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Communication & Conflict

They blame me for their addiction

7 min read

By Michael J. Wilson Jr., CIP, CFI · Author of Loving Lions, Interventionist, and Family-Recovery Specialist · Last reviewed June 19, 2026

Quick answer

Dealing with attempts to make you responsible for their substance use and recovery progress.

Situation Recognition

They consistently blame you for their substance use - claiming you stress them out, don't support them enough, or somehow caused their addiction. You find yourself constantly defending your actions and feeling responsible for their recovery outcomes.

Michael Wilson's Insight

"Blaming others is addiction's way of avoiding responsibility. While relationships can be stressful, no one else causes someone's addiction. Don't defend yourself against addiction's accusations - simply state the truth: 'I didn't cause your addiction, I can't control it, and I can't cure it.'"

Comprehensive Guidance

Why addiction blames family members:

  • Taking responsibility for addiction feels overwhelming and shameful
  • Blaming others allows continued substance use without guilt
  • Addiction needs external excuses to justify internal compulsions
  • Family members are safe targets who won't abandon them completely
  • It shifts focus from their behavior to your behavior

How to respond to blame:

  • Don't defend yourself or provide evidence of your support
  • State simply: "I didn't cause this, I can't control it, and I can't cure it"
  • Refuse to take responsibility for their recovery progress
  • Set boundaries: "I won't be blamed for your choices"
  • Focus on your own behavior and choices, not theirs
  • Remember: their recovery is their responsibility, regardless of relationship dynamics

Implementation Steps

  1. Stop defending yourself against addiction accusations
  1. Use the phrase: "I'm not responsible for your addiction or your recovery"
  1. Set a clear boundary: "I won't be blamed for your choices"
  1. Walk away from conversations that become blame sessions
  1. Focus on your own healing rather than proving you're supportive enough

What to Expect

Escalation of blame attempts when you stop defending yourself. Accusations that you don't care or aren't being supportive. Potential relief when you stop carrying responsibility for their addiction outcomes. Clearer boundaries around what is and isn't your responsibility in the relationship.

Professional Resources

East Point Behavioral Health: (855) 887-6237 - Family therapy for dealing with addiction blame and guilt

Individual Therapy: Process guilt and learn healthy responses to blame

Al-Anon: Support groups focused on the "3 C's" - you didn't cause it, can't control it, can't cure it

Key Takeaways

Blaming others is addiction's way of avoiding responsibility
You didn't cause their addiction, can't control it, and can't cure it
Don't defend yourself against addiction accusations
Set clear boundaries: "I won't be blamed for your choices"
Their recovery is their responsibility regardless of relationship dynamics

Ask Michael

They blame me for their addiction

Talk this through with Michael, the author — he’ll pick it up right where you are. Included with Premium.

Need Personal Guidance?

This scenario provides general guidance. For your specific situation, consider professional support from the East Point team.

This guidance is educational and reflects the author’s lived and professional experience. It is not a substitute for professional medical, clinical, or legal advice. If you or someone you love is in immediate danger, call 988 or 911.