“I love a person, addicted to alcohol. When he’s sober - this is a wonderful lover, husband, father, partner. A question of treatment is no longer relevant, we discussed it lots of times.
He’s a doctor himself - it’s impossible to persuade him or cure, we tried. Should I keep relations or it’s better to quit them, until it’s not too late? Recurring drunkenness, fear for myself and child, shame, and everything good we have, I wrote about before. Who faced this problem and which decision was made?”
Life with alcoholic is like a love triangle - you, he, and his addiction. Your partner’s dangerous habit assimilates his time, forces and attention. He cannot belong to you, as he’s not free.
Alcoholic is not necessarily a man, who is wandering around staggering with a bottle and gets drunk till he loses consciousness. If he doesn’t drink since morning till evening, this doesn’t mean he’s not alcohol addicted. Alcoholic - is the one who cannot live without alcohol. Of course, a bottle of beer doesn’t make him an alcoholic, if he drinks it on a day off. But several bottles of beer every day after work - this is alcoholism already. It’s very difficult to discover sings of this disease on the first stage. Everything usually starts with controlled drunkenness: on every party, presentation, banquet, supper with clients, or at home, “to relax”. Unfortunately, everyone, who takes alcoholic drinks systematically in a company, runs a risk to become an alcoholic. And people, predisposed to alcoholism, pass through this stage very quickly.
Majority of alcoholics refuse their addiction categorically. Because admitting it - means agreeing with the fact that you’re helpless, that you live in a constant nightmare and come-down. The most terrible thing in alcoholism is that it deprives a person of a wish to get rid of this bad habit, restricts his ability to feel and share. A person becomes unable to emotional closeness.
If you love an alcoholic, be ready, that following things will appear in your mutual life:
- uncontemplated and inconsequent behavior;
- fits of fury and violence;
- prolonged periods of depression;
- irresponsibility;
- emotional deafness and coldness;
- lowered sexual activity;
- scuffles and scandals;
- constant irritability;
- instability of relations.
If you are married to alcoholic, don’t close your eyes on this problem. Your partner is seriously ill, he needs professional help. This may seem too sharp, but any professional will tell you that patience, understanding and love cannot cure a one from alcoholism. Continuing to be loving and understanding, you indulge his addiction. Judge yourself: he keeps on drinking, changes nothing in his behavior, and you’re always near, solve his problems, read to understand, forgive. Why should he change his habits? Shall he exert himself if everything goes the same way, no matter what he does?
Your partner just doesn’t think about it. Moreover, he’ll refuse his illness. Or he will say he’s not ready yet, that it’s not so easy, that he needs to wait an appropriate moment and so on. All this is an excuse - “a complex of denial”.
It’s very difficult to come out of such relations. You may feel you’re a traitor, delivering a serious blow to your partner. A subconscious sense of guilt may prevent you from breaking these relations, even when your life with him turns to be a hell.
Presence of children in family can complicate the situation even more. Parents, from whom a child is dependent, are too weak to protect him. In fact, such family often is a source of threat and harm for a child, not a source of protection and safety. When parents quarrel with each other or struggle with their problems, they have no time for children. As a result, a child is thirsting for love, not knowing whether he should trust this feeling, and in fact considering himself unworthy of love.
Experience, gained in such family, has a destructive impact on a personality, that’s why those who have such experience are trying to become strong through helping other people. They need ones, whom they can help, to feel themselves in safety. Only this way they can feel themselves necessary. This way the circle is locked. A child, who grew in a family with an alcoholic, often chooses a similar partner for himself, or becomes an alcoholic himself.
Normal love relationships are possible only when a person recovers and gets rid of his harmful addiction. Until he’s not free, he won’t be able to give you what you need. At least, love yourself - leave this person, until the situation becomes worse.
What to do?
- Quit playing a role of a “savior”. Members of a family often try to help an alcoholic to get out of various situations, connected with misuse of alcohol. It’s important to quit all such actions of life-saving immediately, so that an alcoholic would answer for consequences of his drunkenness himself in full measure - as a result, a wish to quit drinking may appear in him.
- Members of a family often try to help an alcoholic to get out of various situations, connected with misuse of alcohol. It’s important to quit all such actions of life-saving immediately, so that an alcoholic would answer for consequences of his drunkenness himself in full measure - as a result, a wish to quit drinking may appear in him.
- Search support for yourself. No matter whether an alcoholic agrees to treatment or not, other people’s support will be helpful for you, and also help of professionals, investigating this problem. Group training will help you to realize that you’re not responsible for your partner’s actions, and that you need to take care of yourself, regardless of agreement of disagreement of alcoholic to treatment.
