DDN October 2017 DDN_DIR_October2017 | Page 29

Family support and more www.drinkanddrugsnews.com alcohol. More of the same. And it is one that the drinking parent is hardly likely to deny the green light to. What Nacoa does so effectively is fully explain the nature of the deficit which can be created and passed on by alcoholic parents. These explanations are a source of significant reassurance to me. In recovery, awareness is all. As with any unhelpful thinking style, once the child-of-alcoholic deficits are made clear, a new perspective can quickly follow. It allows me to see that my alcoholism is not (all) my own doing, fault or problem. Equally revelatory to me is the fact that the Nacoa checklist of how children of alcoholics might think, feel and behave is also the matrix for the symptoms of the untreated alcoholic. These many forms of frustration are what I found myself grappling with as I tried to turn abstinence into the equanimity of true sobriety. Nacoa has helped me triangulate my recovery and see it from a further point of view. Previously I had approached my alcoholism in two main ways. One is the standpoint of cognitive therapy and addressing it as the result of maladaptive responses to life events. Another has been the 12-step approach and accepting that I have my very own set of character defects like self-pity and selfish motives. However, it can be unsatisfying to see the issue as soluble only by either handing it over to a higher power on the one hand or by being entirely rational on the other. Human natu re can completely mis-fuel both these theories. I will still use a composite of both these approaches on a daily basis. Nacoa brings back in my own personal and family experience. Without that we can never fully understand ourselves. And my dad? He’s been a central part of my recovery – emotionally and financially. He was the one who waited patiently outside as the AA meeting went on, or dropped me off at my latest counsellor in early recovery. My parents bore the brunt of my disappearance into addiction – mine was the only empty chair at their 50th wedding anniversary. Each new part of the explanation for our alcoholism we now share. What we also share is the hope that we can help prevent alcoholism seeping into the next generation. And for that, my children also have Nacoa. The Nacoa helpline is 0800 358 3456, [email protected], nacoa.org.uk Mark Reid is participation and recovery worker at Path 2 Recovery (P2R), East London NHS Foundation Trust www.drinkanddrugsnews.com ‘You are not alone’ the Nacoa checklist One in five children in the UK live with a parent who drinks hazardously, says Nacoa, with millions of adults still affected by their parents’ drinking. These are issues that callers often talk about on their helpline: – feeling different from other people – having difficulty with relationships – fearing rejection and abandonment, yet rejecting others – being loyal even when loyalty is undeserved – finding it difficult to have fun – judging themselves without mercy – fearing failure, but sabotaging success – over-reacting to changes over which they have no control – lying when it would be just as easy to tell the truth – guessing at what ‘normal’ is October 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 17