1. You cannot recover from depression while on Methadone. It is a depressant.
2. Your son should be away from the family environment, which is likely a major part of his problem. He needs to be detoxed from the Methadone, gotten onto a sane regime of antidepressants, and either sent to treatment or to a halfway house. From there, he needs to be allowed to sink or swim on his own.
3. You and your husband need to get into a program for codependents, to learn about boundaries and why you are also part of the problem. That may seem harsh, but only because you do not understand the addictive/codependent merry-go-round. If you really want to help your son recover, you need to know about those things.
See the links below for more information.
NO. No one has the RIGHT to abuse you whether or not you have an addiction or not. Talk to him and tell him that whether he has noticed or not, he's been verbally abusing you and that it is not right. Instead he should be there to get you some help. If he's rather ignorant about it, then talk to someone closer you know, they might be able to help you. But no one, NEVER ever can abuse you, whether you have an addiction problem or not.
He is verbally displaying an emotion of embarrassment, boredom, annoyance, or sometimes depression. Listen to his tone and this will give you the meaning he is giving.
Yes. As soon as you can.
Verbally is spelled v-e-r-b-a-l-l-y.
Verbally is an adverb.
how do muslims communicate verbally
Simple: One keeps hoping he will change. Guaranteed he wont except to the worse. Abuse is progressive just like addiction. They also become more adept as time wears on at making their behavior look rational and the one being abused look crazy (just like addiction).
Yes "verbally can be used in a sentence"
Hyperbole rhymes with verbally.
You have to be kidding. NO. You cannot sign verbally. To sign is to write your name.
She verbally expressed her appreciation for their hard work and dedication.
If you have to ask... Then you are probably being abused verbally.