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Waiting for the kettle to boil, I peeled back the kitchen curtains
to be greeted by the birds singing and the first sunshine in weeks.
Everything seemed so peaceful and fresh.
Admiring the calmness and tranquillity of the garden, I felt my
cat brush past my leg, purring as if to tell me it was time for her
breakfast.
As I turned to reach for the cat food cupboard, I noticed in the
corner of my eye the overloaded bin of empty wine bottles I had
confiscated from my mother last night. Suddenly I was back to
reality.
My life was not peaceful.
Nor was it calm or tranquil.
I would compare my life to a ghost train at your local fair.
Lonely. Dark. Haunted. Erratic. Full of nasty surprises. I am the
child of an alcoholic.
Alcoholics Anonymous (A-A), a unique fellowship founded in 1935,
boasts more than 2,000,000 members worldwide. My mother is one of
them and attends local meetings.
The A-A website says the basic purpose of its meetings is to give
alcoholics a chance to speak out about their illness and help one
another stay sober.
Today is the morning of my mother’s one year anniversary of
attending A-A. She thought it would be appropriate to celebrate this
occasion last night, with her best friend. Alcohol.
CLICK. I reached for the kettle and poured the boiling water into
the two mugs I had pre-prepared with instant coffee. Watching the
milk swirl and blend into the coffee as it was added to the mug, I
thought to myself, just leave the house now and do not look back.
I was tempted, believe me.
However, I put the thought to one side as I clasped a cup in each
hand and started to make my way up the stairs, towards my mother’s
bedroom.
I felt anxious as to what awaited me on the other side of the
door. What mood would she be in? Will she be angry? Or will she
simply not remember anything? Thoughts like these always run through
my mind, the morning after a drunken drama.
On entering the bedroom, I discovered my mother was fast asleep,
blissfully unaware of her actions several hours before. Placing the
cup of coffee on her bedside table, I noticed how peaceful she
looked.
I stood in silence next to her bed, experiencing a succession of
emotions. Disappointment. Anger. Rejection. Frustration. Love. Pain.
Loneliness.
The National Association for Children of Alcoholics believes
there are almost a million children living with an alcohol dependent
parent(s) in the UK today, many of them hiding their problems,
living in fear and without support. I guess that makes me a
statistic because growing up, I never told anyone about the daily
goings on behind our front door.
For as long as I can remember, my mother had always liked a glass
of wine, but it was not until my parents divorced that it seemed to
become a major issue.
I’m an only child so it was just my mother and me in the house.
Do not get me wrong, I love my mum deeply. She was and still is a
good mum. I never went without. There was always food in the
cupboards, I had clean clothes and I was given the best of
everything material. To all my friends she seemed the perfect mum,
and she was, financially. Emotionally, I have to say, she did not
have a clue.
Throughout my teenage years, on the walk home from
school/college, I would always wonder what mood my mother would be
in that evening. Her mood determined the type of things she would
say after her compulsory glass of wine when she returned from work.
Television was my escape. I would sit and watch it all night, to
avoid witnessing my mother’s transformation from a kind, hard
working, professional person, into a nasty, crazy, mad woman as she
sipped her daily poison! I guess she had a case of the Jekyll and
Hyde syndrome.
“YOU made me drink.” “This is your fault.” “Your father never
wanted you, he wanted me to get an abortion.” “You think you’re so
perfect don’t you.” “Get out of my house!” “I don’t want you in my
life.” These words are imprinted on my mind.
As is the daily routine: watching my mother stumble around the
house, to finally fall asleep in front of the television. Tucking
her into bed night after night. Only for her look up at me, like a
baby, to tell me she loves me as she falls into a deep sleep. Simply
forgetting the painful things she had said just a few hours before.
Special occasions are the worst. I especially hate Christmas. My
mother seems to be out of control around this time. It is guaranteed
she will get legless and ruin the festive fun.
My last two Christmases, I have been thrown out of the house, for
no other reason than standing up to her drunken behaviour.
