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... I have been asked to put together a ‘damage’ letter (slightly
worried about what that means!) with some background history, my
emotions and how my mum and dad’s (I think dad drank far too much
too, but this isn’t about him at present) drinking has or is still
effecting my life. This is not going to be easy and will probably be
one of the most difficult things I have ever had to do.
I hope mum will take this letter in the manner in which it is
meant and that I have not or never will portion blame to either of
my parents for anything that has happened in the past. I say this
again later. I hope that it will help to help her on her road to
become a recovering alcoholic and not a drinking one. I only want my
mum to now start taking responsibility for her own destiny and begin
to LIVE!
Well here goes. I feel kind of in limbo at present. A strange
feeling, as I feel that mum’s life is now in two halves. Her life
before she admitted she had a drink problem and her life now being
given the chance to get sober and start living again. I have just
started crying again. I have done this a lot in the last year.
For the last year or so, I have been very angry and feeling much
resentment towards mum as her drinking has gotten much worse. I am
trying to understand that it mostly isn’t a party for her either.
The drinking seems to have taken mum away and she seems a shadow of
her former self. She does not make contact with her friends any more
and I don’t think they do very often either. She has become very
reclusive. Prior to mum going into rehab I had to detach from her
after an incident that happened on August 10th of last year. Not a
memorable day for most, but it just happens to be my mum’s wedding
anniversary. Another excuse for a drink…
Soon after the family got together and went around to her home as
a desperate attempt one Monday afternoon to try and make her see
what her drinking was doing to us. I couldn’t stop crying. I said to
mum that from my perspective she would have to choose between the
drink or me. She looked at me and said ‘I think I prefer the drink’.
Shortly after that I left with everyone else. She did phone me a
couple of times promising to give up drinking and said she could do
it on her own. We all knew she could not. The rest of the family
have seen and spoken to her less in the last year also.
I am so upset to think that the drink is taking away her memory,
her looks and her personality and worse of all from me. Mum is a
very intelligent and funny lady with a warm sense of humour. She
played bridge well and did mental arithmetic. She used to leave me
standing when I tried to add up numbers in my head. The drink is
sadly putting paid to this.
I have felt very let down many times when phoning her and her
slurring down the phone at me, or getting the answer phone message.
I have to say that the silence of the answering phone had become
more preferable, but I had to weigh up the thought that she was
probably just ‘non-corpus-mentis’ and not at the bottom of the
stairs hurt or worse. I cannot speak for my brother, but I know he
felt the same. I would get knots in my stomach before phoning her
and feel physically sick if she picked up the phone whilst drinking.
I have also been round on several occasions in the last year and
on one of these occasions I went to pick mum up to take her out for
lunch and a trip to the garden centre. When I arrived I realised
that she had had a drink. A hair of the dog. There was no way I
could take her out like that and I said very gently ‘Mum, I can’t do
this’. I got in my car and cried for the rest of the day. I remember
feeling such loss.
Another occasion I rushed around one Saturday after going to the
gym and mum didn’t on this occasion answer the door. This time I got
angry and drove my car home very fast. I went straight to the
bathroom and screamed and shouted. I did not come out for about an
hour. My husband begged me to come out and talk but I was so bloody
angry and felt so let down again.
I have had many dreams about mum at night and in all of them she
always has a glass of whiskey in her hand. These dreams have ranged
from fairly ordinary dreams to some that are not very nice. Still
crying.
There is not an hour in the day or a minute in the hour I am not
thinking about mum and how I miss us going into town or to lunch or
a visit to the garden centre or similar. I just want the drinking to
go away and leave my mum. The drink is now more a part of mum than I
am.
Christmas this year was not good. I could not face mum and her
drinking and so went to Guernsey with my husband for four days.
Interesting. I felt some guilt about this but knew I could not have
spent Christmas with my husbands side of the family and not seen my
mum. This was only the third Christmas in my life that I had not
spent it with her.
