This. And if I knew him, I would caution him about marrying someone who is so needy for her family’s approval. It’s one thing if you thought it was a problem, but it sounds like you didn’t until your family brought it up and now you are thinking about breaking up? That is crazy, to me. |
In this case, I would seriously consider your relationship with this man, especially since you come from a family of alcoholics. You guys are not alcoholics, but consider AA as an option. |
It is weird to drink that much when no one else is. Most non-problem drinkers even subconsciously adjust their drinking to the community mean. Drinking 4-5 of anything is a lot, definitely more than to thirst. |
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It is common for parents with families that have had alcoholics in them (which is most families) to be over-concerned about social drinking. Make sure that you are not too critical of him if his drinking is not causing problems. Try to make reduced drinking about health or limiting how much you drink or what your triggers for drinking are.
I am not an alcoholic but I never drink around my parents. I won't even have one glass of wine when they are present or they will over-react. I feel your pain. |
| OP, I just wanted to say, as a person who got spent years with someone I shouldn't have, I wish my parents had said something to me. They went by the school of "she's an adult and gets to make her own adult decisions", so I don't fault them, but what a blessing it would have been if my parents had said to me, we love you, this isn't easy for us to say but have you thought about X. |
I wish someone had done this for my Mom who married an alcoholic. Life of the party has its downsides. |
+1. You should be looking into facts instead of advice from random strangers. And don’t be mad at your parents. |
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I agree that he should have read the room. If it were me, I would have had a glass of wine or two and stopped.
Then gone home and drank whatever I wanted. |
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Nope, I woke early walked the dog to bakery to get my son his favorite donuts.. i asked my son what he wanted to do and we did a majority of his list and then DW and I made shrimp/halibut tacos. Had an awesome day. Honestly I don’t even like beer and thing brewery/distillery tours kind of redundant after the first ones. Can’t imagine going with a group do this either. |
Not true. Usually the opposite. Much less. |
| Op, I am a problem drinker (married, kids) but I modulate the amount I drink given the company. I can drink a bottle of wine by myself, but no one knows. In the company of my MIL, who is a teetotaler, we drink lemonade. If I meet relatives or friends, I have the appropriate amount (like 1-3 drinks). I would never swill unchecked while everyone around me was not drinking. I had a boyfriend who once did this at my parents house. It was a major red flag. The guy was a serious alcoholic (as opposed to the category of “problem drinker” I put myself in) Because I was in my 20s I couldn’t quite get it at the time. We were coming off college years where drinking to excess was common. My dad, who lived as an ex-pat amid heavy drinking culture, spotted that this guy was a problem. Long story short, I dumped his sorry ass and never looked back. My advice: RUN FOR THE HILLS!!!! It only gets worse |
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From what you’ve said, he is not an alcoholic. Talk to him and be open about your concerns. He may not have the baggage around drinking that your family does and not realize that his behavior was concerning to them. If you want for both of you to slow down your drinking, ask for support from him in doing this.
It would be a huge shame to break it off with someone you love without talking this all through with him and allowing him to change his habits. |
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I assume that the non-drinking hosts did not continue offering him beers, and I assume he did not walk in the door with a six pack, so how did he get his hands on 4-5 beers. Did you bring it for him in your purse? Or did your boyfriend rummage through their fridge and help himself? Beer run in the middle of dinner?
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+1. Thank your parents and then tell them that's the end of it with them. Bring it up with him. I dated a nice guy who was like this and I watched him blow up his first marriage because he drank so heavily a few years in. It was all within "normal" range culturally, but I knew it seemed a bit much. Like he needed those 3-4 beers to unwind. See how much he resists a change in lifestyle with you. |