DH finished a bottle of Prosecco last night

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:He brought home some to celebrate my birthday. I had half a glass. I told him to finish up mine if he wanted and went to bed.

I found the bottle of Prosecco empty and in the trash.



He often drinks 2-3 glasses of wine a night. Isn’t this a lot?


I do that too. I'm 68 now and recent blood work indicated no issue with liver function.
P.S. Proseco? ick.


NP. I like Prosecco! No need to ick somebody else's taste. We are all different.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Did someone really revive this four year old thread to be smug and judgmental about the connection between drinking and breast cancer? Pathetic.

I'd be curious to know if OP and her husband are still married, or if he had an affair, and if so gender of the AP
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.


NP. My mom died of breast cancer and never drank. So, no, I am not worried.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:He brought home some to celebrate my birthday. I had half a glass. I told him to finish up mine if he wanted and went to bed.

I found the bottle of Prosecco empty and in the trash.



He often drinks 2-3 glasses of wine a night. Isn’t this a lot?


I do that too. I'm 68 now and recent blood work indicated no issue with liver function.
P.S. Proseco? ick.


68? Ick.
Anonymous
You sound like a blast.
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.


NP. My mom died of breast cancer and never drank. So, no, I am not worried.


2-3 glasses of wine over several decades is not that bad. That's like one glass per decade
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.


NP. My mom died of breast cancer and never drank. So, no, I am not worried.


+1 I have non-genetic BC and am a teetotaler.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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.


NP. My mom died of breast cancer and never drank. So, no, I am not worried.


+1 I have non-genetic BC and am a teetotaler.


But I’m sorry about your mom.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes after the party has emptied out I like to crank up Streisand and finish up whatever bottles my wife hasn’t clobbered



I love everything about this sentence. Thank you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:He brought home some to celebrate my birthday. I had half a glass. I told him to finish up mine if he wanted and went to bed.

I found the bottle of Prosecco empty and in the trash.



He often drinks 2-3 glasses of wine a night. Isn’t this a lot?


I do that too. I'm 68 now and recent blood work indicated no issue with liver function.
P.S. Proseco? ick.


+1
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