blue collar job. After several
years, Beverly suggested that
the couple start a business
of their own. They decided
to invest in rental properties
which they hoped would help
grow their savings and allow
them to travel and enjoy life
more. They got a second mortgage
on their home and bought several
fixer-uppers in the same town
where Chris worked. Things
did not go as smoothly as
expected, but they kept working
on it and trying to deal with
the stresses of a new business
together.
After about a year, Beverly
came home to find Chris crying
and upset. She asked him what
was wrong and he said he had
to move out and "see what
he wanted in life". Beverly
was caught totally off guard
and was devastated, but had
no choice but to let him go.
He left immediately and, in
a week, came back to pack
up his personal belongings.
He told Bev he was staying
with friends. In the meantime,
Bev worked the business on
her own. About a month after
Chris left, Beverly received
a call from the bank that
her business account was overdrawn.
After meeting with the bank,
she discovered that Chris
had been funneling money out
of their business account
for some months before he
left. When Beverly finally
reached him, he minimized
the theft, but said that he
would reimburse the account.
A couple of weeks later, Bev
found out from friends that
Chris was seeing another woman,
someone he had mentioned as
a new acquaintance at work.
After two small checks, Chris
stopped paying Beverly back.
Can This Relationship Be
Saved?"
There is not much hope for
this relationship. Chris has
a history of addictive behavior
in the past. While he had
been clean and sober for some
time before he married Bev,
he is fragile to reacting
to stress with a relapse.
Obviously, Chris had been
secretive about his feelings
for some time. By the time
he decided to talk to Bev
about it, he was ready to
leave. Not talking is definitely
a red flag for relapse.
It looks as if Bev was the
codependent in this relationship
because she was the one who
made the suggestion to start
the business. Reading between
the lines, she takes the lead
in trying to "help" Chris
by trying to make him into
an entrepeneur. She married
a blue collar worker and then
wasn't accepting of the limitations
that might mean in terms of
their lifestyle.
When the business started
to flag, Chris wasn't equipped
to deal with it in a direct
way with his wife. Instead,
he started seeing another
woman and lying to Bev about
it. Alcoholics are extremely
adept at rationalizing destructive
behavior. I'm not sure how
Chris was justifying betraying
his wife, but by the time
he began to steal money from
her, there is a very strong
chance he had started drinking,
drugging, or gambling. This
was the point where he was
in in a complete relapse,
and it was only a matter of
time before he would be found
out. Chris bailed out with
more lies before he had to
face that consequence.
The negative prognosis for
the marriage is cemented by
the fact that, even after
he was found out, Chris made
no attempt to be honest, apologize,
or take responsibility for
his actions. He resorted to
addictive behaviors like rationalization,
minimizing, and more lies.
Bev should move on and deal
with her own issues around
this marriage. Let Chris continue
to run the course of his relapse.
Hopefully, he will get back
into recovery before he hurts
anyone else.
A postscript for Beverly:
She can take some steps to
stay out of the codependency
role by being completely honest
about Chris's behavior to
family and friends. To do
otherwise would be a continuation
of caretaking, "protecting"
Chris from having to face
the consequences of his actions.
By the same token, Beverly
will be extremely vulnerable
to Chris's "charming" side
should he try to reconcile
with her. Chances are also
strong that he will attempt
a reconciliation because addicts
are very dependent on their
codependent partners.
Another postscript: I don't
want to give the impression
that recovering addicts are
bad partners. Recovering addicts
who are actively working a
program can be very good partners
because they have been forced
to look at themselves closely,
are used to talking about
and listening to feelings
(in group meetings) and can
be insightful about behaviors
and motivation.
About the author:
Jennifer J. Sowle, PhD is
a Licensed Psychologist and
Licensed Marriage and Family
Therapist and a Certified
Sex Educator and Sex Therapist.
Dr. Sowle's website, http://here-to-listen.com explores psychological issues like: Depression,
Anxiety, Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder, and Eating Disorders.
Individual and relationship
problems and sexual questions.
Dr. Sowle gives free advice
and shares case studies from
her practice.
Resources - Link Exchange
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