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Serious Problems With Relationships and Addiction

Women with addictions usually experience a lot of emotional pain and turmoil before they turn to drugs and alcohol.  Addiction in women usually forms along an emotional pathway.  When the emotions get out of control or too intense to handle, these women use drugs and alcohol to cope.  Turbulent relationships can be part of this emotional pathway.

Relationships Often Break Down With Mental Illness and Addiction

Women are often more outwardly emotional than men, especially in relationships.  Men often complain that women get too wrapped up in feelings, and women wish men would show their emotions more often.  A lot of this represents fairly normal gender differences and the typical relationship road bumps.

But for some people, mostly women, nearly all relationships seem filled with turmoil and intensity. They either feel abandoned or feel that something is wrong in the relationships.  If you are involved with someone like this, it can feel like you are constantly playing tug-of-war or always on a roller coaster.  There isn’t much contentment, peace, and happiness – only drama.  A person with this kind of behavior may have a personality disorder or a serious anxiety disorder.

A person with this much mental distress may turn to drugs or alcohol to calm their intense feelings.  Their concerns may seem justified at the time, but they might also be riddled with guilt or shame about their actions.  This only makes the problem and their pain worse.

Drug Treatment Helps Mental Illness and Addiction Together

Drinking or using drugs might seem like it calms the storm for a while, providing some much needed temporary relief.  But that’s all it is – a temporary lull in the storm.  Drugs and alcohol actually make emotional imbalances come out more strongly in many cases.  Inhibitions are dropped and a person makes choices they might usually hold back from.  Depression and suicidality becomes intensified with depressants like alcohol.  What appears to be a solution ends up adding a problem.

This is nothing to mess around with on your own.  If you recognize yourself or a loved one in the examples above, start thinking about drug treatment right away.  A mental illness or drug addiction is difficult enough to deal with on its own.  Managing a dual diagnosis without professional drug treatment is like playing with a loaded gun.  The situation is just too unpredictable and dangerous, and eventually, something really bad can happen.

Drug treatment will help the addiction and the mental illness at the same time, so a person can start feeling relief from both problems early on.  Drug treatment is there for you any time you need it.  Get information today and take the first step.

Where do calls go?

Calls to any general helpline will be answered or returned by one of the treatment providers listed, each of which is a paid advertiser: Recovery Helpline or Alli Addiction Services.

By calling the helpline you agree to the terms of use. We do not receive any commission or fee that is dependent upon which treatment provider a caller chooses. There is no obligation to enter treatment.