Lesson 1.1 – Understanding Powerlessness
Step 1: We admitted we were powerless over addiction—that our lives had become unmanageable.
As family members, we often feel responsible to fix or manage the person we love who is struggling with addiction. We may try pleading, threatening, rescuing, or tightly controlling. Despite our efforts, the addiction continues—and so does our exhaustion.
Step 1 is not giving up on our loved one; it is giving up the illusion that we can control their addiction. Only God can truly heal and restore. We begin by admitting our limits and shifting our focus to what we can actually steward: our responses, boundaries, and walk with God.
What Powerlessness Is (and Is Not)
- Powerlessness is admitting we cannot make someone stop using.
- Powerlessness is recognizing our attempts to control often create more chaos.
- Powerlessness is not apathy or abandonment.
- Powerlessness is not having no choices; we still own our actions and boundaries.
“Lord, we confess that we have tried to control what is beyond our power. Today we admit we are powerless over addiction and that our lives have become unmanageable. Begin Your restoring work in our family, one heart at a time. In Jesus’ name, amen.”

