Skip to main content

Alcoholic Chat

It has been a long time since I made a post on this blog. One reason why I haven't is because I have some doubts about it; about its morality. When I started it, it was out of desperation. I had to do it to talk to someone. To express the anger inside. The powerlessness and anguish. Every emotion possible. As I may have said somewhere else on the blog, it is like living through a long slow motion car crash. And your partner is dying in the process. When she drinks it is as if I am waiting for her to die, either by falling over on a hard surface (one of her favorites) or getting hit by a car when she stumbles out to the local shop to buy a couple of bottles of Mr V.

But I think on balance that the site is fair and useful. Useful to me and to some visitors. I gives a clue to how the victim of the alcoholic lives, in constant fear of the unexpected, the chaos. Pick the worst possible moment for Jane to drink and she will drink on that occasion. It is almost as if she does it deliberately to create the maximum amount of harm to herself (i.e. she will upset the most number of people who will be p*ssed off with her). So, this blog might inform some alcoholics as to how their drinking affects their loved ones. Mind you they probably already know that and it doesn't do a damn thing to change things.

It is this lack of change that creates the hopelessness in the victim, the partner. Anyway, I have moved into the main bedroom, with Jane's encouragement, in fact. This makes for a better bolt hole where I can keep out of the way when she is on a binge. And on the subject of binges, Jane has only had one shortish binge recently over a longish period of about 3 months. That is great and I have praised her for it. It has also meant that her job is more secure. However, she does drink slightly differently as a result; usually a miniature or two after work on the way home. So she comes in a bit drunk and is asleep within a couple of hours. That translates, for me, into not seeing her that much! Or at least interacting with her less because she is asleep. Jane is nearly always tired and sleeps like a log.

Her health is not good. Mine isn't that great either, come to think about it! But for her I get the gut feeling that her body is at last complaining about the 25 plus years of punishment it has taken in alcohol abuse. Although a binge is less damaging than constant trickle soaking in alcohol as the body has a respite to recover.

So, at the moment she is not that well. That is another fear of mine. Last night I went to bed thinking that she might die in her sleep. Irrational perhaps. But it is the kind of thought that is generated when you are a victim of an alcoholic. This is my diary.

I am going to put some videos on. Here is one of a celeb who could be drunk?

Comments

  1. Hi Freddy Fox,

    Welcome back! I am glad you did not quit the blog altogether. I look forward to reading your posts... they help me cope in some strange way.

    I'm glad to hear that Jane is better. That's great progress, considering how bad things were before. I hope she can learn to control it, that's if she cannot quit.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Welcome back Freddy!! I'm so happy you are blogging again. I've been concerned about Jane and the episode with her pancreas the last time she was hospitalized. They may have warned her about the next time.

    But, Freddy, again your response to the first comment includes your picture. Did you mean to do that? I know you want to remain anonymous.

    Linda in Pa.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Guys, Thanks Linda. Damn I just get careless sometimes, with comments. I deleted it. Yes, all is kinda normal. Actually I am worried about Jane's health as she is not well mentally, cognitively. Looking into it. Thanks for the comments.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Don't mean to scare you but I thought you might find this interesting. It's from a forum called WQD.

    Hi guys,
    I would just like to share this with you. I had an acute pancreatitus attack 2 months ago. Google it or go to WebMd and you will see that it is usually caused by alcohol because alcohol stops the pancreas from sending powerful enzymes to the stomach to digest food. The result; the enzymes begin to eat away at the pancreas and then other organs of your body. You can't live without a pancreas and a transplant is next to impossible. Once you have had this attack, ONE drink can trigger it again. The mortality rate is 20 to 80 percent, depending on the damage. The pain is unbearable. Shots of morphine every hour barely took the edge off in the hospital. Later I was sent home with oxycodone. I took 1000 miligrams every 3 hours. Again, just to take the edge off. The pain lasted for 3 days. For one week after the pain leaves, you cannot eat. The pancreas needs to rest. Luckily for me, I had no permanent damage. You may not be so lucky. Just look in the obits and see how many die from this. Oh, and you don't have to be a problem drinker to get pancreatitus. A weekend of heavy partying can do it. For many the pain lasts for weeks, months, or a lifetime. Don't mean to be a downer, but you need to know what I learned the hard way. Take care.

    Thinking of you Freddie, Linda

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hi Linda, Yes, I know a bit about pancreatitis as Jane has had it a few times and she has been hospitalized for several days and been near death on those occasions.

    It didn't stop her binging. She now has cognitive impairment and I don't know if it is due to alcohol abuse or what but it is probably due to binging and pill taking for the past 25 plus years. We are seeing a neurologist. Alocohol abuse catches up on you.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Just wondering, why do you call yourself a "victim"? I was in a relationship w/an alcoholic and I do not consider myself a victim. That's very dis-empowering. That's suggesting I did not have a choice.

    Of course I had a choice, all along. And eventually it got so bad for me, I chose to walk. Victim? No. Willing participant? Yes. Codependent and sick in my own head? Yes indeed.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I'd like to hear the experiences of both alcoholics and the victims of alcoholics, please.

Popular posts from this blog

Alcoholism Signs For Family

If a person regularly falls asleep just after breakfast she is possibly an alcoholic. This is because she has had more than a stiff drink early in the morning. Although, alcoholism signs for the family are hard to spot in my experience. What is my experience? It's being the partner and now (2008) a "live in partner" of an alcoholic for about 9 years. Update: I am still her partner but no longer living with her in 2024 which is 16 years after this page was first written! The first section of this article is by me based on experience. The second part is by Bing's Co-pilot after researching the internet. At the end of the article are some pointers as to whether the person in question is an alcoholic. When I first met Jane I didn't know that she was an alcoholic. At that moment in time I was an innocent to the world of alcoholism. It took me about 3 months to realize that she was an alcoholic. What lead me to this revelation? When I didn't know she was an alcohol

Alcoholism and Death

photo copyright crowolf published under a creative commons license kindly granted. These 2 ignominiously go together - Alcoholism and Death . Just after Jane's mini-binge (believe me it was a very minor binge by her standards) of about 20 hours she felt, as usual, suicidal. Jane always feels huge remorse and regret after a binge. She feels bad about letting herself down and bad about messing me around (although it wasn't that bad to be honest - it did though mess up what could have been some time together, which we are lacking at the moment due to work). Jane really does genuinely feel suicidal after a binge. But I must say I don't think she'll ever do it. She hasn't got the courage - I know that sounds horrendously cruel etc etc but this blog is about the plain truth unvarnished. It takes courage to kill yourself and a lots of despair. Jane has the one but not the other. Anyway to get more positive. We had a little talk and I in my usual style, mentioned

Alcoholism is a Disease

1904 Advertisement I have always wondered if alcoholism is a disease . Is this just some sort of idea someone dreamed up years ago as a method to make a buck. You know it could have been that way. People think diseases are either curable or that the symptoms can be controlled to an extent where the person can live pretty normally. The signal sent to alcoholics by the idea that alcoholism is a disease is, "I can be cured by a pill" or "there is hope". And they go off and search for a cure to this mysterious disease...... It may be a disease, though. What is the definition of "disease"? It is an abnormal condition that impairs bodily functions with accompanying symptoms (after Wikipedia). Or here is another definition: An alteration of the state of the body or parts of it interrupting normal function (mine after ThinkExist.com). These are broad definitions. We usually think of diseases as say a virus that infects us and causes illness; the common cold is t