ChaosEngine
Jun 24, 2010, 07:52 AM
I love my girlfriend, and I'm really worried about her. To give a little background, we started dating a year or so ago, right on the heels of an intense car accident that she had, and was just getting out of the hospital. One of the things that came from this was that she was diagnosed with a Catastrophic Brain Injury, and was really a miracle that she survived.
She's turning 25 this year in September, and I turned 22 in May of this year. Over the year we've had our usual ups and downs that are expected in any relationship. However, for the sake of her health, I've worked around her schedule of therapy as much as I can to help her get through this. It's made worse because she's had to move home with her parents, who're strict as can be, and crack down on anything they don't like the sounds of.
Now here's the problem. Before the accident, she was a chronic smoker, pot smoker, and drinker. When we first met (Before the accident), I wouldn't likely have dated her, given her dependence on substance. However, after the accident, the doctors said that she would have to wait 2 years before she could drink again, and would never be able to smoke pot again due to the possibility of stroke. This played heavily in my decision to get together with her, because she's genuinely an awesome person, but I didn't want to be with someone so heavily dependent on substance because I knew it would end up hurting her. This provided the perfect opportunity for a clean start.
Fast forward 8 months exactly, to two months ago. In his brilliance, the doctor has gone back on what he said and given her permission to drink occasionally (2-3 beers a week, to take it slow), and that he 'didn't see how it would harm her recovery' if she smoked pot once a week. (She has, already, given up cigarettes completely though, for which I'm grateful.) Also, over the past year, she's gone from 125 lbs, to somewhere around 155-160. She used to look amazing, and now she looks pretty chunky (At 5'1!), and I'm worried about such rapid weight gain.
Needless to say, I've fought with her over the pot. Begged, pleaded, and tried to convince her. She also is at an increased (48-50% or so) risk of breast cancer due to a defective gene, so smoking pot now raises that risk to around 70% within the next 5 years. I haven't even made a dent in the armor, because she claims I'm being 'controlling', and that this is her 'getting back to normal'. I've tried to explain that this is NOT normal, as before she wasn't at increased risk of stroke, cancer, and still recovering from this brain injury. No luck. On top of that, her friends (Who were supplying her with the pot, and have now come to me telling me they intend to stop supplying it for her sake.), have told me that whenever she gets together with them, which is becoming a lot more than her seeing me, she polishes off an entire 6 pack of beer to herself, and that's not counting the 3 or 4 beers she's having during the week. This is definitely more than what the doctor ordered.
So here's what I want:
1. For her to cut back on drinking to what the doctor has said is acceptable
2. Give up pot for the sake of her health
3. Lose the 30 or so lbs that she's packed on over the past year and get back to a healthier weight.
I can't get her to listen. So I forsee three ways to get through to her.
1. Tell her friends to voice their concerns to her, because right now they're not going to say anything, just stop enabling her to misbehave during her visits. She'll listen to them though, as I'm only the boyfriend, and they're friends of 10 years.
2. Tell her parents. This is, in my opinion both the best and worst option. It's the best because her parents will nail her to the wall, and stop her from being able to get access to the pot, booze, and probably regulate what she's eating a bit better (Though they let her get this heavy, so I'm really hoping on that one). Worst, however, because I know that'd infuriate her, and is really like treating her like a child. However, I'm running out of options.
3. Issue an ultimatum. I personally hate this option, but it might just define whether this relationship is really worth it. Because if she won't make those positive changes for me, after I've bent over backwards during this recovery time for her, I should stop wasting my time. So if I go with this option I'll pick a day when she's sober, then say look, I need these 3 things from you, or I'm gone at the end of July. I'm sick to death of fighting you on this.
So what I'm looking for, is primarily a female opinion on how you'd feel if your boyfriend wanted you to take better care of yourself, and whether you'd dump is . Second, a general opinion on which of the 3 options I've got listed is the best for my situation, given the information provided (I can provide more on request). Third, what I DON'T want to hear is the typical response of 'dump her, she's not worth your time', or 'she's cheating on you to get the pot, sorry bud', or any number of that kind of response. I'm looking to save a relationship with an amazing, but misguided, woman, and that kind of answer isn't going to help!
