Yesterday I broke up with a friend.
This friend — I’ll call her Debbie— and I had met shortly after I’d discovered drugs in my house and that my husband of six years, significant other for nine, had been secretly abusing drugs for nearly our entire relationship.
We quickly became close, and she became the one voice of reason I would listen to: “Tara, that sh*t is nuts. You need to leave him. You know you need to leave him. I’m just telling you what you know you need to hear.”
Living with an active drug addict for so long and not even knowing it, I’d become super codependent, awash with his disease. My mantra for years had been, it’s not that bad. When he punched a wall, called me a bitch, or was physically but not emotionally present: it’s not that bad. it’s not that bad. it’s not that bad.
But after Debbie and I became friends and I kept finding out more secrets, like how my ex-husband had run up over $20k in a month on a credit card in just his name or embezzled another $8k from his employer, I couldn’t use that mantra anymore because Debbie would tell me, “It IS that bad. YOU NEED TO LEAVE.”
WATCH: Mamamia confessions – relationship dealbreakers. Post continues below.
Top Comments
I wonder if she was the inspiration for the saying “Debbie downer”.
I feel like you use people a little bit. Take what you need then spit them out when you are done.
Is that you Debbie????
Actually, looking at her body of work just here on this site, it's clear the author had a tough childhood with a narcissistic mother growing up, and that's had a horrible effect on the sort of relationships she's entered into later in life. It sounds very much like she's still working stuff out for herself.