I usually write about things that make me happy, so you’re probably expecting this to be about my handsome husband or music or maybe lobster and Jarlsberg potato galettes. Instead I’m serving up sadness that will drop you to your knees and the smell of bile. Sound like fun? Good. Pull up a barstool and let me get you a drink.
Whatever Amy Winehouse technically died of, she was an alcoholic, addicted to the feeling she got from drinking. There has been a lot of talk about whether her death was a tragedy or something that served her right or perhaps even honorable punishment for the friends or relatives who didn’t stop her (emphasis added) from drinking or smoking or snorting herself into a jar of ashes. Maybe some of the talkers are as familiar with alcoholism as I am or as some of the others are with passing judgment or even with what intervention is possible to stop the self-destructive behavior of an adult in most countries that recognize individual rights and operate under the rule of law. I don’t know them personally, so I don’t know. But I have more than a passing acquaintance with life at the bottom of a bottle, so here’s my unsolicited contribution to the discussion.
Growing up with an alcoholic mother teaches a daughter what helplessness feels like when it lives inside her bones, and that no one ever really means they’re sorry (no matter how often or sincerely they say it), and that she may think she has witnessed the most outrageous drunken behavior but there will always be something worse and probably soon. My mother (who died in 2001) was an alcoholic, as were her grandfather, her brother and one of her sons. Unfortunately, especially for her kids, she was also a totally self-absorbed, angry, bitter woman. She used to say that gin made a mean drunk (and she sure drank a lot of gin), but she was a toxic person when sober and, therefore, not a good example of your garden-variety lush. I won’t list any of the stuff my brothers and I witnessed – it’s probably not more violent or degrading than what you’re imagining, and I’m not writing this to elicit your pity.
But a bedrock lesson for a daughter of an alcoholic is that no matter what good things she does or bad things she doesn’t do, how she follows directions or stays out of the way, how well she cooks or cares for her mother or siblings or scrapes the vomit off the side of the toilet or avoids gagging on the smell of her mother’s hungover breath or a thousand other things, her mother will never love her as much as she loves martinis. And in her immature brain, that means she must be unlovable which is going to color that girl’s relationships with everyone else as long as she lives. One of those inescapable universal truths is that every child wants her mother to love her, even if her mother is an awful person. I will spare you the humiliating details, but believe me when I say that child can spend a good part of the rest of her life trying to figure things out and has only a slim chance of eventually getting some of it right.
Alcoholics (and other addicts) are, above all, selfish. They want the high, need booze, and nothing will deter them from getting it. My experience (with my mother and others) is not revelatory or unique: the addict has to choose to stop. What makes that happen is different for each person who recovers, and some people never find a good enough reason. It took decades, but I finally decided that I wasn’t going to allow my mother to make me crazy, to ruin every family holiday, to act out in front of my daughter or my husband’s family, and I wasn’t going to answer the phone that rang in the middle of the night and go referee a drunken brawl she had gotten into or anything else, ever again. I had tried everything I could think of to get her to stop, had gotten her to agree hundreds of times that she had to stop, and she just wouldn’t. Or couldn’t. Whether it was wouldn’t or couldn’t no longer mattered either. I then discarded that last reason we all fall back on: But she’s my mother (or brother or husband or fill-in-the-blank). My last recourse was to cut her loose, and I did. I didn’t see her or talk to her for several years, until shortly before she died, but that’s a story for another time. I’m glad I did it. It was freeing in a way I can’t begin to describe. I wish I’d done it much sooner.
My advice, for anyone who’s looking for some or who cares what I think, is that an adult with an alcoholic spouse should be free to stay in the relationship and suffer the consequences, but if there are children living there and the nonboozing parent won’t leave and take them, he or she has a responsibility to find another loving home for the kids. No excuses, no exceptions. No “But we need health insurance and it’s through him/her,” no “But we’ll be poor/poorer,” no “But the rest of the family will hate me.” Think of it as child abuse (because it is). If the drunken parent were smacking the kids around, you’d remove them, wouldn’t you? Just imagine that every gulp out of that glass of beer or wine or Maker’s Mark is a closed fist to your son’s or daughter’s face. And then imagine that it’s your hand hitting them (because it is). Pack them up and get them out. You want to destroy your own life, fine. You don't have the right to do that to your kids'.
Using my mother as an example of why alcoholics lead screwed-up lives (since she was such a miserable person in addition to the alcoholism) is surely overkill, but I want to make sure I drive my point home, so let me tell you about Kathy.
