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Alcohol support

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DH wants to stop, says he needs my help. Advice?

83 replies

Nimnuan · 24/08/2025 21:29

DH has been trying to control his drinking for a long time, with varying levels of success. To be honest I didn't realise until a few years into our relationship how much of a problem it is for him. Partly because we meet in the navy his drinking didn't really seem that excessive to me at the time. There are sometimes periods where his drinking is a relatively normal amount, but he always struggles to keep it at that level.
I've been actively trying to support him to reduce or stop for the last 5/6 years. He's pretty much always said he wants to reduce rather than stop completely, sometimes says the only problem is that I'm too uptight about alcohol, sometimes tries to hide how much he's drinking, sometimes had some combination of days/amounts he decides are okay but can't stick to, occasionally he's said he's going to stop completely but has just tried to use willpower without changing anything in his life.
About nine weeks ago he realised how much money he'd spent in the pub over the last year and decided he would only go to the pub on a Friday with his dad. Since then he's been in the pub at least twice a week every week, usually more, and tried to hide it. Yesterday he went to the pub instead of grocery shopping, lied about it, I told him I didn't believe him.
When he came home he said he's got a problem and he needs help, needs me to help. That he wants to stop but doesn't know how. He's said similar things before but this feels different. For example in the past he hasn't been willing to tell friends or family that he's quitting or tell them why. This time he's planning to tell his family.
I'm not expecting everything to change overnight but I think it's a really positive step that he's admitted openly to having a problem with alcohol, that he needs and wants to stop, and that he needs help to stop.
I know I can't do it for him, but I would welcome any advice on how to support him. What did you do for your partner or your partner do for you that helped? What was not helpful?

OP posts:
Roodlegum · 05/10/2025 13:17

Is there anyone you can confide in about this in RL? Does he have family? Close to them?

NotbloodyGivingupYet · 05/10/2025 13:44

Nimnuan · 05/10/2025 12:57

Sorry, it was a thread about wanting to bring my newborn to university. Lots of people think it's selfish and irresponsible, which is fair enough, but the PP was the only one who went through my post/comment history, made assumptions about my reasons, and then a bunch of pointed comments about my "secret" reasons.
Discovering embarrassing personal problems is obviously just really fun for some people.

I did read your other thread but didn't comment on it, and hadn't connected it was you. I can see why the other pp put two and two together, but as you say, your reasons don't really have anything to do with whether it was a good idea or not. This is why people change user names when they don't want to be followed from thread to thread. (I don't usually bother but I would if I started one on a really personal subject)
People seem to forget that there are real lives behind the posts.

Nimnuan · 05/10/2025 14:51

NotbloodyGivingupYet · 05/10/2025 13:44

I did read your other thread but didn't comment on it, and hadn't connected it was you. I can see why the other pp put two and two together, but as you say, your reasons don't really have anything to do with whether it was a good idea or not. This is why people change user names when they don't want to be followed from thread to thread. (I don't usually bother but I would if I started one on a really personal subject)
People seem to forget that there are real lives behind the posts.

That would have been the sensible thing to do. I'll know for next time if there is one.
I just didn't think it through, honestly.

OP posts:
Barbadossunset · 05/10/2025 17:08

also the idea that alcoholics are a special type of uniquely afflicted person.

I think alcoholism/addiction is a unique affliction in that those suffering share one particular characteristic, that being the inability to stop. Also the vast majority cannot go back to drinking moderately which is why abstinence is recommended.
Those who are not addicts or alcoholics find it incomprehensible that drink and drugs should come before everything.
“Just don’t have an alcoholic drink’ they say, but if only it was that simple.

mindutopia · 05/10/2025 21:19

OP, I said it before and I’ll say it again, he has to do this himself and it will take time. You need to focus on taking care of yourself and your child.

It took me about 2 years, a little bit more, to get sober from the point when I first started to think I needed to. And other than telling me he was worried about me and he cared, there was nothing Dh could have done to make it happen faster or make it more likely to stick.

It had to come from me and I had to want it, which I did. He could be sober from tomorrow, if he really wanted to. He has to want to though. You can’t want it for him.

In the meantime, you are in quite a challenging phase of life. I don’t advocate just up and leaving because your partner is an alcoholic. I’m very grateful Dh didn’t leave me (though I’m sure he wanted to chuck me in the bin many times). It would have been more damaging to our children in the long run. We actually have a very happy healthy relationship now. But you can’t run yourself into the ground for someone else. You can absolutely stay together and your relationship, if it’s otherwise been a good one, can thrive when he’s sober, but you have to look after you and your baby first. Only you know what’s required to do that, but don’t let his alcoholism suck the life out of you right now.

Thatmoves · 11/10/2025 13:50

How are you doing Op? Hoping all ok

Nimnuan · 11/10/2025 19:30

All going well, thank you 😊

OP posts:
Simplyrewarding · 12/10/2025 06:16

Nimnuan · 11/10/2025 19:30

All going well, thank you 😊

Lovely to read a positive update on a thread like this! Very pleased for you. Did you hear from the uni?

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