The material presented
here is not Al-Anon Conference Approved Literature. It is a method
to exchange
information, ideas, feelings, problems and solutions on a personal
level.
Never been too good at lurking, I prefer to jump right in. So here goes.
My brother started drinking when he was 14, that was 20 years ago. My parents have both been sober and in AA for over 20 years, and my methods for dealing with my brother come from what they have tought me. They moved out of state a few years ago, far away, and I am the only one left to deal with my brother.
My parents tell me not to enable him. He has lost countless jobs, and thrown away countless offers of help over the years. He has left rehabs. Most recently he gave up the chance to go to rehab by signing himself out of the facility. He is now jobless and homeless and sleeping in the streets when he can't find a friend to take him in. Basically it seems he wants to continue drinking while I house him, feed him, and take care of him the way my parents did before they finally threw him out for good about 10 years ago.
Last night he was very drunk and he begged me to take him in, but I managed to refuse. I've been here before. By taking him in he would be able to clean himself up, and rest up long enough to start the process all over again. He wouldn't hit bottom. The problem is he is so darn tough and stubborn there seems to be no bottom low enough. Sleeping on the concrete city steps in a very dangrous neighborhood covered in puke didn't even seem to phase him. It was one of the hardest things I've had to do. I am not sure I am doing the right thing. Sometimes I just want to give in and take him in so he doesn't end up in jail or dead.
Aloha Revok...glad you found MIP and jumped right in. You're doing the right thing...staying out of the way between your brother, his compulsion and obsession with alcohol and God. It does get bad enough where they will get so sick and tired of being sick and tired and they will cry out for a power greater than themselves. I know that at one time I wouldn't have believed that statement myself and that was before I found the Al-Anon Family Groups while in my second addiction marriage and I don't know just how many addiction relationships and I did find out that there is a Power Greater than myself and it is not me. Today I don't get in the way except to call on others better equipped than myself to properly help. Rescuing a drunk and having them stop drinking as a result is a rarely talked about experience and even then a Higher Power is involved. I didn't know anything about alcoholism and I didn't know that I didn't know so everything I did to rescue didn't work.
I called the hotline number for Al-Anon in my town, (after calling help in emotional trouble and the suicide prevention center...not for her for me) and I got help...real help for me so that I would not continue to be part of the problem and would be a part of the solution. The program saved my sanity, soul and life and then later without me trying to rescue at all my alcoholic went and got help.
Look for and call that number for Al-Anon in the white pages of your local telephone book. Get the meeting places and times where we meet to share and support with others so that they can learn how not to loose themselves in this disease. HP is with you and with your brother. Turn him over and get to the program. Keep coming back here also. You are not alone by any sense of the word. ((((hugs))))
So glad that you jumped right in!! I am so very sorry that you are dealing with this dreadful disease . It is a painful experience when a family member is so ill. You are doing well. Please remember that alcoholism is a disease and it affects everyone who comes in contact with it. You did not cause his illness, you cannot control it and you cannot cure it. We here have found that we cannot do this alone and can walk in life with courage, serenity and wisdom when we learn new tools to live with.
I do not think I could have made my difficult decisions or carried the emotions I felt because of them without the tools and support of AlAnon. Exchanging experience, strength and hope with other people who understand can be life changing. Find some meetings, share here, read literature, it all really helps. Glad you found MIP.
Dear Revok, I have had to do the very same thing with a family member---and more than once. The hardest thing I ever have had to do. Anyone who has never done it can never know how hard it is to carry out. It is like doing something that is against our very nature.
Dear Revok, I know it doesn't come easily, but I believe that you are doding the "right thing".
I tell myself over, and over, and over that I am not turning my loved one away---I am turning the disease away. I am turning the disease away in order to LOVE my loved one.
Revok, maybe looking at it this way will help you.
Thank you so much for your responses and support. When I wrote my post I was feeling the pressure and feeling like a monster. There was so much guilt. Each one of your responses lifted that feeling. It is actually hard to describe the feeling, kind of like being welcomed into strength and compassion. I am amazed by it. I am so happy I found you all. Thank you.