Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
You're an ass. Did you even read her post?? She has called the police on him before. I'm the PP in her same situation. I've called the police after finding out my husband has left parties drunk and driving. It's never resulted in an arrest. When I find out he's been driving drunk, he's already home. My husband doesn't call me beforehand and say, "hey honey, I'm wasted and getting behind the wheel. I just wanted to let you know".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
I'm very sorry for your loss. I can't imagine the pain and loss you suffered. But at the end of the day, I must protect MY children first and foremost. What about when my DH 'graduates' from supervised visitation (because it doesn't take much to graduate...supervised visitation is expensive for the state to provide, and the tendency is to be as least restrictive as possible in terms of parent access). Then he starts drinking again and gets back in the car with our children? How long until I realize that he is drinking again? And how do I catch him? Our autistic child is not verbal. Again, I'm sorry for your loss, but your 'solution' makes a lot of assumptions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
I'm very sorry for your loss. I can't imagine the pain and loss you suffered. But at the end of the day, I must protect MY children first and foremost. What about when my DH 'graduates' from supervised visitation (because it doesn't take much to graduate...supervised visitation is expensive for the state to provide, and the tendency is to be as least restrictive as possible in terms of parent access). Then he starts drinking again and gets back in the car with our children? How long until I realize that he is drinking again? And how do I catch him? Our autistic child is not verbal. Again, I'm sorry for your loss, but your 'solution' makes a lot of assumptions.
So is your solution just to say this and say "oh well" and hope he doesn't kill your kids and someone else? Because at this point all I hear are excuses and I'm curious what someone has to say in order for you to change your opinion.
Excuses for what, exactly? Do you really believe that if I leave him he will quit drinking? I don't for a second. I believe he will likely drink even more. And have more 'unsupervised' access to our children. While drunk. When I am not there. And I don't even know if or when my children (or yours) are in danger. I can do NOTHING at that point if I don't know. At least now, I can do something some of the time. Like pick up my cold and crying son off the stairs at 3am. If he had done that on a custody visit? No one would ever know unless our child required hospitalization or a he let himself outside and the police were called. Please think about what I am saying. I'm not saying 'oh, well'. I'm saying 'oh, fuck' because there is no solution to this problem unless my DH quits drinking forever. And I can't make him do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
I'm very sorry for your loss. I can't imagine the pain and loss you suffered. But at the end of the day, I must protect MY children first and foremost. What about when my DH 'graduates' from supervised visitation (because it doesn't take much to graduate...supervised visitation is expensive for the state to provide, and the tendency is to be as least restrictive as possible in terms of parent access). Then he starts drinking again and gets back in the car with our children? How long until I realize that he is drinking again? And how do I catch him? Our autistic child is not verbal. Again, I'm sorry for your loss, but your 'solution' makes a lot of assumptions.
So is your solution just to say this and say "oh well" and hope he doesn't kill your kids and someone else? Because at this point all I hear are excuses and I'm curious what someone has to say in order for you to change your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
I'm not the poster who suggested a lawyer and leaving, but I agree 100% and I read the whole post multiple times.
What OP describes sounds like grounds for supervised visits only to me. This is a father who drinks and drives with the kids in the car, whose wife has reported his car to the police as a suspected DUI, who cannot control his drinking in and out of the house. He refuses to change his behavior, "won't agree to not driving the kids" and the OP says she can't do anything about it.
I think she needs to talk to a women's shelter and a lawyer, pronto.
Why a shelter?
Because your husband is endangering your children and he refuses to change his behavior. It doesn't matter if he believes that he is sober enough to drive if he isn't.
Look, I'm not one of those people who assumes that if you've had a beer, you're automatically not safe to drive. You didn't say that he has "a beer" though. You said he "binge drinks" which I assume to mean multiple drinks in a relatively compressed timeframe. It doesn't matter if he's physically dependent or not. If he has multiple drinks in a short time span and then gets behind the wheel, he is endangering your children and all the other children on the roads he drives on as well. If he is unwilling to accept this, I would be unwilling to allow my child to be in that car. If you are unwilling to enforce that, you are either enabling him or you need to talk to someone about the control issues in your marriage.
Please, tell me how I would 'enforce' that? And yes, he drinks after work and then picks kids up from aftercare or from activities, etc. Or drinks at home while I am out at PTA meetings, or even after I've gone to bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
I'm not the poster who suggested a lawyer and leaving, but I agree 100% and I read the whole post multiple times.
What OP describes sounds like grounds for supervised visits only to me. This is a father who drinks and drives with the kids in the car, whose wife has reported his car to the police as a suspected DUI, who cannot control his drinking in and out of the house. He refuses to change his behavior, "won't agree to not driving the kids" and the OP says she can't do anything about it.
I think she needs to talk to a women's shelter and a lawyer, pronto.
Why a shelter?
Because your husband is endangering your children and he refuses to change his behavior. It doesn't matter if he believes that he is sober enough to drive if he isn't.
