When something happens to you — something that rocks your world, makes you doubt not only your relationship, but also yourself — you are left wondering who the hell you are. Your head and your heart aren’t always in line, and people looking in from the outside are always experts in telling you what you should do.
I’ve never regretted staying with my husband after he cheated because, even though people tried to tell me if he’d loved me he wouldn’t have done that, I believed he did and we were worth a second chance.
We are happily divorced, and I’ve been in a strong relationship for over two years with a man I love very much. He has fit into my life — and my kids’ lives — like a missing puzzle piece, and we are happy.
However, this man I love has a drinking problem. It’s something that was subtle at first because he’s a binge drinker. He’ll go months without drinking. He’d never seem drunk (even when he was), and he never drinks alone.
The problem is, when he does drink, he drinks to get messed up. Then, he blacks out and makes horrible decisions.
After six months of dating, I’d learned he’d driven home from a Super Bowl party after drinking all afternoon and into the night. He told me it was only a mile and he was fine. I told him if he wanted to be with me, his drinking and driving had to stop. He didn’t have to agree to this — he could have chosen to set me free. But, he made a promise to me. And I believed him.
After that, he didn’t drink a lot, but when he did there was something off. He seemed to be on a mission. He wouldn’t eat, and I had a feeling it was so he could feel the high faster. I’d watch him pound back a six-pack, when everyone else was sipping on one or two. He ordered another rum and Coke before his first one was finished.
I completely quit drinking around him, and we talked at length about how his drinking bothered me.
Because I’ve never been with anyone who had a drinking problem, and he didn’t drink often, I was confused about why it made me so angry and anxious. I often wondered if I was being too uptight. His father was an alcoholic and drank heavily every day, couldn’t hold down a job, and wasn’t able to care for himself. A lot of his friends drink more than he does so, by comparison, he thought he didn’t have a problem.