They say that an alcoholic’s mind/memory goes whilst they are
drinking, well the same goes for the worried people around them. I
feel very distracted a lot of the time which is spent worrying. I
have been pulled up at work for silly little things and know that
sometimes this is due to this distraction. I have mistakenly thought
that it is the parent’s job to worry about their parents but I
cannot remember a time when I have not worried about mum.
I hope this letter comes some way to explaining a bit about how I
feel about mum’s drinking and how it has or is still affecting me.
Monday 24th January 2006
Now for some history. Mum was married to my Dad some 40 years
until he passed away just over four years ago. I think they must
have had good times, but dad was a possessive man and mum was very
gregarious and outgoing. This caused a lot of arguments between them
in as far as dad thought it was fine to go out drinking on a Friday
night, but mum should stay at home with the children playing the
‘good wife’. Mum of course who enjoyed dancing and also seeing
friends resented this a lot.
Christmas’s caused a lot of problems with this as dad always
managed to engineer a good night out on Christmas Eve which
sometimes included part of the morning. This also was cause for my
mum to get upset, quite rightly as she had to drive around
retrieving our presents whilst neighbours looked after us. Most of
our early Christmas’s were lovely with lots of family parties to go
to, but was not long before Mum started drinking a lot over
Christmas. These memories have stayed with my brother and myself. At
first it was mum is doing ‘her thing’ again, but after a while it
became very upsetting with us stuck in the middle.
When we were at home and mum had been drinking, she used to lock
herself in the toilet, which of course was a cause for concern for
my dad, brother and me. We were so afraid that she would fall and
knock herself out on the sink or bath. I remember dad hammering on
the door and us pleading for her to unlock it and come out, but of
course she was too drunk or asleep to do so. This happened on many
occasions and we were always very unhappy about it as you can
imagine, we were very young maybe 8, 9 10 a bit older.
Mum and dad had many rows and she used to get very angry with my
dad and several things happened at Christmas which are still very
vivid in both my brothers and my mind. On one occasion dad was
tending the fire and as they were rowing she poured a whole plastic
carton of salt over his head. I think that was the year the
Christmas tree (which was fully decorated) got thrown through the
blinds and window into the front garden. Once again we were very
young and this has stayed in both of our memories not fading in the
length of time.
When mum got drunk at Christmas we were asked to stay over to
whoever’s party it was. She would fall asleep and we would either go
to bed or sleep on the sofa depending on where we were. Dad would
take mum home and she would ask where we were. We of course were
happy to stay over as the atmosphere at home was not very nice! She
would make dad come out and wake us up, pick us up and bring us home
again. I remember feeling bad about this.
On another occasion I remember again the rowing and my brother
and I both very small were sitting on the stairs and mum upstairs
and dad downstairs. Mum was shouting go downstairs to your father
and dad was shouting go and sit with your mother. As you can well
imagine we were understandably very upset and scared.
More rows and several large objects thrown by mum at my father.
We were older by this time and wiser to it. Two of these objects
were rather large brass flamingo birds, they ended up in the front
garden. I recall the conversation with her friend on the phone
‘saying two birds had flown through the window’, her friend saying
that that was strange and that birds did not usually fly into the
house through glass windows’. She admitted to her friend that they
flown out of the window and not in!’.
She had another friend in the early days (I think she was quite
unhappy sometimes in those days) who used to live opposite us. My
brother and I remember them getting the Martini and lemonades out in
the morning whilst dad was at work. This was at 11.00 o’clock! They
did on some occasions take us out with her daughter in the car and
whilst we played on the swings they drank in bars. This is not very
vivid in my memory, but has stayed in my brothers and the friend’s
daughter’s memory.
I have had large rows with both my parents, but I think the worst
row was with my mother several years ago. After we had argued, I did
not speak to her for 5 weeks. Again she had made me very hurt and
angry. I don’t think I deserved the treatment I got.
