For Drinkers and Those Who Love Them:
“Finally she said, ‘I need to talk to you. I’m very worried
about your drinking.’ I said, ‘I know.’ I walked beside her, keeping my eyes on
my feet in the sand, afraid that if I looked up I’d bump too abruptly into a
truth I didn’t really want to see. I added softly, ‘I am too.’ I could tell
from her tone that she wasn’t angry, just worried, and I had to admit to her: I
was too. Sort of.”
I have met a fair number of people with alcohol problems, but I have never met anyone with a drinking problem, whether in or out of recovery, who
instinctively and immediately ‘got it.’ For that matter, I have never even heard of a single woman or
man, young or old, who instantly ascertained there was a problem and said: I’m going to
deal with this – right now. Just as it takes a while for a drinking problem
to become a problem, it usually takes a
while to comprehend that the problem needs to be addressed. Naturally, this is not a welcome revelation, nor is it a welcome conversation; whether you’re having it with yourself, or with someone else. As Duras
says: 100% of the time it’s taken as an insult. Indeed, we go out of our way to
avoid this conversation, this reckoning. Often, we look to those around us for relief from this unwelcome reality. We seek support from specific people, usually fellow travelers or people who we know dislike confrontation, for validation. We also look to people who are worse off or to media/literary depictions for confirmation that, in fact,
there is no drinking problem. If I had drinking problem, you say, I’d be living
under a bridge, leaving work for lunch and never coming back, losing my family. If I had a drinking problem, I’d be all alone. If I had a
drinking problem, could I be working? If I had a drinking problem, I’d be drinking before work. (For many of us, the job is what we
really protect--more than anything else.) If I
had a drinking problem, I’d be in jail, an insane asylum, or some other
final destination.
“The thing is hints of distress are like air: you can’t see
them, can’t hold them in your hand and subject them to proper examination.”
The high-functioning woman asks: "How could it be that I have a drinking problem as an
employed, housed, clothed, relatively functional individual? I have friends—great
friends. My family hasn’t ostracized me. Maybe I go on dates. Maybe I’m in a
relationship. Maybe I’m married. Maybe I even have children. If something were
truly wrong, I’d have none of these things. If there were a problem, people
(other people) would be telling me. Everyone would know."
Does anyone know?
Does anyone know?
“I hid it that well. Most high-functioning alcoholics do […]
Part of what allows us to ignore the fact is that we’re so very different from
the popular definition of a ‘real’ drunk. Alcoholic is a nasty word, several
decades of education about the disease notwithstanding. Say it out loud and
chances are you still get the classic image of the falling-down booze-hound: an
older person, usually male, staggering down the street and clutching a brown
paper bag. In fact, the low-bottom, skid-row bum is the exception, representing
only three to five percent of the alcoholic population, a mere fraction. The
vast majority of us function remarkably well in most aspects of our lives for
many, many years.”
“There are moments where you do know, where in a flash of
clarity you grasp that alcohol is the central problem, a kind of liquid glue
that gums up all the internal gears and keeps you stuck. The pond was beautiful
that day, rippled and sparkling, turning the sand a deep sienna where it lapped
against the shore, and for an instant, I did know, I could see it: I was
thirty-three and I was drinking way too much and I was miserable, and there had
to be a connection.”
The morning comes, and with it the sensation that something
is wrong. What is it? Too much wine? Too much isolation? Too much distance from
the material lives of your friends? Then the day passes, and slowly, surely, you
feel better. You feel fine. Then it’s evening. A vague shadow of the night
before remains, but nothing impenetrable. Maybe a small drink would help. Maybe
you were too hasty in your early morning considerations. Things aren’t so bad.
Things are fine. Plus, you’re different. You’re not like everyone else. You
have different needs and longings. You have a different kind of make-up. One
that entitles you to a specific kind of remedy. You deserve this.
“And that’s how it works. Active alcoholics try and active
alcoholics fail. We make the promises and we really do try to stick with them
and we keep ignoring the fact that we can’t do it, keep rationalizing the third
drink, or the fourth or fifth.”
After a certain point, alcohol has become too important. It may have
been important from the very first drink, or it may have become important
somewhere along the way, or it may have developed into something important
right at the end, suddenly, and with a yearning, a pull. Either way,
your relationship with the drink is something you can’t imagine living without.
Though you may not admit this. To others. To yourself. Although those close to you can see it, somehow you can't. You simply can't. Although you can't say there's problem, you know you don't want anyone to get in the way of it.
“By the end it was the single most important relationship in my life.”
“By the end it was the single most important relationship in my life.”
And for the most part, things are fine. Things are pretty good. There are nights, perhaps many nights, where things are fine. Where you remember how it ended. Where you drove yourself home. Where you watched others get plowed. These nights are proof -- standing proof -- everything is OK.
“I loved the way drink made me feel, and I loved its special power of deflection, its ability to shift my focus away from my own awareness of self and onto something else, something less painful than my own feelings. I loved the sounds of drink: the slide of a cork as it eased out of a wine bottle, the distinct glug-glug of booze pouring into a glass, the clatter of ice cubes in a tumbler. I loved the rituals, the camaraderie of drinking with others, the warming, melting feelings of ease and courage it gave me.”
“I loved the way drink made me feel, and I loved its special power of deflection, its ability to shift my focus away from my own awareness of self and onto something else, something less painful than my own feelings. I loved the sounds of drink: the slide of a cork as it eased out of a wine bottle, the distinct glug-glug of booze pouring into a glass, the clatter of ice cubes in a tumbler. I loved the rituals, the camaraderie of drinking with others, the warming, melting feelings of ease and courage it gave me.”
