Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not rude, but I’d only go to a dinner party without alcohol once.
I feel sorry for you; your social group must be really small. Are you friends with any Mormons? Muslims?
Tons of people don’t drink for a variety of reasons, and tons of people wouldn’t think anything of socializing without alcohol.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for your comments!
OP here. Yes, the reason for quitting is alcoholism. The people coming over are my in-laws, so not like friends who I can distance myself from. DH is supportive of me and doesn’t drink when I’m around. His family are heavy drinkers. If someone had one or two drinks, I can handle that, but not when they drink a 6 pack of beer by themselves or bring a bottle of whiskey in their bag to mix with Coke. I’m not comfortable telling them that I’m recovering. They’re kind of judgmental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just let them know! I won’t be serving alcohol this year as I have stopped drinking. I will have a lot of delicious options!
I find it so strange that some adults can’t socialize without alcohol. If that’s you, you need to ask yourself what’s going on.
“I will have a lot of delicious options”. Well, when you put it like that…
I love delicious options!
What does this mean? Delicious options?? I only drink water, coffee, wine. Delicious options really just sounds like a calorie bomb and I can’t imagine people would rather have that than wine.
Agreed. For people who like to drink alcohol there is no "delicious" alcohol free option that is an acceptable substitute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just get one bottle of wine and not drink it. I don't drink but I'll get some for others.
+1 That's what I'd do. One bottle of wine is just fine for two guests. Once it runs out, that's it.
She is an alcoholic new to sobriety. Those new to sobriety should not be around alcohol. It is too tempting to relapse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently had to quit drinking. If I host a dinner party and serve a great spread (like I usually do) with a variety of non-alcoholic beverages, do you think guests will be put off or think I’m cheap or a bad host? The guests are heavy drinkers (drinking during daytime kid birthday parties, sneaking drinks at public parks, etc). When I’ve hosted in the past, I’ve always served alcohol, but can’t do that anymore. I never told them I quit.
If they brought their own, which some of them probably will, they can drink it and take it home. I don’t want to tell people to BYOB though. That sounds cheap to me.
Please explain drinking in a public park. Do you mean like while children play for 30 to 60 min? Because I can't think of a time I'd do this. Maybe on a Saturday morning with a spiked coffee? Maybe. But I nor my husband have ever done such a thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just get one bottle of wine and not drink it. I don't drink but I'll get some for others.
+1 That's what I'd do. One bottle of wine is just fine for two guests. Once it runs out, that's it.
Anonymous wrote:If you are recently sober then DO NOT host heavy drinking in laws. Do you have a sponsor? You need to talk to a therapist or your AA group about this.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just get one bottle of wine and not drink it. I don't drink but I'll get some for others.
Anonymous wrote:OP, under the circumstances, I do not think it is wise for you to host a dinner party right now.
These aren't just friends, they are your in-laws. They don't just drink socially, they are heavy drinkers.
I gave up alcohol a few years ago and have had social drinkers over with no problem. We open a bottle of wine for them, but I just don't drink any. But I am assuming your in laws will drink a lot more than that and it sounds like you don't expect them to be supportive of you not drinking. I would cancel this party and get together a different time.