Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She claims she will go to AA, etc. all the stuff you would want to hear. But in my opinion, talk is cheap. Who knows if she will really follow through? I feel like she nearly needs an intervention, and even that might not help.
If you think she has a drinking problem and needs an intervention, why are you enabling her by bailing her out on this DUI?
OP, rather than providing money which enables her, insist that you drive her to AA meetings at first. Not because she'd drive there drunk! Because you seem pretty sure she might be blowing smoke about going at all. Find out where the local meetings are and TAKE her there. You will have to sit outside in the car and wait. Do it. I have seen AA truly help a woman your sister's age who is an alcoholic. But it doesn't help if you do not attend regularly and faithfully.
If you feel she needs an intervention, I would not wing it -- I'd get advice from someone (maybe a doctor or a counselor?) about the right way to do one, so that she doesn't end up slamming out of the room furious and stops talking to all of you. There are professionals who help stage interventions. But maybe try AA first.
I would not tell your parents about the DUI. But are they aware that she has a drinking problem? Do they enable it in any ways? Your family members might need to go to Al-Anon (which is for family of alcoholics, not for alcoholics themselves). You yourself might want to go to Al-Anon to hear from other people who have been where you are, at a crossroads wondering how to help a family member wake up to her own addiction. You might get some great, real-life advice there on what to do to help her and what not to do, as well.