When it gets bad, we chalk it up to circumstance: our friends' influence, not enough to eat, not enough sleep, lots of stress and too much time spent at home, alone. When it gets truly bad, we console ourselves with what
feels like a searing, dirty truth: this is the only rational response to being alive. Yes, being alive has become not just an inconvenient truth, but a full-blown problem. And that's how it should be. These undercurrents of despair and drinking
and depression are somehow central to our work, our being. Writers and
musicians and artists have this special need, we say. A hazard of the trade. As
a writer, alcohol is part of the equation. Many writers swear they don’t drink
to create. They don’t need that glass of wine that Tennessee Williams swore by.
But that doesn’t stop us from celebrating, from rereading drafts with a drink
in our hand, from meeting at the pub to debate and discuss the politics of
publishing. Just like for musicians and artists, it’s an occupational hazard. Dorothy
Parker, F. Scott, Carson McCullers, Eugene O’Neill, William Faulkner, Edna St.
Vincent Millay, William Styron and on and on… We don’t see them as depressed, suicidal,
miserable – or as tyrants to those around them, absent parents, abusive partners,
masters of isolating the very people who love them. We celebrate them as
individuals who lived their lives on a deeper plane. We romanticize their very
painful despair. And we use it as a prop. To justify our own abuse. Abuse we
inflict on others and ourselves.
“The truth gnaws at you. In periodic flashes like that I’d
be painfully aware that I was living badly, just plain living wrong. But I refused to completely acknowledge or act on that
awareness, so the feeling just festered inside like a tumor, gradually eating
away at my sense of dignity. You know and you don’t know. You know and you won’t
know, and as long as the outsides of your life remain intact—our job and
professional persona—it’s very hard to accept that the insides, the pieces of
you that have to do with integrity and self-esteem are slowly rotting away.”
And here is the crux of this post: if you love a drinker, it’s
important – no, it’s crucial – that you understand: this is not your fault. “You
did not cause the problem, and you must not pay for it.” So simple, but so
complex once you’re in the morass of a relationship with a drinker, especially
if you drink yourself. But was it always like this? “Remember how the problems
associated with drinking got worse—moods became erratic and hard to predict and
shared enjoyment dropped off?” Be honest with yourself: you didn’t want this and you never asked for
this. Why is the drinker getting what they want and you are not? Why do you
think you should (or can) live like this? Undoubtedly you’ve been subjected to
accusations, maybe even threats. You’ve been told of your many failings, your possessiveness
and demanding nature. You’re irrational. In fact, you should not only doubt
yourself, you should maybe consider disliking yourself.
The drinker comes out on top. They are carefree. They are
living life. They are in the moment. But wait? That’s bullshit you realize, and
when you get the courage, and find just the right time, or lose the necessary
amount of patience, you explode. “It may be that screaming or throwing are
experienced by your drinker as rewards. Angry attention is often better than no
attention at all. So when you pitch a fit, your drinker feels connected to you.
Even if the connection is nasty and ugly, it is there nonetheless. Furthermore,
if your interactions really escalate into highly emotional scenes, your
drinker, and you, too, may experience a sort of adrenaline rush that may be
rewarding. Also, the aftermath of a fight often involves making up and a sort
of honeymoon period when everyone tries to be extra nice, and so the fight, in
a sense, gets reinforced again.”
I remember how it felt to get into a drunken fight. It felt
strange or surreal and sometimes awful, but sometimes almost giddy. It felt
like something was happening. Something different than reading or typing all
day. Something other than musing on death and the ultimate nothingness of
being. The feeling became addictive. I knew it first as someone who drank, but
not alcoholically. I knew it as the girlfriend of an alcoholic. I knew the
sounds. The cracking of a beer can or a bottle top being popped, the crunch of
car wheels up the driveway very late, the telephone ringing in the middle of
the night, or early morning, and the words of an apology. I knew it all. And
the sick thing is, as much anxiety and sadness as it gave me, I started to like
it. At least depend on it. I felt slightly superior, and distracted from my own
problems/feelings. I felt like I was in a position of saving someone. I also
really loved him. And I wanted him to get better. And also he told me he needed
me. That he was sick. That he might die without me. What a power trip. Someone
needed me to survive? Holy shit. What a feeling. If I wasn’t getting high
enough from being the long-suffering girlfriend to a musician/artist/lawyer, I
was surely high now.
But of course, he didn’t need me to survive. He needed attention and care
and coddling and excuses. But he didn’t need me. In fact, just like me, he’s
married now. He has a new baby, well, a toddler by this point. I have no idea
if he’s still drinking. But I know looking back, that I was benefiting from his
illness. I kept showing up out of love, I told myself. But it was more than
that. He was a brilliant distraction from myself, and a reminder of how much
more stable I was. It’s a good thing that one night he got very drunk and tried
to make-out with my roommate. I could withstand many indignities, but for some
reason, I couldn’t quite withstand that. He told me later (of course we met for
coffee after a few months) that he did it on purpose; that he saw I would never
leave him and he wanted me to be free of him. (Many addicts are insecure
narcissists.)
Or you could argue that many people are insecure
narcissists. That’s probably most fair. It’s important for us to divide up the
blame in terms of not being perfect, but it’s also important to shoulder only the
blame that truly deserves to be on our shoulders. No more, no less. And in the
meantime, it’s important to figure out what positive, healthy things we love –
and devote our time and energy to that. Others have pointed out, and I believe
this to be true: the best thing we can do for one another is to be healthy, honest,
and happy. We don't need to be perfect.
XOXO thanks for reading, AMD
All quotations (except
for the last three, which are from Robert Meyers) are from Caroline Knapp
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