BIGREDIOWAN
Mods
My guess is it's someone who picks alcohol over everything else, family is a distant second. They do it mostly on a daily basis to numb something somewhere deep within them. Their "normal" level to operate everyday is different than you and I's. What they consider "normal" BAC you and I would consider drunk. They dread the shakes that comes with the detoxification that begins to occur if there has been too much time since their last drink and if they don't keep their levels "normal" it becomes pretty apparent to those around them and is painful and annoying to them. They hide it from their family, stashing bottles here and there and denying what they're doing to not only themselves, but their families, secretly they may be embarrassed and ashamed. They become verbally and sometimes physically abusive when they are on one of their many benders and don't care what happens or who they hurt and will still live in denial until it finally gets to the point that they are either ready to talk about and do something about it or lose everything. They are trapped in their own personal hell with no clear picture of how to get out or don't want to take on that mountain sitting in front of them where recovery is on the other side. Trouble is the flames of the hell they're in lick at the people that care about them and they surround themselves with and they become collateral damage in the process. I feel the term "alcoholic" is used too loosely and thrown around way too much when describing some situations. It may be appropriate in this situation or it may not be. We obviously don't know the entire background and can only speculate at this point.What defines someone as an alcoholic? Is it someone that drinks everyday, no matter the amount? Is it someone that drinks more then once in a given period of time, like twice a week?
I got an MIP when I was in college and had to take a class as a part of my probation. During that class, the instructor asked if anyone in my family drank. After a short discussion, he tried telling me that my Grandma was an alcoholic because she drank 1 beer on New Years Eve every year. That was the only time my grandma would drink. It was a family tradition for her that started when her great grandparents came to America.
Ever since that day, I have always wondered what defines someone as an alcoholic.
Sorry for the deep thoughts, I've had several alcoholics in my family, still do, and have seen what it does to families as a spectator as well. Damaging stuff, but addiction usually is.