shirou: (cloud)
shirou ([personal profile] shirou) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2018-05-21 04:03 pm

Help! My Boyfriend Implied That I Shouldn’t Have Children Because I’ve Struggled with Addiction

From Dear Prudence


Q. Irredeemably addicted: I recently read an article about opiate addiction and a commenter said no addict should ever have children. I told my long-term boyfriend, and he said he could see where the commenter was coming from.

I’m in recovery myself and was really hurt by this. He didn’t understand why I was upset and said he was alarmed I wouldn’t think of that as a viable perspective, therefore implying that I am blind to my lifelong risk of relapse and irresponsibly inconsiderate of my potential impact on my potential children. He said he thinks “all the time” about how my addiction would impact our future family. When I said not everyone would think of me that way, he said that’s because “they haven’t had to check if you’re breathing.”

I’m worried about what he thinks of me, and I have so much shame and regret about my past. I’m now doubting if I should ever have children, even though I’ve always wanted to. I feel like he is saying I’m not fully human anymore, that I don’t have the same rights as everyone else. Am I making a big deal out of nothing?

A: No, you’re not. Disagreeing over whether to have children is a huge issue for any couple.
Add to that the fact that your boyfriend apparently considers you incapable of ever being a parent by virtue of the fact that you’re a sober addict, and you’re at a serious impasse. Not to mention the fact that he’s clearly felt this way for a while, but never mentioned it until you shared that you’d be hurt by an anonymous comment on an article about addiction. It’s one thing for him to still experience pain or resentment over the toll your behavior had on him while you were an active addict. But the proper response to that would be to see a therapist together, or find a support group for the partners of addicts, or to share some of these feelings with you directly (or all three!), not privately decide you’re not fit to ever have children.

The reason you feel dehumanized by your boyfriend’s comments is because they were dehumanizing. You don’t make choices on the assumption you’re going to relapse and spend the rest of your life in active addiction. You have not forfeited the right to decide for yourself whether you want to have children. You are not an inherently bad parent just because you’ve gotten sober. This is a real crisis point for your relationship, and you shouldn’t shy away from it. It’s better to find out now if your boyfriend is capable of staying in a relationship with you and finding ways to deal with the pain of the past that don’t involve constantly holding the future hostage.

Q. Re: Irredeemably addicted: Whoa, there! The boyfriend just said he could see where that belief comes from. He didn’t say he holds it himself, and indeed, he admitted he thinks about how addiction might impact “their future children.” I think you’re jumping to conclusions badly.

A: I disagree! The boyfriend said “he was alarmed I wouldn’t think of that as a viable perspective,” and I don’t think these are two reasonable positions with a meaningful compromise. To claim former addicts, as a category of people, have forfeited the right to have children, is an immoral position; to entertain it as a viable perspective (especially in relation to his partner) is cruel.

kiezh: Tree and birds reflected in water. (Default)

[personal profile] kiezh 2018-05-23 06:27 am (UTC)(link)
I think there are very important differences between A) "I don't want to have kids with you" (which LW's boyfriend has every right to say, and so does anyone else), B) "I think you need to get your shit together a lot more before considering parenting" (which is iffier but still potentially reasonable from a close friend or partner), and C) "People like you are unfit to parent and should never have children."

What the commenter said, and LW's boyfriend agreed with, was C. That's not about his personal future, or LW's, or the difficulties they may or may not decide to face together. It is, as LW and Prudence noted, dehumanizing. Getting hit by that from a partner is a profound betrayal, and casts doubt on whether he considers LW an equal human being worthy of respect at all.

(And if he really cannot look at LW and see anything but a source of trauma and pain, then he should be initiating a breakup and getting some PTSD therapy, which I suspect he really needs. That's not an insult to him - I have PTSD and have experienced thinking about a traumatic incident all the time and it sucks a lot. If he were the one writing the letter, my advice would be to get the heck away from as many triggers as possible and get a therapist with some experience in treating trauma, so he doesn't have to stay stuck in that loop.)