- Tell you partner that you refuse from living with him. Explain him that you will be with him only under one clause - if he applies for help immediately. Be ready to fulfill your threat. If a partner doesn’t start actions immediately, break with him for keeps. Don’t come back until he recovers completely, until his behavior changes radically.
- Be ready to help. Collect information on various methods of treatment beforehand. If an alcoholic agrees to treatment, offer him to go to the first visit to a doctor together. However, here it’s important not to take responsibility on yourself, otherwise, everything will go the same way. A partner should understand that everything depends only on him.
Am I to blame?
There’re several reasons, according to which people are inclined to keep on such relations. Moreover, often a woman, who parted one alcoholic, finds another one some time later??¦
- Family story
Life with alcoholic is like a daily road trip. Raises and slumps, surprises, maneuvers, abruptness and instability of relationships cause constant shaking of a nervous system. If a serious trauma takes place, then the next day a person may feel a certain emotional raise. This happens because a body sense shock, and adrenalin is thrown to blood in extremely big quantities. It’s adrenalin that causes euphoria. If you’re struggling with depression, then you are unconsciously searching for situations, keeping you in excited state. If you grew in a family of alcoholics, then your depression, most likely, has 2 reasons: your past and your genetic inheritance. Excitement of relations with a person, suffering from such disease, may attract you a lot.
Life with alcoholic is like a daily road trip. Raises and slumps, surprises, maneuvers, abruptness and instability of relationships cause constant shaking of a nervous system. If a serious trauma takes place, then the next day a person may feel a certain emotional raise. This happens because a body sense shock, and adrenalin is thrown to blood in extremely big quantities. It’s adrenalin that causes euphoria. If you’re struggling with depression, then you are unconsciously searching for situations, keeping you in excited state. If you grew in a family of alcoholics, then your depression, most likely, has 2 reasons: your past and your genetic inheritance.
- Fear for responsibility for yourself
You want to feel your own superiority, magnitude. When you have got near your partner, whose life is chaotic, you start feeling better, more intelligent, more efficient. Playing a role of a hero, you close your eyes on your disadvantages, your own weakness. Chumming in with people, whose problems require solution, or getting to chaotic, uncertain and emotionally disadvantage situations, you avoid thoughts of responsibility for your own life. Going deep into dramatic problems, you refuse from looking inside of yourself and making wise decisions concerning important aspects of your life.
- Syndrome of a life-saver
You need to command. When you get to a situation, when you need to save your partner, you gain huge power over him. This is one of the most efficient methods of manipulation over people. Unconsciously such person is guided by fear of loneliness and unfaithfulness, thus he provides his safety, taking key positions. You need a partner, who needs to be rescued all the time - only this way you can feel you’re competent and protected. You use your partner in your own way, not less then he uses you.
- Love is a narcotic
You use your relationships like a narcotic, avoiding the feelings, you would have to feel in loneliness. The more agonizing your communication with a man becomes, the stronger it distracts you from reality. The most terrible relations serve the same reason, as a very string narcotic does for a complete drug addict. But you become unsociable without a partner, whom you can accentuate your attention on.
- Idealization
You invent an image of an ideal partner and live in your world of fancies. In this world a partner, whom you’re unhappy with, turns to be your dream man, but only with your help. You concentrate not on a real man, but on your fancy about how good he could be and you’re ready to do everything in your power for this. It seems to you that a happy moment will come in a little. But a person can change himself only if he wishes this himself.
If you’re attracted to people, suffering from serious problems, ask yourself: whether I mix up compassion with love? Whether I’m inclined to co-dependence? A key word in people’s relations is respect. You should not only love your partner, but also respect him, be proud of him. Take your time to decide what you want from love relations, and then make a decisive step towards yourself.
If life drives you into a corner and you don’t know how to find a way out of the situation - tell about your problems in our blog or forum. Our psychologist-consultant and readers will value the situation from their direction, tell their opinion and suggest ways of their solution.
Gloria
June 22nd, 2009 at 2:56 am
I am feeling very depressed. I find myself living with an alcoholic. He is a wonderful man when he is not drinking, but he becomes nasty, ugly and very critical and emotional abusive when he is drinking. I have a 6 year old grandson that I love dearly. I do not want him to be negatively affected by alcoholic abuse. My love is a very good person, but he is ex-military, combat soldier.
sarah
December 24th, 2010 at 2:56 am
Hello Gloria so sorry your feeling so depressed.You are certainly not alone loving a man with this awful addiction.Unfortunaly life will not change all the time your man is drinking .Pleae ask yourself where you see yourself in five years and if this relationship is destroyng you its time to get out .He wont stop untill he has a consequence to his behaviour and he may not stop then. Remeber children are prescious and need love and secruity so protect your granchild. seek out people who can support you.