Kathy was about ten years younger than I, single, a lawyer who made partner in a very male-dominated law firm, extremely intelligent, organized, self-possessed and very attractive. She was hyperaware; nothing got past her in a deposition and probably not in her regular old life. She was calm and polite and compassionate but hilariously snarky in private. Her looks were surprisingly delicate: pale, perfect skin, beautiful eyes and smile, pretty light brown hair, a face like one of those vintage dolls. She could wear a light blue suit without looking ridiculous, if you get my drift. I was a court reporter and worked with her occasionally though she wasn’t a client; she was always professional and courteous to other lawyers, witnesses, everyone, although somewhat aloof. Once, though, at a firm retreat, she was the star of a fierce midnight croquet match, smacking the senior partner’s ball around the pitch, inspiring amazingly inventive cheating to try to stop her, tough and brave. I was yelling along with everyone else, encouraging her, until the management at the Ritz came and shut the game down. I really liked her.
When firms merged and my husband left trial practice, she started her own office and I retired with bum hands; our orbits separated. But she had been the protégé of an old friend of ours, so later I heard gossip that she (whisper this) was drinking. We saw her at a restaurant once with an odd-looking fellow, and she hollered our names across the crowded room, the rictus of a smile glued to her pretty, flushed face. She dragged a different embarrassed guy to a garden party one afternoon, late and loud, stumbling and flailing until someone caught her just before she launched herself into the pool. The rescuer’s reward was that she threw her arms around his neck, shouting “Hi-ii-ii-ii-i,” while everyone looked away.
A few years later, about six years ago, I got a message that Kathy had been hospitalized and was not expected to live. We guessed it had been a car accident, some catastrophe, but apparently she had been getting most of her calories from vodka for years and her liver was destroyed. She lay in a coma for a couple weeks, her porcelain skin the color of a pumpkin, until she died at the age of 44. Fortunately, she had no children.
To be clear, having a few drinks, even getting a little tight once in a while, isn’t alcoholism. The difference is that the occasional drinker isn’t compulsive, isn’t addicted, wouldn’t go to disastrous lengths to get more booze. And lest you think my expertise comes only from witnessing the compulsive behavior of others, I hereby freely admit that in my misspent youth I ingested far too much of a few substances all too often.
And I worked in the legal and the medical/legal system long enough (my whole life being ‘long enough’) to know that it’s impossible to force an adult to stop abusing him- or herself unless the person either commits a crime or meets the classic definition of being a danger to him-/herself or others (and how extraordinarily difficult and expensive it is to prove that) and that most alcoholics aren’t criminals and don’t threaten to kill themselves or others; they just drink all the time.
And it makes me grit my teeth when I hear people saying that an alcoholic who is a happy drunk isn’t really hurting anybody. That would only be true if the happy drunk has not a single family member or friend in the world who cares about them or is affected by their behavior. Last time I looked, there aren’t a lot of happy drunks on remote mountaintops, completely disconnected from society. Kathy, for example, was a grinningly happy drunk.
It’s a very difficult problem. Drunks are dangerous – on the highways, even in their homes especially with kids around – and are sometimes really unhappy people. But liquor is legal, consuming it isn’t frowned upon (and shouldn’t be) unless it’s drunk to excess, but by then things can be out of control. If a person were stumbling around with a hypodermic sticking out of his arm, he’d be dealt with severely. A drunk is tossed into a bed somewhere to sleep it off. I don't have a solution, no one does, not one that fits everyone, but a whole lot of people become collateral damage. Makes me want to just say fuuuuck.
In order to reduce my own sanctimony quotient, let me admit that I still drink. Not much, a glass of wine or a cocktail once a month or so, and I haven’t been even tipsy in a dozen years. It’s not because I’m better or holier (that’s a laugh) than someone who drinks more than that, but for two other reasons. First, I can’t tolerate the way I feel a couple hours after the last too-many-th drink and into the next day. I’m too old to bounce back after some eggs with hot sauce and a bloody Mary like we did in the old days.
The second reason is that I can still feel the undertow trying to haul me out to the green water. The sharp taste of lime juice in icy vodka or the fizzle-ting of ginger beer and dark rum on my tongue, not to mention the luscious syrup of a great wine in my mouth is a shivering reminder of how easy it would be to step too hard on the razor’s edge that I walk and feel it slice straight through the pink flesh of my foot, to find myself surrendering to a place where I would bear no responsibility for my actions, to leave my car on the side of the road and slide into a stranger’s bucket seat, thunking the door closed behind me and diving into the dark. So easy.


Salon.com
Comments
Candace, you wrote this with your usual brilliance and I thank you.~r
Yeah. Your writing this piece brings many memories Candace and some deep thoughts. TY dear....
