I got used to the yelling, the uncertainty, the fear of not knowing who was going to come home. I learned to hide my pain until I realized there was another way to live.

I grew up in a home with addiction. I didn’t understand it at the time—I only knew that something wasn’t right. The feeling of uncertainty, of fear disguised as normality, of a silence that weighed too much. Will he come home today? Will he be okay? Will there be yelling? Will he keep his promise or will this be another disappointment?
My childhood was filled with unanswered questions and a guilt that wasn’t mine, yet I carried it as if it were. Because that’s what children do: if something is wrong at home, we assume it’s our fault. We think that if we were better, more obedient, more worthy of love, everything would be different. We believe that if we try hard enough, if we don’t bother anyone, if we get good grades, if we are the best, then maybe… maybe my father would stop drinking. Maybe my mother would smile more. Maybe my family would be normal.
But no. Alcoholism is not a problem that can be solved with a child’s love. And even though we understand this as adults, the wound remains because we grew up thinking that we were the problem.
Addiction Doesn’t Just Destroy the Addict
For a long time, the focus in recovery was on the addict. "If the addict heals, the family heals too," they said. But that’s not true. The damage is already done. And the children, the spouse, the parents... they are all affected. Because growing up in a home with addiction is like growing up in a minefield. You never know when something will explode. You never know if today will be a good day or one of those days. Childhood becomes a constant state of vigilance, an endless need to adapt, to predict, to survive. And that changed me.
I learned to be independent because I had no other choice. I learned to stay silent because no one wanted to listen. I learned to hide my sadness because, to the world, my life looked normal. No one noticed anything. No one asked.
Alcoholism doesn’t just affect the one who drinks. It affects everyone around them. In my home, that meant endless fights, broken promises, absences that hurt more than the yelling. It meant forgotten birthdays, missed important events, disappearing without explanation. And even when he was physically present, his mind wasn’t there. The emptiness he carried felt heavier than his absence.
The Silent Loneliness
I had no one to talk to about this. My life looked normal from the outside. No one noticed anything. I was an excellent student, I had no visible problems, but inside me, a silent sadness kept growing. I learned to keep quiet because talking felt like betraying my parents. The thought of sharing my pain filled me with guilt, as if it meant speaking badly of them. And that’s how children of chaos become experts at repressing, at pretending, at surviving without making a sound.
I grew up with questions no one ever answered. Why isn’t my dad here? Why doesn’t he come to my school events? Why does my mom cry? Why don’t they hug me? Why don’t we laugh together? Why isn’t our home like my friends’ homes?
And the answer I found was the worst one of all: "It must be my fault." Because when you’re a child and the world doesn’t make sense, you assume the problem is you. It’s easier to believe that something is wrong with you than to accept that your parents are broken. So I tried to be perfect. But it was never enough.
Growing up this way leaves scars. We become adults with low self-esteem, disguised as self-sufficiency. We become hyper-vigilant, hyper-responsible, addicted to relationships where we feel needed because we don’t know how to be loved just for existing. We feel different, defective. We fear abandonment and will do anything to avoid it. We mistake love for rescue. And the worst part? For decades, we think it’s just us, that we are the broken ones.
Until we discover we are not alone, that there’s a pattern, that there are millions of us.
We are Children of Chaos.
The List That Showed Me I Wasn’t Alone
When I found the Laundry List from Adult Children of Alcoholics, something inside me broke and rebuilt itself at the same time. There were my defects, described with the clarity of someone who had walked the same hell. It wasn’t just me. It wasn’t my fault. I wasn’t broken. I was programmed.
We isolate ourselves because we learned it’s safer. We seek constant approval because we never felt enough. We fear criticism because we already judge ourselves too harshly. We are drawn to people with addictions or dysfunctional patterns because it’s what we know. We take on excessive responsibility, carrying the world on our shoulders because, as children, we were made to feel it was our burden. We struggle to set boundaries. We feel guilty for standing up for ourselves. We become addicted to intense emotions because peace feels strange. We confuse love with pity. We repress our emotions until we forget how to feel.
And the worst part? We learn to act. To pretend. To smile when we’re breaking inside. To appear normal when we don’t even know what normal is.
Healing Is a Choice
The hardest part was realizing that I couldn’t save my dad. Or my mom. Or anyone. That healing was my responsibility and mine alone. And to do it, I had to forgive.
I didn’t need my father to apologize to forgive him. I didn’t need my mother to acknowledge her codependency to understand her. I didn’t need anyone to validate my pain for it to be real. I only needed to understand that they, too, were Children of Chaos. That they, too, grew up with their own wounds, without tools, without knowing how to do better. That they did the best they could with what they had. And that my story, no matter how painful, was not a life sentence, but an opportunity.
Today, I have a healthy relationship with my parents. Today, I have a family where love and understanding come first. Today, my husband, who also battled alcoholism, is in recovery, and together we are breaking cycles. Today, my daughter is growing up in a home without fear or secrets, in a home with presence, words, and hugs.
Today, I know I was never alone. That I have never been alone. That there are millions of us who have lived the same story, who carry the same scars, and who are learning to heal together.
And that’s why I’m writing this. So that you, the one reading this, know that you are not alone. That you are not broken. That you are not doomed to repeat the past. You can redefine your pain. You can heal. You can let go. You can forgive. And you can live a life not defined by chaos, but by the conscious choice to be happy.
Because yes, Child of Chaos, but also Child of Healing.

If you, or anybody you know, lives or has lived a similar situation, please know that you are not alone. Share this article and come join our community Hijos del Caos.
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