Shay
January 29th, 2011 at 1:33 am
I know what you’re feeling and you’re not alone. I’ve been with my common-law alcoholic husband for 7 years, and have heard all of the promises, but haven’t seen any action taken. I have 2 young children with him. He can be a great man, good dad, helpful husband but he cannot give up alcohol. When he drinks he is emotionally and mentally abusive, and doesn’t remember it when he is sober. He blames me for not “taking care of him”, I am in a codependent relationship and have been enabling him to drink. He has put financial strain on the family and the kids are suffering. There has been many times when we have had $20 to our name and he spends it on cigarettes and booze (this is when the kids need milk or diapers). I have made plans in 4 weeks to take the kids and leave him. I am giving up everything to start over (house, good job, community, friends). I will be depending on my friends and family to help me through this, they are more than willing to help as they want to see me happy. I know that this is the best decision for myself and my kids. I am scared but have a right to freedom and life. He doesn’t know that I am leaving, he will find out when I am gone- this is the only way and easiest for me emotionally. I love him dearly, and wish he would change but the bottom line is his constant pattern of drinking. He won’t stop- promises and words mean nothing. I am a bundle of nerves, trying to hold it together for the kids, to keep him from suspecting anything, leading a double life- pretending everything is ok when it is not. After 7 years of trying to talk to him, trying to negotiate with him, trying to help him, hoping he would change, I’ve finally saw the situation for what it is. You can’t have a relationship with an alcoholic, alcohol will always come first, and eventually you will begin to develop resentment and anger. It is heart breaking and it hurts, but PLEASE LEAVE NOW, you deserve better than this, so does your grandson. BIG HUGS, I’ll keep you posted on how my situation goes.
Cindy
June 4th, 2011 at 6:11 am
Dear Shay, I’m a 43 yr old mom with a 15 yr old son. I’ve been married to an alcoholic for 24 yrs. I have the same plans you have. We are leaving in 10 days to go 600 miles back home. We are going to have to depend on family and friends to start over. I’m scared to death. It’s taken me this long to realize he not going to change. I am so sick of all of this. I deserve better. The drunk caught on to my running away plan. I told him we were going for a two week visit. But now he knows. He lives in a motel in a seedy part of town. He left me!!! He chose alcohol. He has no relationship with our son. Our son hurt for a ling time but I explained to him we all don’t get everything we want in life. He doesn’t get a dad. His dad is sick with a disease. He’s incapable of thinking clearly. He may never ever think right. Good luck to you and your children. I hope we both get what we deserve in life. I’ll choose more carefully next time. My departure date is June 12, 2011. Take care
cjp
June 14th, 2011 at 12:47 am
I hope your new beginnin is going well. You are in my thoughts
debbie
August 3rd, 2011 at 6:25 pm
best of luck, i wasnt married to one, but left one after 5 years…only someone who has been through this can understand….thanx everyone for your helpful insight .
kim
October 2nd, 2011 at 5:34 am
I am so lonely and lost…Not sure what to do “my Alcoholic” is gentle kind intelligent guy who is mt best my who I love dearly-we shared everything-As far as I know I haven’t lost him to another lady, but to the bottom of the a bottle-he is emotionally disconnected, distance and now lies about everything-he is emotionally empty but alcohol full. I am disabled unable to drive and live in a very rural area ie: no buses taxis etc. I don’t feel I have anything to offer another not just due to disability add all I feel that has been taken from me-which I allowed to be taken. The drunken guy has beaten me, accused, threatened, violated embarrassed dis-guarded etc,& he is lucky enough not to recall it, although I’m not so fortunate. I feel he thinks no one will like him if he wasn’t the life of the party?! Which I can understand but its when the party is over, the beer(s) straight shots of vodka after work. I’m so fed up with all of it…I could comment more but am hoping one the professionals, or individuals on here may contacted me,& I may share more, so I may stop feeling as through I am breaking a trust sharing something so personal that doesn’t just involve me, being “two-faced”. I honestly don’t want to hurt him that said I am very sad not sure where to turn and feel I deserve better & have no idea how or what to do. Lost in a world of my making…why I allowed this to happen is lost to me….not sure if I can actually click post, scared to death
Claire
October 2nd, 2011 at 6:44 pm
At the moment I am hiding in my study, curtains drawn and wondering when my partner is next going to attempt to kick the front door in or start screaming abuse at me through the window, you see, I have locked him outside, so far he’s been quiet for about 20 minutes but it’s only a matter of time really.
