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My Mum is an alcoholic; I am a child of an alcoholic. But I am also
a woman, who likes the X factor, the colour purple, has a penchant
for kissing and shopping and has a crush on Alan Hansen. So here
is where we are now. My mum has just been screwed over by someone,
some dodgy agency, so no longer owns her house. She lies in her
sodden clothes, for days on end, on her stained marked sofa. She
lives in a small terraced house with no carpets. She has no money,
no friends, no sense of reality and no direction. Soon it’ll be her
50th, but what has she got to celebrate?
The thing is, after all my reading, soul searching, googling,
talking, crying, and hurting myself, I have slowly accepted, no one
can sort you out, apart from yourself. People can support,
influence, assist and inspire, but you’ve got to want to do it, be
motivated, and want to change. But in her case nothing motivates
her, not even her kids. I ask her what will help her. Her response,
‘Your Dad’. He died seven years ago.
Alcohol is her friend, her escapism, her crux and her excuse.
Sometimes I wish she was the silent drunk, maybe even the violent
drunk, but I know these fleeting thoughts would not be the answer.
She has been lost for a long time. But you get to see glimmers of
her, when the acting drops. But then I realise, we are merely the
audience, watching this tragedy unfold. We have seen this film so
many times; we know the lines off by heart. But it still hurts.
I never thought I’d say this, but I don’t understand why she is
still alive. If she hates life so much, why do this to herself and
her family. I’ve been angry at her for so long, especially when she
would go on a bender, and then everyone would welcome her back. I
didn’t. How could she sleep? Continue on as normal, when she was
wrecking so many people’s lives.
I am very open and honest with my friends about her situation,
about the realities of it. Perhaps sometimes too open, but my
friends use the information and humour me. That’s the way I like it.
Of-course her alcohol I believe, has had a profound effect on my
life. I suffered low self-esteem, a lack of sense of self, self
harm, an eating disorder, attempted suicide, anxiety, and depression
and welcomed an abusive lover into my life. But would I still have
done this is she was sober? Who knows. All I’ve got is my
experience.
However, I’m still here. With a bag of experiences, a University
degree and a future as bright as the sky. I remember when I was at
my lowest ebb, I got angry with the people that looked on the bright
side, ‘always look on the bright side of life,’ Rubbish. ‘Things
aren’t as bad as what they seem.’ Shut up. ‘Things will get better,
they always do.’ Anger. I was confused, I did want to get better,
but I didn’t know how. I didn’t want my history, I didn’t want this
pain, and I didn’t want this. Who really was I?
Then looking at statistics on the internet, I knew due to my past
I was prone this, prone to that, had more of a chance of this.
Negative, negative, negative. But that was my comfort. But I’m over
it now.
I’ve recognized where I was going wrong, this is a part of me,
but it doesn’t have to hold me back. I read recently, we are here to
learn to love more. Each experience helps us learn, grow to bring
more love into our lives. Don’t get me wrong if someone told me that
a couple of years ago; I’d given them a right look. But now, it’s
not as though I would want to go through it all again, or make my
situation anyone else’s reality, it’s part of me.
As I’ve discovered from friends of the family, Mums drinking
started when we were young. So it has always been in the background,
like a misty cloud over our lives.
As I reached to my teenage years, and the drinking escalated, my
humour distanced me from talking about the real issues of my life.
The hormones kicked in, and the negative thoughts were a regular
guest in my already confused mind. Then I became suicidal, but I
couldn’t tell anyone, as I felt they all had more important things
to worry about. I attempted suicide, but no one knew until my
twenties. But I survived. I live, as they say, to tell the tale.
So here I am, with 3 amazing brothers and sisters, a good job, a
better attitude and hope. I still yearn for the day when I can say
and think, I’ve had a bad day, I’m in a bad mood and I’m not happy.
Not because of depression, my past, just because I’ve got a cold,
I’ve had an argument with my boyfriend and I didn’t sleep very well.
Normal stuff. I’ve started to engage in real relationships, talk to
people, openly and feel more comfortable with my feelings. I’m
excited about life.
I don’t hate my Mum anymore, I’m over the anger, I think what
prevails is an overwhelming sense of sadness. She didn’t have an
easy life, both her parents died when she was young, she suffered
low self esteem, anorexia and my Dad suffered 4 heart attacks before
his fatal one in his forties. She fought all her life, and I don’t
know if she strong enough anymore. But I will learn, and not be the
sequel.
My advice, for all of you going through a similar situation out
there is to talk about it. Please don’t keep it in; it’s not your
fault. You are the innocent party. You are not your parent’s
mistakes; you are the successor of them. Learn to love more.
Hopefully one day you will see your experience, as a horrible event
in your life, which YOU overcame.
Good luck.
Carly
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