There are other ways to have a horrible childhood. This is only one path. I actually would have been better off if my mother had a drink once in awhile to ease her anxiety. We need education on moderation instead of a criminal system. Kids need to know.
This is so, so well done.
Point taken, btw.
Had to flash on my 28 years of drinking, flashed on all I put my parents, wives and children thru. You kept it green for me, just for today. Thank you.
Clean, sober, tobacco free for seven plus years. Grateful.
I didn't read this as sanctimony at all - rather a rational and clear plea for mercy, on behalf of kids who grow up not knowing wtf is going on, let alone whether it's right or wrong.
Alcoholics might refer to themselves as "recovering," but their children will never enjoy that luxury.
Get out and stay out is good advice.
One day, in a favourable wind a child might want to know more about the person who left.
I got lucky, somehow. I count these blessings every day and thank the extraordinary soul who threw me out of her house on a day like this, in 1993.
We are friends once more, but I wouldn't expect her to trust me any further than she could throw me, ever again.
I'm sorry for you and every other kid who had no other choice than to endure it.
x.
I read it twice.
Oh, you may think that you are ok now and indeed, you may be ... but then the slightest hint of a problem brings everything roaring back like the train at the end of the tunnel,
all senses on hyper alert.
Father, mother, grandfather, spouse, siblings, aunts, uncles, friends and neighbors.
Only the spouse finally chose recovery.
It's gets mighty lonely, alone on the island of the take it, or (mostly) leave it drinker. And after all these years, I still sometimes ask myself, "maybe it really is me" - as the eternal outsider who never quite fits in with the crowd.
Rated, with sadness.
fyi I didnt get the pt about the blue dress and I sure wonder how many people did haha.
as for winehouse, yeah it seems unlikely that her friends/family didnt try to help her a zillion times and I havent seen anyone write to the contrary as you allude in your essay.
and her 1st hit single, of course as many have noted, is about rejecting Rehab. No, No, No. this is all what is known as a Slow Motion Train Wreck. I remember watching her video for the 1st time & thinking how fundamentally degenerate, debauched the lyrics and song was.
I hear that some ppl were even wagering when she would die of alcoholism in nasty public blogs or forums. grisly.... its a twisted world we live in sometimes.
oh yeah and some of her friends were actually partying drunk at her funeral.
I blame her nefarious, lowlife enabler associates to some degree. Im sure she had at least one drug dealer from stories Ive heard. amy didnt seem to fundamentally understand that to kick her habit she would have to get rid of her "friends". I mean very literally, *get rid* of them like the rotting trash that they are.
fyi, for those that resonate on this subject. try a blog by angel triggs who started it on open salon to blog about kicking alcohol and cigarrette habit, and succeeded one blog at a time. an inspiring story, and it would be cool if someone interviewed her in juxtaposition to the amy winehouse story.
as for amy, I wonder if it was a bad pill, a poison pill that did her in. drug dealers sometimes have been known to get their recipes wrong, or actually lace in stuff like cyanide or whatever.
from what I understand this is what happened to janis joplin, I think I heard that more than one person died from a batch of bad heroin, her included....
Damn.
your brilliance is too bright for my eyes.
razor's edge, indeed.
I wish I could give you those years back.
I love that song. So much.
Thanks
rated..D
Lezlie
Thanks for that.
thank you, A/B. drunks just spin around and fling damage everywhere, don't they? i'm so sorry about your family member and what happened.
i'll be thinking of you, dear mission.
it *is* exhausting - that's a perfect word. they just suck the life out of everyone around them. thanks for the kind comment, zanelle.
thank you, dhss, for reading it and for the comment.
tril, thanks for your kindness.
thank you, matt, for the comment and the rate.
i appreciate it every time you come by and comment, sophie. i truly do.
charlie (sigh). i'm grateful that you're sober, too. that's worth everything to people who love you, you know. and i'm not blameless, by the way.
kim, i was hoping you would read this and understand how powerful it is that you are living and writing and appreciating everyone in your life today. i couldn't be more thankful for that and that you come around and read my stuff and say nice things. you're a doll.
lea, you're a sharp cookie and i know it won't come as any surprise when i say that i wrote around her, not really about her. for perhaps similar reasons. thanks, old friend.
thank you so much, designanator, for your lovely, lovely comment.
thanks, gabby girl. xoxo (twice) :)
i appreciate your thoughts, kai2, and understand how different the situation is for each of us who lived with an alcoholic. it's a very tough thing.
thanks for the comments, vzn, and your thoughts about the various subjects, including the poor woman who's been much in the news and her music.