Mum was very slim and glamorous and very beautiful, think Liz
Taylor or Audrey Hepburn beautiful. She is still a very attractive
lady. Dad did not like her wearing makeup or nice clothes. I think
he thought that she was going to go off with someone or something
like that. He was quite a placid man until riled and then he would
loose his temper too.
Mum used to go to an art class, it was escape for her I suppose
as dad still remained very jealous. These were not happy times for
my brother and me, I was about 13 or 14 and my brother is just under
3 years younger than me. One night my mum was caught drunk in charge
driving back from the class. Although she was just over the limit,
she had to go to court and we remember the police bringing her home.
Once again we were both very worried for her.
Mum is a very poor sleeper and she uses sleeping pills to help
her sleep. In those days (1970’s), the sleeping pills were very
strong. She used to take something called Mandrax (elephant
killers!) She was dropped home from the art class on one occasion
and she was very drunk. As per usual she took her sleeping pills. I
think she must have fallen asleep and woke up again. She had
forgotten that she had taken the pills and of all horrors she took
more. Coupled with the drink, this soon sent her into a very deep
sleep.
I remember dad coming through to my room and waking me up saying
‘Gill, wake up I think your mother’s dead’. He was beside himself. I
rushed through with dad, my brother stayed asleep during this awful
time. Mum was not moving and was like a rag doll. I wanted to call
the doctor, but dad kept saying no. I remember putting a mirror to
her mouth and there was no mist on it. She was close to death.
We shook her, we smacked her, but still she would not wake up. It
was very early in the morning 2.00 am or more. We continued to
pummel her and eventually she made this horrible moaning noise I
suppose you could liken it to a death rattle. She came around very
slowly and dad and I were soon able to sit her up. I still wanted to
ring the doctor but I think dad was scared too, maybe he was
embarrassed I don’t know. I know it was an hour or so later, this
too is still very vivid in my memory. Even the colour of the bedroom
is still there after all this time, one wall purple and the others
white with lilac sprays of flowers.
We soon managed to get her down the stairs and out in to the
fresh air. We walked her up and down the estate for at least an hour
in the cold night air to bring her round. We did so successfully. I
don’t know how much of that mum remembers as it was our nightmare
and not hers. I had school that next day. I was 13.
I once again do not blame either one of my parents for anything
that has happened in the past and I only hope that mum can begin to
understand how we felt.
My parents both worked very hard for both of us, they often
struggled with money, but we never went without. We always had
lovely clothes, full school uniform and mum always cooked a proper
meal for us.
There were lots of lovely gifts at Christmas and mum always
ensured that both of us were treated exactly the same with the exact
amount of money spent on both of us down the last penny! We always
sat down together at meal times. We did have many lovely days in
between these difficult times. We spent many great days down the
beach.
My mum had a very good sense of humour and on one of those
occasions we were down on the beach with my dad, my aunt and uncle,
my brother and my cousin. It started to rain, so action stations. My
dad and uncle decided to build a fort! This fort consisted of all
the sun chairs, the lilos, blow up boat and towels. We all ate our
lunch under it. Mum was soon desperate to go to the loo. In those
days trendy ladies wore their hair in a bee- hive and as my mum was
well in the fashion stakes she had this hairdo. She did not want to
get it wet and so looked around for something to cover her hair up.
She spied my dads white Y-fronts and put them on her head. We fell
about laughing as she made her way down to the sea. Yes I can
remember very funny times too and there were more of those of
course.
I hope mum, that you won’t be angry or upset with me sharing
this, but I am hoping that by me being brave enough to admit things
that have happened and how I am feeling, it will help you to come
out with things by your own admission. I have to do this for us, as
I think you know that this is the last chance. You must begin to
take responsibility, but mum you are not in this on your own, your
family are willing and praying that you will soon become a
recovering alcoholic with a life worth living.
I love you mum and will try almost anything to help you recover.
I only hope you realise this and talk to me again after this.
Gill |