Co-Dependency: The Myth That Made Mothers the Problem
Let's retire this word too.
I’ve come to really question the word co-dependent.
It’s another one of those labels that lands heavy, the kind that takes something deeply human and turns it into something shameful.
According to Webster’s Dictionary, co-dependency is “a psychological condition marked by low self-esteem and a strong desire for approval.”
Really?
Because when a mother spends sleepless nights trying to keep her child alive in a system that offers almost no safety net, that’s not low self-esteem. That’s courage.
And when she calls rehabs, doctors, and treatment programs, begging someone to help, that’s not a strong desire for approval. That’s advocacy.
The truth is, we don’t hover because we crave control.
We hover because we’re scared they’ll die if we don’t.
We don’t rescue because we’re addicted to rescuing.
We rescue because systems keep failing, and no one else shows up in time.
What used to be called loyalty, protection, and mothering got renamed co-dependency.
And somehow, families became the ones who needed treatment and not the systems that left them doing it all alone.
So no, I don’t buy it.
We don’t need to recover from loving our children.
We need to recover from being blamed for their suffering.
When addiction enters a family, mothers adapt in every way we know how.
We don’t need to detach from love, we need to find new ways to hold it safely. We need information, boundaries, and support that honor our humanity, not shame it.
Let’s retire this word, too.
Let’s stop calling love a disorder.
Because we are not the problem. We are the proof that love can survive even this.
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It’s sad how many people try to pathologize our love for our children😡.