DH finished a bottle of Prosecco last night

Anonymous
If he does this all the time, I’d be concerned. Once in a blue moon isn’t an issue.
Anonymous
Wow! If my DH brought a bottle home as a surprise on my birthday I'd have one glass and then ask him to bring another glass to our bedroom. What message wasn't clear to you?
Anonymous
uh Proseco is like water i am sure I could drink 3 bottles maybe 4 if I had something to eat
Anonymous
The fact that this concerns you enough to ask about it, and act like he is the problem when he tried to do something nice for you, is telling.
Anonymous
I drank a bottle of Prosecco myself at brunch this past weekend. Sound the alarms!
Anonymous
I drank a whole bottle of cabernet last night! I didn't realize how low in alcohol content it was when I opened it - I usually like pretty heavy wine - but it was like water. Meh, who cares....
Anonymous
I can name at least a half dozen moms at my kids school that drink a bottle of wine every single night.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The fact that this concerns you enough to ask about it, and act like he is the problem when he tried to do something nice for you, is telling.

this
Anonymous
My birthday yesterday too, HBD!

I have unintentionally had a whole bottle of Prosecco to myself a couple times and wasn’t dangerously drunk. Since your dh is a daily drinker, I’m sure it was fine.
Anonymous
Are you sure he's a man? Drinking prosecco? Men don't drink that stuff.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure he's a man? Drinking prosecco? Men don't drink that stuff.


I enjoy the odd campari spritz. Real men don't care what others think about their choice of drink.
Anonymous
Half a glass of wine and then went to bed early on your birthday? I guess you had to be up early to check up on his drinking habits.

Lucky guy...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:For a man 2-3 isn't. I know people that have poor health because they won't stop drinking soda, and eating chips or other junk food. Or refuse to lose weight. I drink at least 2 glasses of wine a night, my husband doesn't. However, he's on 3 prescriptions. My doctor recently told me to keep doing what I'm doing based on my labs etc.

Now if he downs a bottle every night it's time to curb it.


Aren't you worried about the carcinogens in wine end the link to breast cancer?

My mom has breast cancer, and she drank 2-3 glasses of wine for decades. She was always thin, ate very healthy, physically fit, and great labs. And now she's dying of breast cancer. Her cancer wasn't genetically predisposed, so I'm blaming the wine habit.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:For a man 2-3 isn't. I know people that have poor health because they won't stop drinking soda, and eating chips or other junk food. Or refuse to lose weight. I drink at least 2 glasses of wine a night, my husband doesn't. However, he's on 3 prescriptions. My doctor recently told me to keep doing what I'm doing based on my labs etc.

Now if he downs a bottle every night it's time to curb it.


Aren't you worried about the carcinogens in wine end the link to breast cancer?

My mom has breast cancer, and she drank 2-3 glasses of wine for decades. She was always thin, ate very healthy, physically fit, and great labs. And now she's dying of breast cancer. Her cancer wasn't genetically predisposed, so I'm blaming the wine habit.


Could just as easily have been carcinogens in the environment. Without more, blaming the wine feels like a modern version of thinking God afflicts people for their sinful behavior.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:For a man 2-3 isn't. I know people that have poor health because they won't stop drinking soda, and eating chips or other junk food. Or refuse to lose weight. I drink at least 2 glasses of wine a night, my husband doesn't. However, he's on 3 prescriptions. My doctor recently told me to keep doing what I'm doing based on my labs etc.

Now if he downs a bottle every night it's time to curb it.


Aren't you worried about the carcinogens in wine end the link to breast cancer?

My mom has breast cancer, and she drank 2-3 glasses of wine for decades. She was always thin, ate very healthy, physically fit, and great labs. And now she's dying of breast cancer. Her cancer wasn't genetically predisposed, so I'm blaming the wine habit.


Could just as easily have been carcinogens in the environment. Without more, blaming the wine feels like a modern version of thinking God afflicts people for their sinful behavior.


My mother died of lung cancer and never smoked a cigarette in her life. Blaming the victim is not a good look.
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