indelible, your second graf is so accurate. i'm sorry that you also had to learn this lesson through personal experience, but it sounds like you chose wisely. some people call it self-protection but it's really deciding not to die, i think. thanks so much for coming by. it's very nice to meet you.
thanks, bleue. i hope so too.
i knew you would understand every word of this, grif. thanks for reading.
i love you, annie. thanks for seeing the best words i could write today.
ah, my friend scarlett. we've talked about these parallels and how hard the choices were to make but why they were right. our daughters benefit greatly from the lives we've led in so many ways, from the bad stuff we know and the purpose we had in knowing we had to raise them differently. thank you so much, so much.
diana, your compliment makes me blush. but thank you very much.
thank you, jeff. i remember a few of yours that i thought that quote applied to. i greatly appreciate your compliment.
procopius, you are lucky indeed, and i'm very happy that you don't recognize *any* of this, really i am. thanks for stopping by.
thank you, dianne. i'm so happy that it's over and i have a great life now that i don't think much about the sadness, but i appreciate your comment.
julieeeeeee, thank you, thank you. you're the best.
thanks, lezlie. you're right, "helplessness" pretty much sums it up. i'm sorry you had to learn about it firsthand and see the damage. it's awful, isn't it? damn.
thanks, JT. i'm glad you came to read it, very glad.
nice to see you, JJ, and thank you for the careful reading and insightful comment. like so many others, i'm sorry that you, too, 'hear' this but glad that it resonated for you.
dear david, old friend, thank you so much for your kindness - on this piece and so many others. i treasure your friendship.
thanks again, scarlett. just dig your toes in and the surge won't move you. xo
What 1IM said - Damn.
Anyone with a taste for it can appreciate the analogy.
Your post is like a miracle. Children of alcoholics haven't a clue about relationships, and neither do I, nor does my poor sister, who I suspect is alcoholic too. The legacy we leave are kids is incalculable, and no one will probably ever know the extent of damage we do them.
Thank you for your frank, wonderful writing. I'm hoping with all my might that my kids can find an end to this goddamned misery.
And this is terrific. r.
Alcoholism - the gift that keep on giving.
now go write something - you have the whole week ahead of you!
Beautifully rendered.
Your last paragraph grabbed me around the throat and held on. Even curse words as superlatives are inadequate. Thank you for giving us the gift of this post here on OS.
There seems to be different levels of alcoholics. The father of an ex-fiancée was one. He'd been on the wagon for several years when I got to know him but would fall off every few years thereafter. I witnessed this a couple of times and it was eerie how the personality change would overcome him. But, from everything I could tell about the family, and I saw a lot of them, they were much better off having lived with him and he did manage to keep mostly steady employ.
I'm not sure if my own father was an alcoholic. If I go through those diagnostic questionnaires, he probably qualifies. Since he and my mother split up when I was 12, and he traveled a lot before that, I never witnessed any seriously drunken behavior. But in getting to know him as an adult, I don't think he spent a day in his life without having at least two or three drinks. And sometimes many more than that. Yet he was able to make a steady living as an independent contractor/broker for decades and I never heard so much as a whisper of physical abuse.
It seems that you and the others here have experienced mainly the alcoholics who drink themselves drunk day in and day out. I don't question for a moment that there are plenty like that but they're not all the same.
is about the truest thing written about alchoholism
maybe ever.
ah for a sip.
of?
of that which disproves
I don't have a solution, no one does,
for a lousy night.
So poignant, so beautifully written and so insightful. Thank you for sharing this deeply personal story with us.
she lived a long life, never for a moment taking any responsibilty for it. at the end, my wife was the only one to care for her, following years of treatment, and saw to it she was in a facility at the end and was properly buried--even though my wife was on her death bed at the time.
Me? i'd still piss on her grave but it's too out of the way to make the trip.
"But a bedrock lesson for a daughter of an alcoholic is that no matter what good things she does or bad things she doesn’t do, how she follows directions or stays out of the way, how well she cooks or cares for her mother or siblings or scrapes the vomit off the side of the toilet or avoids gagging on the smell of her mother’s hungover breath or a thousand other things, her mother will never love her as much as she loves martinis. And in her immature brain, that means she must be unlovable which is going to color that girl’s relationships with everyone else as long as she lives."
Yep. That's me. Never good enough. Unlovable, and unable to love. Even though mine weren't mean, they were reckless and darn selfish. When it wasn't martinis anymore, it was something else. I still get pissed off about that.
Don't get in that damn bucket seat. Bad, bad idea.
"Just imagine that every gulp out of that glass of beer or wine or Maker’s Mark is a closed fist to your son’s or daughter’s face. And then imagine that it’s your hand hitting them (because it is). Pack them up and get them out. You want to destroy your own life, fine. You don't have the right to do that to your kids'."