Thanks in advance for all the advice!
She's turning 25 this year in September, and I turned 22 in May of this year. Over the year we've had our usual ups and downs that are expected in any relationship. However, for the sake of her health, I've worked around her schedule of therapy as much as I can to help her get through this. It's made worse because she's had to move home with her parents, who're strict as can be, and crack down on anything they don't like the sounds of.
Now here's the problem. Before the accident, she was a chronic smoker, pot smoker, and drinker. When we first met (Before the accident), I wouldn't likely have dated her, given her dependence on substance. However, after the accident, the doctors said that she would have to wait 2 years before she could drink again, and would never be able to smoke pot again due to the possibility of stroke. This played heavily in my decision to get together with her, because she's genuinely an awesome person, but I didn't want to be with someone so heavily dependent on substance because I knew it would end up hurting her. This provided the perfect opportunity for a clean start.
Fast forward 8 months exactly, to two months ago. In his brilliance, the doctor has gone back on what he said and given her permission to drink occasionally (2-3 beers a week, to take it slow), and that he 'didn't see how it would harm her recovery' if she smoked pot once a week. (She has, already, given up cigarettes completely though, for which I'm grateful.) Also, over the past year, she's gone from 125 lbs, to somewhere around 155-160. She used to look amazing, and now she looks pretty chunky (At 5'1!), and I'm worried about such rapid weight gain.
Needless to say, I've fought with her over the pot. Begged, pleaded, and tried to convince her. She also is at an increased (48-50% or so) risk of breast cancer due to a defective gene, so smoking pot now raises that risk to around 70% within the next 5 years. I haven't even made a dent in the armor, because she claims I'm being 'controlling', and that this is her 'getting back to normal'. I've tried to explain that this is NOT normal, as before she wasn't at increased risk of stroke, cancer, and still recovering from this brain injury. No luck. On top of that, her friends (Who were supplying her with the pot, and have now come to me telling me they intend to stop supplying it for her sake.), have told me that whenever she gets together with them, which is becoming a lot more than her seeing me, she polishes off an entire 6 pack of beer to herself, and that's not counting the 3 or 4 beers she's having during the week. This is definitely more than what the doctor ordered.
So here's what I want:
1. For her to cut back on drinking to what the doctor has said is acceptable
2. Give up pot for the sake of her health
3. Lose the 30 or so lbs that she's packed on over the past year and get back to a healthier weight.
I can't get her to listen. So I forsee three ways to get through to her.
1. Tell her friends to voice their concerns to her, because right now they're not going to say anything, just stop enabling her to misbehave during her visits. She'll listen to them though, as I'm only the boyfriend, and they're friends of 10 years.
2. Tell her parents. This is, in my opinion both the best and worst option. It's the best because her parents will nail her to the wall, and stop her from being able to get access to the pot, booze, and probably regulate what she's eating a bit better (Though they let her get this heavy, so I'm really hoping on that one). Worst, however, because I know that'd infuriate her, and is really like treating her like a child. However, I'm running out of options.
3. Issue an ultimatum. I personally hate this option, but it might just define whether this relationship is really worth it. Because if she won't make those positive changes for me, after I've bent over backwards during this recovery time for her, I should stop wasting my time. So if I go with this option I'll pick a day when she's sober, then say look, I need these 3 things from you, or I'm gone at the end of July. I'm sick to death of fighting you on this.
So what I'm looking for, is primarily a female opinion on how you'd feel if your boyfriend wanted you to take better care of yourself, and whether you'd dump is . Second, a general opinion on which of the 3 options I've got listed is the best for my situation, given the information provided (I can provide more on request). Third, what I DON'T want to hear is the typical response of 'dump her, she's not worth your time', or 'she's cheating on you to get the pot, sorry bud', or any number of that kind of response. I'm looking to save a relationship with an amazing, but misguided, woman, and that kind of answer isn't going to help!
Thanks in advance for all the advice!