Growing Up with a Parent having Schizophrenia

Growing Up with a Parent having Schizophrenia: Experiences and Resilience in the Offsprings

Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine

April-June, 2013, 35(2): 148–153

By Hesi S. HerbertM. Manjula, and Mariamma Philip1

At Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3775046/

Another Chance: Hope and Health for the Alcoholic Family

Another Chance: Hope and Health for the Alcoholic Family, by Sharon Wegscheider-Cruse. (1989)

From Amazon.com: “The second edition of this classic work on recovery for alcohol families updates and expands the original, which won a Marty Mann Award as an outstanding contribution on alcohol communications. The first ten chapters of Another Chance pull the curtain back on the alcoholic family. We meet its cast of characters: the Dependent, the Enabler, the Hero, the Scapegoat, the Lost Child, the Mascot. The author then spells out a treatment plan for halting the downward spiral of alcoholism — a powerful blend of the Twelve Steps pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous, the Family Reconstruction process developed by Virginia Satir, Wegscheider-Cruse’s innovative and eclectic approach to therapy, and her own recovery from co-dependency. The second edition also addresses adult children of alcoholics, spirituality, and co-dependent therapists.”

How Addiction Impacts the Family

How Addiction Impacts the Family: 6 Family Roles in a Dysfunctional or Alcoholic Family

Why is addiction considered a family disease?

By Sharon Martin, LCSW
~ 3 min read

https://blogs.psychcentral.com/imperfect/2017/05/how-addiction-impacts-the-family-6-family-roles-in-a-dysfunctional-or-alcoholic-family/

You Don’t Outgrow the Effects of an Alcoholic Parent

You Don’t Outgrow the Effects of an Alcoholic Parent

By Sharon Martin, LCSW
~ 4 min read

At Psychcentral.com

https://blogs.psychcentral.com/imperfect/2016/06/you-dont-outgrow-the-effects-of-an-alcoholic-parent/

How Children of Alcoholic Parents Can Be Profoundly Affected

How Children of Alcoholic Parents Can Be Profoundly Affected

The emotional toll of having an alcoholic parent may carry into adulthood.

By Buddy T | Reviewed by Richard N. Fogoros, MD

Updated February 20, 2018

At Verywellmind.com

https://www.verywellmind.com/the-effects-of-parental-alcoholism-on-children-67233

Alcoholism and Family/Marital Problems

Alcoholism and Family/Marital Problems

One of the hallmarks of individuals who abuse alcohol is that they will begin to face problems in all, or nearly all, facets of their lives.

How Alcohol Causes Marital Issues?

At American Addiction Centers.org

https://americanaddictioncenters.org/alcoholism-treatment/family-marital-problems/

The Favorite Child: How a Favorite Impacts Every Family Member for Life

The Favorite Child: How a Favorite Impacts Every Family Member for Life 

by Ellen Weber Libby, PhD. (2010)

From Amazon:  For more than thirty years, veteran clinical psychologist Ellen Weber Libby has been helping successful, often-powerful clients in Washington, DC—a place known for its outsized personalities—deal with their personal problems. One pattern that has emerged out of some 60,000 hours of therapy is what she calls “the favorite child complex.” In this groundbreaking book, she describes in intimate detail how being the favorite child can confer both great advantages and also significant emotional handicaps.
While many of Dr. Libby’s clients are successful because of their favorite-child status—they have been brought up to believe that they can do anything and are unafraid of challenges— they suffer from an array of personality problems. Behind the outward appearance of money, power, charm, and attractive looks, they feel an intense pressure to maintain the façade at all costs. Sometimes their ability to tell the truth becomes shaky; sometimes their intimate relationships are elusive. In a series of chapters that offer insightful vignettes from actual therapy sessions (the identities of clients are disguised), Dr. Libby explores why parents, consciously or unconsciously, choose a favorite child, as well as the long-term effects of being the favorite son or daughter of either or both parents. She also discusses family situations where parents have successfully made each of their children feel favored and have instilled in their children a healthy emotional balance. She details parental skills and family processes that increase the likelihood of this type of success and that, most importantly, reduce the risk of the favorite child’s curse—power corrupted. Illuminating for adults trying to come to terms with their own emotional baggage as well as parents seeking the best way to rear their children, The Favorite Child makes for rewarding reading.