" I don't have a solution, no one does, not one that fits everyone, but a whole lot of people become collateral damage. Makes me want to just say fuuuuck."
"a shivering reminder of how easy it would be to step too hard on the razor’s edge that I walk and feel it slice straight through the pink flesh of my foot, to find myself surrendering to a place where I would bear no responsibility for my actions, to leave my car on the side of the road and slide into a stranger’s bucket seat, thunking the door closed behind me and diving into the dark. So easy."
These among the many sober, sobering truths you write with perfect insight and clarity. This is a brilliant, compelling post. Just brilliant.
Maybe that's why so many stand at the shore and gaze out...dreading, wishing for...that one rogue wave.
Now I purposely stride, with long, firm strides...across the sands, and away.
Away from the edge,
away.
So much for that.
Yeah, it's a bitch. I have been one of the very very lucky ones. Yes, lucky. I was given a white-light experiece which I thought was death. I was carried out of my first AA meeting on a stretcher.
But twenty-two years ago I sobered up, only to find myself in the place you describe, because I had given away my crutchesand my shield against the feelings and memories , the beatings and abuse at home. It took years to put the puzzle together. I did not have the tools.
You have lived with an untreated addict and reached the only conclusion possible. At a certain point, the addicts substance no longer works. That's when he/she is most vulnerable. There are few ways out. Prison, the psych ward, death or recovery.
There is a brilliant acronym that helped me get through many potholes on my way to serenity and peace:
FEAR:
Face Everything And Recover
or
Fuck Everything And Run.
Best wishes.
Bob
Wow. You really hit the nail on the head with that line. That was what it was like.
I'm sorry that your mother never stopped drinking. My mother stopped when I was 16 and has been sober for almost 30 years, but after being told what a selfish, spoiled, unlovable child I was, we have a wall between us that will never come down.
Not that it needs explaining, but I had started with a over-long comment about my experience with an important person in my life who had struggled with addiction. I thought better of it and deleted the whole thing. Then I found myself in an emotional, inarticulate state when I tried to explain how your piece effected me.
Anyway this is a fine piece of writing, which obviously threw me into the "Twilight Zone" :) Thanks for sharing.
Euphoria from the stuff is short-lived, and I think so many folks are stuck in the cycle of trying to attain some measure of ecstasy like they remember from the earliest times of imbibing. I know this is an errant emotional engine that drives young college age kids (I see most of them act responsibly), leading some of them to oblivion.
You touch on a familiar cycle of pain and frustration that exists in our family. Luckily, it is far away and seen only once a year.
This is a finely written piece of work Candace.
I've nothing profound to add to the discussion; I am fortunate in that no one I love is an alcoholic. A neighbor friend's mother was, years ago, though I was too young to know it until later. I lost touch with my friend but after his mother's death found out her alcoholism affected him much more deeply than I recognized when we were kids. Through through the grapevine I found out he was an alcoholic, too, unable to keep a job or driver's license. He's now living in Maine near his older brother and I hear he's doing better. I hope so.
All this to say your essay touched me, Candace, and made me grateful for never having gotten as close to the tragedy of alcoholism as you talk about here, so eloquently have you described its darkness.
Yep. You'd think, given how important it is, that certain minimal standards would be required for someone to become a parent, but no, they let just anyone do it, and more often than not with less than optimal outcomes.
"If a person were stumbling around with a hypodermic sticking out of his arm, he’d be dealt with severely. A drunk is tossed into a bed somewhere to sleep it off. I don't have a solution, no one does, not one that fits everyone, but a whole lot of people become collateral damage. Makes me want to just say fuuuuck."
Me too. Addicts are considered criminals, while drunks get a free pass, at least until they hurt someone or get a DUI and sometimes even after. Our jails are stuffed with people whose sole crime was to be addicted to substances our culture labels as bad, and meanwhile ads for booze tell us how fun and cool it is to drink. There's an imbalance there.
"I can still feel the undertow trying to haul me out to the green water."
But you don't let the undertow grab you. Some people never feel the undertow at all, some manage an accomodation with it, and some, unfortunately, end up like Kathy.
Anyway, thanks for the honest discussion here. I guess it's something that's always been with us, the need to feel good or to at least feel less bad, and one has to wonder, considering all the harm done, why we have these receptors in our brain which interlock perfectly with the molecules of alcohol and opiates and etc. For better or worse we're a substance-using species, and that's a characteristic which gives with one hand and takes with the other.
Thank you for saying the words that continually fail me because I'm just too tired to utter them.
Rated squared.