Healthcare Training Institute
- Quality Education since 1979
Psychologist,
Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!

Section
2
Track #2 - The Threaten, Punish, and Relent Cycle
Question
2
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Answer
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On the last track, we discussed the three tools addicts use to control their
families and keep them involved in the addiction. These three tools are manipulation,
misdirection, and mistrust. On this track, we will discuss the "threaten,
punish, and relent" cycle.
As you know, addiction creates unmanageability and imbalance in the
family. As a result, all of the family members, including the addict, work
to bring things back to "normal". This equilibrium is always disrupted
again by the addict, and two things happen as a result these are families
try harder to create balance, and they grow more accustomed to being off
balance. As you are aware, these families rarely look outside themselves
for help, instead believing that they can handle it alone.
A common belief among families coping with addiction is the belief that improving
the addict's circumstances will render the addiction unnecessary;
they believe that the addict's problems are causing his addiction, not the
other way around. Angela, 45, gave her brother-in-law a job at her computer
repair business. She told me, "I was worried about my sister's kids… they
never had enough money. For a while, things were great, but then a few weeks
later he started coming in reeking of alcohol, unable to do
his job properly! He screws up jobs and insults my customers. I don't understand.
He was doing so well."
Families of addicts often get trapped in the "threaten, punish,
and relent" cycle. Stan, a 39-year-old father of two, is married
to an alcoholic. Last week, he came home from work and found his wife Wendy
drunk, screaming at the children about a toy they had not put away. Stan
said, "They were terrified. She's done this before.
I calmed them down and sent them to their rooms, and then I told Wendy that
if she didn't stop treating the kids that way, I'd move out and take them
with me. It seemed to work, for a couple of weeks she was a great mom, and
she drank a lot less. But then it started up again. I was going to move out… but
if I did, who would take care of the kids while I'm at work? I can't afford
daycare or a babysitter." Stan relented and stayed with Wendy.
Leo was in a similar situation with his 17-year-old son Craig. Craig
would often stay out all weekend, coming home bruised from fights, and smelling
of beer and marijuana. Leo said, "Every weekend, I warned him that if he
came home like that, I'd take his car away. So he'd go out, come back trashed,
and I'd take his keys. Then he'd be so good… and I'd have to give his
car back. How was he supposed to get to school on time without it?"
Both Stan and Leo were training the addict in their family not to
believe what they said. Their pattern of relenting empowered
Wendy and Craig's addictions. Stan and Leo underestimated the strength of their
family member's addictions. Many families run into the trap of
thinking that addiction is a bad decision or and unfortunate
turn down a bad road. Family members therefore think that a little prodding,
admonishment, or punishment will make the addict "get back on track",
and that their efforts will be sufficient to solve the problem.
As you know, families sometimes try makeshift interventions. Ellen's daughter
Faye had become addicted to pot in high school. Ellen got the idea to sit Faye
down at her computer, and make her research pot online. Instead, Faye found
a number of pro-marijuana sites that reinforced her decision to smoke pot.
Ellen blamed this backfire on her daughter's insolence, and refused to accept
that the poor design of her plan hindered Faye more than it helped.
Ellen's mistake is a common one. She put the focus on changing Faye's
behavior, rather than on healing herself and changing her own behavior. Do
you have a client who keeps using the "threaten, punish, and relent" cycle that
would benefit from being asked: "Is what you're trying working, or does
it just feel that it should work?"
I encouraged Ellen, Leo, and Stan to change their focus from trying
to change their family members behavior, to changing their own behavior
in small ways. With Leo, I used a technique I call the "My Daily
Needs" exercise. I asked him, "What's the one activity you
know you need to do every day that would strengthen your relationship with
yourself?"
Leo told me, "I used to go for a thirty-minute jog every day. It gave
me time to think, and made me feel really physically good. Nowadays, I feel
like I can't go out. Craig might come home at any time needing first aid or
a trip to the hospital." Leo and I agreed that he would start taking his
jogs again, giving him a block of time where he only had to take care of himself. He
made a daily schedule for his jogs, and posted it on the fridge. Being caught
in the "threaten, punish, and relent" cycle had made Leo feel like
nothing would ever change. After two weeks of taking his jogs, Leo felt like
he was making progress for the first time in months.
On this track, we have discussed the "threaten, punish, and relent” cycle.
Would it be helpful to play this track in your next session with the family
member of an addict?
On the next track the three main reasons
families cling to old habits of coping and become highly resistant to change:
being locked into recycling past habits; relegating themselves to the sideline;
and “feeling comfortable”.
QUESTION
2
What is the danger of the "threaten, punish, and relent" cycle?
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