Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he have that he can drink before and during? Landscaper?
He's a research scientist in academia.
Anonymous wrote:Boyfriend and I are in our early thirties and are like two peas in a pod. We adore each other, take care of each other, and support each other. We laugh, have fun, have a great sex life, respect each other, and overall have a wonderful relationship. We've been together for two years.
My boyfriend is a highly educated professional who's well-respected in his field. He has a ton of adoring friends and a loving family. Recently we have discussed marriage.
But here's the thing: my boyfriend is an alcoholic. He doesn't get wildly drunk, but he drinks every day. He has a drink before going to work and drinks a few throughout the day. He was sober for four months last year and his personality stayed the same - easygoing and cheerful - but he really threw himself into his work, working 12 - 14 hours a day, and a lot on the weekends.
He treats me like gold, has never raised his voice, pays his bills, is organized, is well-liked. As far as I'm concerned, he's perfect outside of the drinking. I am at a loss. I have never had a relationship that even comes close to this. Would it really be so terrible to marry him??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.
The alcoholics in my family were extremely jolly, easy-go-lucky kinds of people. They did great damage to their kids and spouses, nevertheless.
In what way?
AP here. Tons of drama. Often times drinking comes before other responsibilities. In my case, my husband can't perform sexually when he's been drinking. But he doesn't care enough to not drink. He'd rather have those drinks than have sex. We always have to uber everywhere so he can drink at parties and dinners. He says mean things to me when he drinks.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of job does he have that he can drink before and during? Landscaper?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from a job...there is zero stress in his life. Marry him, live together a year, two years etc and watch the stresses his life morph into resentment against you.
- Why'd you make do this expensive wedding?
- We didn't need a house?
- God, I hate the suburbs
- Can you shut up that screaming kid?
He literally has no reason to be angry with or at you right now or at anything in his life - yet he's already drinking 5-7 times a day.
OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.
He's really not that easy going if he needs to drink that much. Also, just picture him in 20 to 30 years. It'll take more and more alcohol for him to feel the same.
Not all people need more and more. I am surrounded by people who drink, decades of drinking at the same level, the same good attitude, same good people. I don't believe in personality changes due to drinking. If you are a jerk when drinking then you a jerk sober, just a two-faced jerk who pretends well.
Alcoholics need more and more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from a job...there is zero stress in his life. Marry him, live together a year, two years etc and watch the stresses his life morph into resentment against you.
- Why'd you make do this expensive wedding?
- We didn't need a house?
- God, I hate the suburbs
- Can you shut up that screaming kid?
He literally has no reason to be angry with or at you right now or at anything in his life - yet he's already drinking 5-7 times a day.
OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.
He's really not that easy going if he needs to drink that much. Also, just picture him in 20 to 30 years. It'll take more and more alcohol for him to feel the same.
Not all people need more and more. I am surrounded by people who drink, decades of drinking at the same level, the same good attitude, same good people. I don't believe in personality changes due to drinking. If you are a jerk when drinking then you a jerk sober, just a two-faced jerk who pretends well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from a job...there is zero stress in his life. Marry him, live together a year, two years etc and watch the stresses his life morph into resentment against you.
- Why'd you make do this expensive wedding?
- We didn't need a house?
- God, I hate the suburbs
- Can you shut up that screaming kid?
He literally has no reason to be angry with or at you right now or at anything in his life - yet he's already drinking 5-7 times a day.
OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.
He's really not that easy going if he needs to drink that much. Also, just picture him in 20 to 30 years. It'll take more and more alcohol for him to feel the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.
The alcoholics in my family were extremely jolly, easy-go-lucky kinds of people. They did great damage to their kids and spouses, nevertheless.
In what way?
AP here. Tons of drama. Often times drinking comes before other responsibilities. In my case, my husband can't perform sexually when he's been drinking. But he doesn't care enough to not drink. He'd rather have those drinks than have sex. We always have to uber everywhere so he can drink at parties and dinners. He says mean things to me when he drinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aside from a job...there is zero stress in his life. Marry him, live together a year, two years etc and watch the stresses his life morph into resentment against you.
- Why'd you make do this expensive wedding?
- We didn't need a house?
- God, I hate the suburbs
- Can you shut up that screaming kid?
He literally has no reason to be angry with or at you right now or at anything in his life - yet he's already drinking 5-7 times a day.
OP here. I've seen him deal with stressful situations - his job, in particular, is very stressful- and also interpersonally. He's just an easy-go-lucky kind of person.