This latest episode started yesterday afternoon, I bought his sister a gift and card to be sent to her house to congratulate her on the birth of her son a week ago. I knew that my partner wouldn’t like me doing it, but when I suggested that I paid for it on my credit card he said no, so I did it anyway as it’s embarrassing not to at least recognise that this baby has been born even if we haven’t seen it.
After that he’s just been going on and on about how I disrespect him and has been drinking for the best part of 24 hours now so we’ve reached the phase of being violent and abusive and I am on the point of having to phone the police for help again as I haven’t healed from the last time he hit me (4 weeks ago) and am so scared that he’ll go for that place again.
My 10 year marriage broke up and all too quickly I got into a relationship with this man who I had been at school with years ago. I have an 11 year old daughter and he has two of similar age, at first I thought he was wonderful but everything changed when he moved in last February.
Steadily he became more possessive and jealous and controlling too, I quickly lost touch with my few friends because he thought that I would be unfaithful as his last girlfriend had been. He drank heavily and became verbally abusive and started to break things when in a temper, such as my mobile phone and he slammed doors and threw things at me. He has also stolen money from me to buy alcohol.In November 2010 he drunk drove my car, hit another car and ran off, thankfully nobody was hurt but my car was written off with no money for me to buy another one. I live in a very rural location and depended on my car to get my daughter to school, luckily my ex husband bought me another car, but the stress of being prosecuted for the crime meant several months of drunkenness and violent abusive behaviour from my partner.
Over the months things just got worse and worse and even though we got engaged on Christmas day 2010 he violently assaulted me on the 27th in front of my daughter, each and every time I have forgiven him.
In January 2011 he strangled me whilst drunk on whiskey, my daughter witnessed the whole thing and the police came and tried to take him away but he ran off. Eventually his Dad came and took him to a hotel but in the end I had to take him back as we were on benefits at the time and I couldn’t afford for them to stop.
February was the court case so he was drunk and violent then again but from then on I have been trying to put up with it without anyone else finding out, my husband had said that he would take my daughter away if anything like January happened again, which it hasn’t…not in front of her anyway.
Now, my partner seems to binge drink and have a crisis when my daughter is at her Dad’s, like this weekend. She is due home at 8pm and I don’t know what she is coming home to, I don’t know whether my partner will just stay in the caravan in the garden or whether he will still be drunk enough to carry on when she is here. I sit here hoping that he will just go to sleep and that I won’t have to see him until tomorrow when he will probably be back to normal.
I have been keeping a diary this year as I recognised that he was having an episode once a month and wondered if I could plot a trend or things to look out for, I wanted to help him because I do love him very much and for most of the time he is a wonderful person. I am now considering whether I should try to put my experiences into a book, not for publishing but just to give me a place to put all this.
I told him an hour ago that I don’t want to be with him anymore that I don’t love him when he’s like this and that he keeps being like this, he just trashed the kitchen and that’s why I’ve had to lock him out.
I have no family and no friends, I live in a remote place and I have nowhere to run to, although there have been times when I have ran into the fields just to be safe from him. Last night I spent two hours parked in a layby because I I was too scared to come home. He doesn’t understand any of my feelings, he is only concerned about his own and how bad I am, how ugly I am, how everything is my fault. He is a cliche and I am a doormat.
Last month I got a job because we needed the money and I needed the freedom, he was drunk for the whole first week that I worked and I never knew what I was going to come home to each night. he is convinced that I am having an affair and accuses me of having a lover often, I haven’t of course.
I read other people’s stories with hope that I will come across a happy ending but there are so few, some escape, many stay but I never hear of anyone that actually manages to cure these men and I don’t think that I am going to be a success story either. Today I can honestly say that I hate this man with a passion, that he scares me so much that I am frightened to speak to him and that he has turned me from an outgoing bubbly person into an appeaser; a facilitator and a victim and I hate him for that.
Over time I have discovered that I was not the first woman to suffer at his hands, his ex wife had to flee the marital home with the children and didn’t go back until he had moved out..six months! He has a record of violence against both men and women and has put his own children in jeopardy in the past, but part of me still believes that he can change and in some ways he is changing, but each time he drinks vodka he becomes a monster that just wants to destroy and invariably it is my home and me that bears the brunt of his anger and rage.
I live in hope but also expect the worst, and that’s the best I can do at the moment. He has me over a barrel financially and this is my house not his so I can hardly leave him.
I have to just have faith that one day a month will go by and he won’t have drunk, that’s all I have, that and the secure knowledge from the stories I read on the internet, that at least I am not alone.
Bless you you, Claire xxx