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Will Sweetie ...I did the same thing to my Alcoholic son. I got tired of listening to his lies, being conned & manipulated, plus watching him destroy his life. I call it setting boundaries ( tough love ) I think you did a good thing for your sister & for yourself.
I set the boundary last June .....I heard a couple months ago he was in counselling.
Yesterday he phone & left a message to tell me he was in counselling & that he loved me and that he went to his first AA meeting .
-- Edited by Icie on Wednesday 24th of October 2012 07:32:55 PM
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Icie
"Holding a grudge is like taking poison and waiting for the other person to die..."
My sister is an alcholic. She calls me on the phone 4 to 8 times a day. Today, I couldn't take one more phone call of listening to her slurring words; I told her that I loved her very much, but not to call me until she was sober, and I hung up. I have not done this before because I feel so bad for her and her situation, and now the guilt is making me nuts. Any help on how to handle this better would be much appreciated.
My AH used to call me constantly at work with one dreamed up crisis after another, it was really stressful, so I asked my therapist the same question, she is a smart lady and her response was 'why do you feel the need to answer the phone'. It was kind of freeing, if I don't feel like answering I let it go to voice mail, it makes my day much better and puts me back in control of what I am letting in the proverbial door. Keep the faith. TS
I feel bad for people still sick and suffering from alcoholism. My natural instinct now when I encounter them though is to pray for them and try and get away from them. Nothing you do or say will help her when she is actively drinking (or drunk). Waiting until she is sober to talk is a good idea and a good boundary for you to have. A drunk person will over react to what you are saying and maybe not even remember it.
Not sure why you feel guilty. I guess there are some unrealistic expectations we place on ourselves about what whe "should" do for family. My sisters backed off me and my craziness while I was in the midst of my worst alcoholism and messed up relationships with other alcoholics. I'm hearing now how concerned they were but I never expected that they should have to be responsible for me or that it was their obligation to listen to me while I was wasted.
I called my parents wasted a few times and really regretted it. I wish they had not picked up the phone.
Just remember the 3 C's which are that you did not Cause her alcoholism, cannot control it, and cannot cure it. It's terrible that she suffers from alcoholism, but your pity is not going to make her any better. You made a statement of belief in her by hanging up. At least that conveys that you believe she can stop drinking long enough to sober up (temporarily at least) and carry on a more normal conversation with you.
I told my exAH the same thing last night. I can no longer let him ruin my serenity. Anytime I pick up the phone late in the evening I know how the Convo will go and I need to not get sucked back into all that. I hope you have meetings to help keep you on track. Keep coming back.
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Sending you love and support on your journey always! BreakingFree
Al-Anon/Alateen Family Group Headquarters, Inc. 800-344-2666
" Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional."
"Serenity is when your body and mind are in the same place."
Just remember, she probably doesn't feel bad for intruding and putting you through that. You weren't mean to her, you didn't hurt her - you put up a boundary to protect yourself. You deserve to take care of yourself, you are allowed to treat yourself as good as or better than those around you.
It's hard, we are so accustomed to worrying about everyone else's feelings and ignoring our own that it feels "bad". You did great now the hard part is to mean what you say. Maybe a couple more times answer and remind her immediately "I love you sis but you need to be sober when you call me". Then let it go. She can leave you a message telling you she's sober - and you'll know.
Im dealing with the same guilt with my husband. Everytime he calls I know he will be slurring his speech and talking nothing but nonsense. I told him last night that he can only text me. He still called numerous times today, but I only answered the phone twice. Boundaries is key, thats what Im learning.
My son is a "drunk dialer" and calls whenever he is wasted with his sad sob stories about his life and how stressing it is. Japan is 11 hours ahead of our time so if my phone rings anytime in the afternoon I know it is way late where he is so he will be drunk. If not, he would be sleeping those hours. After checking the caller id I no longer answer his calls.
I felt more guilty after I answered and told him I could not talk to him drunk. It is so much better to just not answer the phone.
Well done you have a set a boundary for your relationship with your sister , yeah it hurts *us* now the hard part sticking to it and remaining consistant . Louise