Loving Lions
Parents

Communication Issues

I don't know how to talk to them anymore

7 min read

Situation Recognition

Addiction fundamentally changes communication patterns. Normal parent-child interaction becomes impossible when every conversation triggers defensiveness, conflict, or manipulation. Many parents feel they've lost the ability to connect with their child entirely.

Michael Wilson's Insight

"You're not trying to communicate with your child—you're trying to communicate with someone whose brain has been changed by addiction. Different rules apply." Expecting normal communication during active addiction creates constant frustration and failure.

Comprehensive Guidance

Why normal communication fails:

  • Addiction creates cognitive defensiveness about any perceived criticism
  • Their brain prioritizes addiction protection over relationship connection
  • Past communication failures create defensive patterns
  • Normal parenting approaches trigger addiction defensiveness
  • You're trying to reach someone who isn't emotionally available

New communication foundation:

  • Communicate love without requiring response
  • Share your feelings without demanding acknowledgment
  • Set boundaries without requiring agreement
  • Avoid addiction-focused conversations until they're ready
  • Focus on behavior rather than motivation or character

Implementation Steps

  1. Lower expectations for emotional connection during active addiction
  1. Practice communicating love without conditions or requirements
  1. Learn phrases that don't trigger defensive responses
  1. Set aside addiction discussions unless they initiate
  1. Focus on preserving relationship possibility for recovery

What to Expect

Relief when you stop trying to force connection that isn't possible during active addiction. Small improvements in interaction when defensive patterns decrease. Normal communication often returns naturally when recovery begins and their brain can process relationship connection again.

Professional Resources

East Point Behavioral Health: (855) 887-6237 - Family communication coaching for addiction situations

Family therapy when recovery makes emotional availability possible

Key Takeaways

  • You're communicating with someone whose brain has been changed by addiction
  • Lower expectations for emotional connection during active addiction
  • Communicate love without requiring response or acknowledgment
  • Focus on preserving relationship possibility for recovery
  • Normal communication often returns naturally when recovery begins

This guidance is educational and not a substitute for professional medical, legal, or clinical advice. If you or someone you love is in crisis, see crisis resources.