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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

He wont admit he has a problem

162 replies

Rriot · 10/06/2017 09:20

DP and I live together with my DS from a previous relationship.

Before we moved in he lived with his parents and I saw him most weekends and we would usually go out for a few drinks.

After we moved in it became apparent that he drinks alot more than I realised. He drinks every night in the house, up to six or seven cans a night. He obviously has built up a tolerance for drinking this amount as he isn't drunk during the week from drinking at home. It later transpired that it has been about ten years since he has had a completely alcohol-free day. He goes out after work at the weekend and will have several pints and this is when he does get drunk. If I'm not out with him he appears home, and I have to put him to bed as he is too wasted to even take his own shoes off. There have been times where he has been sick and I've had to clean him up, he has fallen, and a couple of times has woken up still drunk/sleepwalking and wet the bed. Last night he ended up going to the toilet in the kitchen bin, there was mess all over the kitchen floor and for the first time ever I lost my patience and shouted at him.

Following that, he appeared to sober up and tried to apologise but I am at my limit of how much more I can take.

I tried to explain to him how mentally draining it is to sit at home every Friday, calculating how much money he has taken out with him to work out how much he will have to drink and what sort of state that means he will come home in to mentally prepare myself for what I'll be dealing with. How difficult it is to join him if we go out together and have him poke fun at me in front of his friends because he gets really insensitive when he is drunk. The fact it's damaging his health and I'm worried sick about him.

He thinks that because he is able to hold down his job and that he isn't drunk every night that it's not a problem. He says I knew what I was getting into and if I am so unhappy, why haven't I left him? We are by no means well off either and the amount of money he spends on alcohol is crazy- I never have money to spend on myself but he manages to find it one way or another.

I am suffering from depression and anxiety (present before I even met him, so not as a result of this). More recently (possibly due to the stress of living like this but also due to work and things too) it has been worse and he had quite a frank discussion with me (kindly) about how my moods were affecting all of us and that I needed to address it. I listened to him and have sought treatment and made an effort to improve things and with his support I am feeling a bit better and my moods are no longer taking their toll on our relationship.

He thinks that because it's not a problem with regards to his work or because he isn't having any visible side effects that his drinking isn't a problem. He isn't affected by it but I am and that doesn't seem to matter.

He is an otherwise very affectionate, generous and fun partner. I love him to death which is why I'm not just walking away. I want to find a way to resolve this and help him address his drinking so we can move forward but I know I can't do that until he accepts that his habit is causing him damage and us damage.

DS isn't around when there is drinking going on and isn't directly affected by it but I know this could change and at that point I will have no choice but to leave for his sake but I love my partner and I want to help him, not abandon him. He just doesn't want or think he needs it.

OP posts:
PacificDogwod · 24/06/2017 21:04

He is causing you to self-harm Sad

Please find a way to live away from him - you cannot help him and he is hurting you.

Thanks
Rriot · 24/06/2017 22:13

I self harm when I'm having a bad anxiety attack, which happened last night. Spunds messed up but it takes the focus off of the attack and is somehow soothing. I did it before I met him but obviously what happened last night triggered me.

He slept until 3 today, I spent some time with DS and am now too exhausted to start dragging it all out. I hope to get some sleep tonight and talk about it properly tomorrow. I have told him I can't keep going like this and he has of course said he is sorry, but actions speak louder than words and I know nothing will change.

I feel so hurt and tired and I want him for comfort which is just making it even more confusing.

OP posts:
Rriot · 24/06/2017 22:24

Oh and viking thankyou. I am as safe as I can be. This is something I have done for a long time and am careful about it (as strange as that sounds).

I work in healthcare, I know about staying clean, not cutting too deep etc.

In an odd sense it calms me down so actially means I'm less likely to do anything irrational.

I know its not healthy, and I've abstained from it for a long time, my pot just boiled over last night.

OP posts:
MickeyRooney · 24/06/2017 22:31

If you stay with this alcoholic, your son will think that this is acceptable and may turn into an alcoholic himself in the future.

Stay with this drunkard, and you will have a life of poverty and chaos.

bin him and run, while you can.

PersianCatLady · 24/06/2017 22:52

OP - Tell him that he either goes to the GP on Monday to get proper professional help or he moves out on Monday.

You and your DS are worth so much more than this.

JaneEyre70 · 24/06/2017 22:55

Please find your local Al-Anon group - they are there to support the family and partners of alcoholics. My friend tried for over 10 years to "mend" her alcoholic fuckwit of a partner. She and her kids went without food, electric, petrol, clothes,shoes....but did he ever go without his drink?! Did he hell. She was driving round in a deathtrap of a car with no tax, insurance or MOT - while he spent £20 a day on a bottle of vodka. It was only when one of her kids starting saying things at school that SS got involved, and she was gently steered towards Al-Anon that she saw that her "lovely when he's sober" partner wasn't that lovely after all...............
And if you think your child isn't seeing all this, you're very very wrong. He could end up hating you for making this his life Sad.

melisma · 25/06/2017 07:50

Hope you are okay OP and that you're able to have that frank conversation with DP today.

AdalindSchade · 25/06/2017 08:26

You say it doesn't impact on DS
Come ON.

mummytime · 25/06/2017 09:01

I'm repeating the advice just up thread, and I'm surprised no one mentioned it earlier.

Go to an Al-anon meeting. You will find others with an alcoholic in their lives and the stories will seem very familiar. You can do this, it's not your fault, you can't rescue him, you can't cure or control it.
So get out and rescue your son and yourself.

PacificDogwod · 25/06/2017 09:25

Al-anon has been suggested a couple of times, mummytime.

Have you had a chance to look at their website, Rriot?

You have 'normalised' self-harming as it is a coping mechanism that is giving you relief and you have used before. It is NOT healthy or normal and such a powerful symptom of your distress.

You deserve better than this. And please don't kid yourself that your DS won't be affected by what is going on, no matter how much you think you are protecting him from it.

vikingprincess81 · 25/06/2017 09:29

Rriot I hear you, and I understand (from a professional POV) what self harm does for you - and I get that most people who self harm know how, what to use etc, just wanted to check you're ok.
Does dp know you harmed this weekend? Flowers

dustmotesinthesun · 25/06/2017 10:08

Op alcoholism is one of those things where you have to really really want to get better to have any chance of beating it. Even if you do the odds are stacked against you im terms of staying in recovery. If you aren't really motivated to get sober then you pretty much have zero chance. A family member or wife desperately wanting you to be in recovery effectively means nothing at all. It's very hard to accept that but it's reality. I would bet a sizeable amount of money that your oh is never going to beat this. You need to extricate yourself from his life. It's sad because of any good qualities he might have. But he is his good qualities + alcoholism and you can't separate the two.

Get along to al-anon. You will find so many people in a similar boat. You will get a lot of support there for as long as you need it. Your son deserves so much better

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