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Old 06-15-2008, 09:33 PM #1
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dorrie dorrie is offline
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HaHa!!!!
Heres one:

Man needs a new brain...goes to brain store
asks about the prices of brains...
salesman shows him 3 brains
brain#1 is $50,000.00 belonged to a doctor!
brain#2 is $100,000.00 belonged to a rocket scientist!
brain#3 is $500,000.00 belonged to an alcoholic!!!!

The man was confused and asked why the alcoholic brain was so much more expensive than those of a doctor and a rocket scientist!!!!!!!!!!

The salesman replied......"its more expensive because its barely been used"!!
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Old 06-29-2008, 10:20 PM #2
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Well, I have sad news again.

I had started another thread "trying to help a friend", but I'm just putting the update on this one. Same people are reading it.

He's back in the hospital. He drove himself because his pancreatitis flared up, he got all infected and he couldn't take the pain.

My friend called me up all hysterical telling me that "if he dies, I'm going to kill myself". Now how do you answer someone who tells you this??

I, of course, told her to go again to Al-anon, that she needs help with this situation. She is in therapy and she said to me 'He can't come home, he can't come home, I have to find a way to get him into rehab".

This just happened yesterday by the way.

Guess what happened today? They gave him librium, his heart stopped racing, he's much better and I have no idea what the prognosis is, but they told her 'he'll make it". He refused to see the social worker. I told her to go and see the social worker and proceed to do whatever she needed to do to put him in rehab. (How stupid was I on this one??).

So she and her husband went to the social worker and asked all kinds of questions. What can they do, How do they get a judge to sign off on this, etc. etc.?

She was told "He's not a danger to himself, and he's not a danger to you". She said 'what do you mean he's not a danger to himself, he's got a death wish going on, he's been hospitalized 4 times in one year. His Pancreas can't take it any more'.

The social worker said "Yes I understand but if he had a gun to his head, then you could have him committed. This is a drinking problem and it's HIS problem".

Then she said "but he's killing us, we have no life". The social worker said "he's not killing you, you are allowing this".

My friend did not understand. I said 'if you went to an Al-anon meeting, believe me you would understand. They would explain tough love to you. They would tell you to stop feeding him, buying stuff for him, etc."

She said: "but I dont' do these things". I then said:"you bought him a gift today". She said: 'but he's in the hospital, he's my son".

I just said (this is on the phone because she lives in another state). I said "you need to attend Al-anon meetings." "you need to listen to what they have to say, and apply it".

She just said "well, we have no rights, we have to let him come home, and if we go to Family Court (the only legal way to evict him), it will take 6 months to one year, BUT I CAN'T ABANDON MY CHILD"

This says it all!!! She wants him to voluntarily go into rehab and that's not happening.

We really thought that this time, there could be a judge signing off on SOMETHING. I gather this is not the case.

Good Lord.
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Old 03-10-2012, 05:18 PM #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MelodyL View Post
I hope you all don't mind if I ask this, but I just want to find out some facts.

Exactly what separates a social drinker from an alcoholic??

I don't drink. I do not like the taste of alcohol. Oh, I've had the occasional glass of wine with dinner, but that's it. It has to be in a pretty glass and I'll probably drink half of it.

I have been told that it would be beneficial to have a glass of wine with dinner because it's good for the heart. I also have diabetic neuropathy and I know that it might inflame the neuropathy so I don't drink any alcohol at all. The last time I had any wine was probably at a wedding 4 years ago. So drinking is not My thing.

But I have friends who sit out at night in the back yard and have some beers. I have other friends who bring out margueritas and dacqueries (spelling, sorry), and they chug a lug them on the weekends (but they all work and don't do this during the week).

As a matter of fact, several years ago, I was at a nighttime chip and dip thing in someone's backyard and they brought out pitchers of this and that and poured them into glasses. I had never tasted margueritas, etc. I found them delicious. But I had maybe one glass of each and that was that for me.

But they were doing this all night long.

Does this make one an alcoholic? Or are these (all women), just gals getting together on a hot summer night to drink ladies drinks??

I really don't know the answer.

I grew up in a household where, on holidays and special occasions, the highballs were served, whiskey sours, 7 and 7's and beer was served. My mother had 10 brothers and sisters, and on various occasions, I would see drinking. Never thought much about it because no one passed out and we all played cards during the night, then had coffee and cake.

I never knew my own mother was an alcoholic. I thought EVERYBODY's mother was sitting at the kitchen table when their 12 year old came home from school, and she'd be sitting there with a glass of scotch. Always scotch, never anything else. She never slurred, I never saw any disturbing kind of behavior. She was a mean person and we never got along, but I never attributed it to drinking.

Only when I was 24 and my parents moved to Florida, did my father call me and tell me "the superintendent of the apartment complex told me I better reign in my wife's drinking, she's getting out of hand". That's when I said 'Mom drinks??? Honestly, no one ever told me anything.

I told him to check for scotch bottles, and empty glasses. I flew there on many occasions, and they had a bar with lots of alcohol. But my mother had family in Florida, and there was ALWAYS people over and drinks were served. I never drank because it's not my thing. Food WAS my thing, but it's not any longer, thank god for that.

I distinctly remember my father singing and playing the ukelele with a drink in his hand on Christmas and on News Years Eve, but that was it for him.

Everybody else drank highballs on the weekends.

So does this constitute social drinking, or was everybody an alcoholic.

I believe my mom was. She was a nurse and worked the night shift, and I was visiting in Florida when I was in my late 20's. She must have been 56 or so. She came home at 7 a.m. and I watched her go to the liquor cabinet and pour herself a glass of scotch. I ran over and said AHA!!!! got you. and she jumped and said 'Don't tell your father, you don't understand, you just got up and had breakfast, I'm just coming home from work, so I have to unwind"

I tried to speak to her but it was like I was wrong and didn't understand and SHE knew what SHE was talking about.

If anyone can give me some answers, I would really appreciate it.

Thanks much.
i think with one you have to have a drink the other, you feel like having a drink.
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