Can I drink around my son?
Often I am asked if I drink around my son.
It’s a question that comes up frequently in support groups trying to help those with an addiction to alcohol.
Professionals typically suggest cleaning out the house when a loved one comes home from rehab, or at least locking up any alcohol.
But that doesn’t answer the question: what to do at a family gathering or restaurant?
My son recently told me, “It is helpful to do anything we can to protect the alcoholic/addict until he or she can experience the psychic change that results from working the Twelve Steps.”
When Jacob first came out of rehab years ago, neither my husband nor I would drink around him. It wasn’t just the nagging worry that I’d be putting a temptation or “trigger” in front of him. It was more a show of support. You can’t drink. So I won’t, either.
But it wasn’t long into his sobriety before Jacob was staring at me across the table after the waiter left. “Ma, it’s okay. You can order a glass of wine.’
When I didn’t, time after time, there came a moment when he said this…
“Mom, go ahead. It’s ok. I wish you would. That way I’ll know you know I am okay, and you can trust me. You can trust my sobriety.”
Today, bearing witness to the “psychic change” he’s worked so hard to achieve, I do occasionally sip a glass of wine in his presence.
Because I have faith in my son’s recovery, and in my own.
And I am learning to trust, again.