Look, I'm not one of those people who assumes that if you've had a beer, you're automatically not safe to drive. You didn't say that he has "a beer" though. You said he "binge drinks" which I assume to mean multiple drinks in a relatively compressed timeframe. It doesn't matter if he's physically dependent or not. If he has multiple drinks in a short time span and then gets behind the wheel, he is endangering your children and all the other children on the roads he drives on as well. If he is unwilling to accept this, I would be unwilling to allow my child to be in that car. If you are unwilling to enforce that, you are either enabling him or you need to talk to someone about the control issues in your marriage.
Please, tell me how I would 'enforce' that? And yes, he drinks after work and then picks kids up from aftercare or from activities, etc. Or drinks at home while I am out at PTA meetings, or even after I've gone to bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
I'm very sorry for your loss. I can't imagine the pain and loss you suffered. But at the end of the day, I must protect MY children first and foremost. What about when my DH 'graduates' from supervised visitation (because it doesn't take much to graduate...supervised visitation is expensive for the state to provide, and the tendency is to be as least restrictive as possible in terms of parent access). Then he starts drinking again and gets back in the car with our children? How long until I realize that he is drinking again? And how do I catch him? Our autistic child is not verbal. Again, I'm sorry for your loss, but your 'solution' makes a lot of assumptions.
So is your solution just to say this and say "oh well" and hope he doesn't kill your kids and someone else? Because at this point all I hear are excuses and I'm curious what someone has to say in order for you to change your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
I'm not the poster who suggested a lawyer and leaving, but I agree 100% and I read the whole post multiple times.
What OP describes sounds like grounds for supervised visits only to me. This is a father who drinks and drives with the kids in the car, whose wife has reported his car to the police as a suspected DUI, who cannot control his drinking in and out of the house. He refuses to change his behavior, "won't agree to not driving the kids" and the OP says she can't do anything about it.
I think she needs to talk to a women's shelter and a lawyer, pronto.
Why a shelter?
Because your husband is endangering your children and he refuses to change his behavior. It doesn't matter if he believes that he is sober enough to drive if he isn't.
Look, I'm not one of those people who assumes that if you've had a beer, you're automatically not safe to drive. You didn't say that he has "a beer" though. You said he "binge drinks" which I assume to mean multiple drinks in a relatively compressed timeframe. It doesn't matter if he's physically dependent or not. If he has multiple drinks in a short time span and then gets behind the wheel, he is endangering your children and all the other children on the roads he drives on as well. If he is unwilling to accept this, I would be unwilling to allow my child to be in that car. If you are unwilling to enforce that, you are either enabling him or you need to talk to someone about the control issues in your marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
I'm not the poster who suggested a lawyer and leaving, but I agree 100% and I read the whole post multiple times.
What OP describes sounds like grounds for supervised visits only to me. This is a father who drinks and drives with the kids in the car, whose wife has reported his car to the police as a suspected DUI, who cannot control his drinking in and out of the house. He refuses to change his behavior, "won't agree to not driving the kids" and the OP says she can't do anything about it.
I think she needs to talk to a women's shelter and a lawyer, pronto.
Why a shelter?
Because your husband is endangering your children and he refuses to change his behavior. It doesn't matter if he believes that he is sober enough to drive if he isn't.
Look, I'm not one of those people who assumes that if you've had a beer, you're automatically not safe to drive. You didn't say that he has "a beer" though. You said he "binge drinks" which I assume to mean multiple drinks in a relatively compressed timeframe. It doesn't matter if he's physically dependent or not. If he has multiple drinks in a short time span and then gets behind the wheel, he is endangering your children and all the other children on the roads he drives on as well. If he is unwilling to accept this, I would be unwilling to allow my child to be in that car. If you are unwilling to enforce that, you are either enabling him or you need to talk to someone about the control issues in your marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.
I'm very sorry for your loss. I can't imagine the pain and loss you suffered. But at the end of the day, I must protect MY children first and foremost. What about when my DH 'graduates' from supervised visitation (because it doesn't take much to graduate...supervised visitation is expensive for the state to provide, and the tendency is to be as least restrictive as possible in terms of parent access). Then he starts drinking again and gets back in the car with our children? How long until I realize that he is drinking again? And how do I catch him? Our autistic child is not verbal. Again, I'm sorry for your loss, but your 'solution' makes a lot of assumptions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a good lawyer. Get out and take your kids with you before one of them gets killed. Good luck.
Thanks, but I feel like you didn't read past the subject line.
I'm not the poster who suggested a lawyer and leaving, but I agree 100% and I read the whole post multiple times.
What OP describes sounds like grounds for supervised visits only to me. This is a father who drinks and drives with the kids in the car, whose wife has reported his car to the police as a suspected DUI, who cannot control his drinking in and out of the house. He refuses to change his behavior, "won't agree to not driving the kids" and the OP says she can't do anything about it.
I think she needs to talk to a women's shelter and a lawyer, pronto.
Why a shelter?
Anonymous wrote:You're a fucking enabler.
My little sister was killed by a drunk driver when we were kids. Her death totally changed my life forever. I watched her die in the street before the ambulance arrived. We later learned that his wife knew he was getting behind the wheel drunk.
If you are aware that dear hubby is binge drinking with the kids in the car if something goes wrong, and it will eventually, you are an accomplice.