I've never lived with an alcoholic, but my impression is that a true alcoholic would not have been able to refrain from finishing that last "splash" glass, might have asked to take the extra in the bottle to go, might have gone out for more drinks after you fell asleep, or other behaviors that indicate a lack of control.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think I recognize you from previous threads that you've posted. If you are the same person, the amounts you reported that your husband drank were really small/normal, and it seemed like you had simply decided that he had a "problem" and that he was required to stop in order to make you happy. I think you need to look at yourself and try to figure out why you feel compelled to be so incredibly controlling...I can't imagine anyone can have a happy marriage with this particular dynamic going on.
Anonymous wrote:He stopped drinking--easily--and has been sober for five months, at your request. He asks you permission to drink, and when you say that he can't, he doesn't. You go on vacation, go out to dinner just the two of you, and he has three glasses of wine. One time. On vacation. This is a huge problem for you, and you seem to think that you're the victim here. Is that correct?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - have you been to Alanon? Is there more you aren't telling us about your husband hitting bottom before the intervention?
You know what makes me snippy? Head games and being manipulated and controlled and treated like a child.
I've never lived with an alcoholic, but my impression is that a true alcoholic would not have been able to refrain from finishing that last "splash" glass, might have asked to take the extra in the bottle to go, might have gone out for more drinks after you fell asleep, or other behaviors that indicate a lack of control.
Maybe you are the issue and your husband sometimes needs a drink to work up to telling you what he thinks and you don't like to hear negative things so you make him think he has a drinking / anger problem when really you have a control problem.
I think you need couples counselling. Why is he sometimes seeing a counselor anyway? Why not AA with a sponsor?
Seriously, you sound like a whack job. Just reading your post reeks of self-righteousness and controlling behavior. PP what are you not telling us? It is ludicrous to suggest that half a glass of wine made your DH snippy the next day. Your poor DH! I felt like I needed at least 2 glasses of wine just to get through your post.![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP, my DH stopped drinking several years ago. He agreed with our therapist that he would stop for a year. After the year was up, he decided to "drink moderately." That lasted a few weeks. And so I asked him to stop again. We had a little back and forth about it for about six months, during which time he read a book called "Rational Recovery."
One of the theories in the book really resonated with my DH. The book called that addictive voice of the brain "the beast" (cheesy, I know). The beast can hold out for alcohol for long periods of time, so long as it knows it can get some eventually. That's when DH decided that he had to promise never to drink again.
Your DH's therapist sounds terrible, frankly. Has he or she never heard of people being sober for years even, and then relapsing? To say, "well you quit for 5 months so you must not be an addict" is moronic. It really took my DH deciding never to drink again that stopped that voice for him.
Anonymous wrote:OP - have you been to Alanon? Is there more you aren't telling us about your husband hitting bottom before the intervention?
You know what makes me snippy? Head games and being manipulated and controlled and treated like a child.
I've never lived with an alcoholic, but my impression is that a true alcoholic would not have been able to refrain from finishing that last "splash" glass, might have asked to take the extra in the bottle to go, might have gone out for more drinks after you fell asleep, or other behaviors that indicate a lack of control.
Maybe you are the issue and your husband sometimes needs a drink to work up to telling you what he thinks and you don't like to hear negative things so you make him think he has a drinking / anger problem when really you have a control problem.
I think you need couples counselling. Why is he sometimes seeing a counselor anyway? Why not AA with a sponsor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's my take. Because he is an alcoholic/has a drinking problem he's going to interpret anything he hears as permission to keep drinking and twist anything he hears as support for his drinking and denial of the fact that he has a problem in the first place. On top of that, you are passive, passive-aggressive, manipulative, and unable to give him a clear and absolute "NO" about his drinking because you don't want any responsibility for it and you want to be a princess. Together, you are a train wreck.
You asked.
Thank you for your answer. Every time I have asked about dealing with an alcoholic on here, people day they have to own their own recovery and you can't make them stop. So, based on that advice, I don't make rules for him. I am not his mother.
My therapist does know him, so it's not a matter of me hiding the truth. We originally tried couples counseling with the therapist when I was seeing someone else individually. The therapist has seen first-hand what happens if you suggest he needs to change. First, he threatens to kill himself. Then he threatens to sue the therapist. So this is why we don't do couples counseling.
I think you might be right that together we are a train wreck. I have been struggling for a long time what to do, especially for the kids' sake. But if complete strangers can see this is a train wreck, it!s time to admit it and get out and hope he doesn't spiral downward so that the verbal abuse of the kids we saw all the time before the intervention comes back.