I ended up spending Christmas and Boxing day alone at my
university home. On my flatmates’ return, they all told happy and
funny stories about their Christmases. To be honest I envied them.
I wanted to spend a “normal” Christmas with a “normal” family.
When they asked me about my Christmas, I just lied. “O yes, it was
fantastic, lovely to be home.”
There was no way I was going to tell them the truth.
I also recall my eighteenth birthday, when we had all the family
around. As usual, my mother had had too much to drink before anyone
had even arrived. By the time my cake was brought out, my mum was in
a mess. She attempted to make a speech, but just started crying and
telling me she loved me. I was ashamed and embarrassed. I just
wanted to disappear and for the day to end.
The family knew she liked a drink: “Here she goes again, the
family drunk,” some would say behind her back.
This was extremely hurtful to hear, even though I knew it was
true. No-one had the right to talk about my mother like that. If
family members were judging her, then I was certainly not going to
receive help from anyone else.
That is why I decided not to tell anyone the full extent my
mother’s drinking had reached at this point.
A study, conducted by The Priory in 2006, concluded that problems
children of alcoholics experience in early life have a profound
impact later on.
I could not agree more. Things just went from bad to worse as the
years passed. I witnessed some awful things such as cleaning urine
off the kitchen floor, forcing my mother to be sick over the bath as
she attempted suicide with an over dose of pills. I have had to drag
her from a car while intoxicated at four in the morning. I lost my
job the following day, as I slept through my alarm.
My education also started to suffer. All my energy and time went
into worrying about and saving my mother from her drunken dramas. It
was extremely draining being the responsible one. I was not sleeping
or eating properly, and constantly felt ill with headaches through
stress.
From the outside, tutors and employers just assumed I was lazy
and not motivated to get anywhere in life.
I will never forget when my English Language teacher, Mr Beard,
laughed in my face when I told him I had been offered a place at
university: “As if you have been offered a place.”
The Priory Study also believes children of an alcoholic are four
times more likely to become alcoholics, compared to children living
with non alcoholic parents.
There was a time I did think: if you can’t beat them, join them.
I started drinking from the early age of thirteen.
I am an angry drunk, just like my mother. I started to push
friends away as they could not understand my behaviour. How could
they?
One day, I looked in the mirror and saw my mother’s reflection
staring back at me. I burst into tears.
I was now everything I had been fighting against all my life. I
decided there and then, I had to focus on me and my life.
I joined ‘Al-Anon’, a support group, for family and friends of
alcoholics. They made me realise I had to go through ‘detachment’
from my mother. Al-Anon said: “Detachment allows us to let go of our
obsession with another’s behaviour and begin to lead happier and
more manageable lives, with dignity and rights.”
I remembered this phase, as I was looking upon my mother sleeping
peacefully in her bed. All the feelings of disappointment, anger,
rejection, frustration, love, pain and loneliness that had filled my
body, suddenly defused.
Professor Martin Plant, an addictions expert at the University of
the west of England, said: “The children of alcoholics can break the
cycle.”
“Many end up loathing alcohol and refusing to let it destroy
their lives like it may have done to their parents."
I have now moved out my mother’s house and live at the other end
of the country, to start pursuing a career for myself. At the age of
twenty-one, I have only just started living MY life.
It has been extremely difficult to adjust to life without the
drunken dramas night after night, as they were a “normal” way of
life for me.
I do still worry about my mother, especially as last night
highlights the fact that she is still drinking. I do not think a
part of me will ever rest about her drinking, until the day she
dies. I will also walk around with the invisible scars of her
drinking until I die.
However, I now realise it is out of my control and the only
person who can stop her from this misery, is herself.
I smile to myself and softly say, “One thing that will never
change mum, is that I love you.”
I kiss her on the forehead. I silently close the bedroom and
leave her in peace.
Some people may judge my mother for her illness, and call her an
unfit parent. Don’t. I am the child of an alcoholic. But I still
would not trade my mum for any other.
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