I hope my readers can help me. I'm seeking family or friends who are concerned about an opiate addicted elderly person. I'm doing some research and need some input. Please contact me at LDoyne@live.com with "opiate" in the subject line.
Thank you very much!
This blog reinforces that there is life after spending a decade of being a non-alcoholic person married to an end-stage alcoholic. You will still find posts from the original Immortal Alcoholic but the new direction is that of SURVIVNG after the chaos. You will still find useful insight and facts concerning the complexities of being a part of an alcoholic's collaterally danaged.
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Sunday, January 17, 2016
I dare rehab facilities to take this challenge!
I was sitting in a waiting room when I struck up a
conversation with another woman. It turns out that she was also the wife of a
retired submariner. Her husband has long
since passed and she spoke freely about the long deployments and lack of communication
and the parties with free-flowing booze. Both our husbands were dedicated Navy
men who put the families on a shelf and took them down when they wanted to be
fathers and/or husbands. The similarities were eerie.
Back in the day, the command would reward the men with
barbeques and baseball games. There was plenty of hamburgers, hot dogs, steaks,
salads and kegs of beer. The wives watched in dismay as the men over-indulged
Sunday, January 10, 2016
My respite get-away
Day One
I arrived at TownPlace Suites by Marriott and checked into
my “studio” suite. The space felt clean and fresh. The bed was covered with a
pristine white coverlet over the cleanest sheets I’ve ever seen or smelled.
There was a kitchenette that was completely stocked with everything I would
need to prepare a full meal even if I didn’t plan on doing so.
After unpacking my toothbrush, I settled down on the bed
that seemed to have been created just for me. I was in heaven and fell to sleep
before I knew it. I awoke
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Annual optimistic arrogance
Here we are. We’re here every year, year after year. There’s
nothing we can do to stop it and I don’t know anyone who would want to if they
could. It’s the New Year. It comes with fresh new hopes and statements of
adamant changes in lifestyles. In our optimism, we have images of brighter days
and calmer nights. In our pessimism, we
dread what we know in the deeper recesses of our being is the logical outcome
of this bright New Year.
Each year I start out thinking that I will strive to do
things differently. I will pledge to write a chapter each week in the next
book. I clean out my
Monday, December 21, 2015
Another Christmas..
First off…
Thank you very much to everyone who donated to make this
time away a reality. If you haven’t donated and feel that it is something you
want to do – just click on the donation button in the previous post. I’m still
trying to pull money together to allow me to go to dinner at a restaurant or
two.
Anyway… on to other things…
It’s Christmas and I usually do some kind of Christmas post.
Christmas is not a fun day for families of alcoholics. Even if the alcoholic is
not drinking there is always an undercurrent of the possibility of a shoe
dropping at any moment. It is stress at the maximum level. Not wanting to add
to that stress by reminding us of the possibilities of disaster, I decided to
try posting something a little lighter.
Growing up in the 1950s in a small
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Immortal... the definition of
Immortal –
Definition of immortal in English in the Oxford Dictionary:
Adjective -- Living forever; never dying or decaying
This definition goes on to say that humans are not immortal but their souls may be. I don’t think the authors of the Oxford Dictionary ever met or heard of Riley.
On Wednesday, Riley’s primary care doctor made a
Definition of immortal in English in the Oxford Dictionary:
Adjective -- Living forever; never dying or decaying
This definition goes on to say that humans are not immortal but their souls may be. I don’t think the authors of the Oxford Dictionary ever met or heard of Riley.
On Wednesday, Riley’s primary care doctor made a
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Now what?
Riley had a saying that went something like “When you’re up
to your arse in alligators, it’s hard to remember that your prime objective was
to drain the swamp.”
That’s exactly how I feel most of the time. With all the
responsibilities of being Riley’s caretaker, sometimes I lose sight of my prime
objective. I actually, I seldom can remember what is my prime objective. I seem
to have many and they seem to change from day to day. Maybe my objectives are
layered like a pyramid.
We have received the official notification that Riley WILL
NOT be entering the Veterans Hospital as a hospice patient. I don’t understand
all the whys and wherefores except that his lab results are not showing any
abnormalities in his liver function.
Saturday, December 5, 2015
A typical day
“Where are my friends?” Riley asks almost daily. “What have
you done with my money?” he accuses. “How did I get so sick?” “Why are you
keeping me prisoner here?” “Get me out of this bed!”
I answer him as honestly as I can, but my answers are met
with hostility. Such is the life of a caretaker of a very end-stage alcoholic.
Although I’ve been told he has less than six months, I know from past
experience that this could go on much, much, longer. I don’t know if my health
will allow me to see this all the way through to Riley’s end.
There is a light and it is NOT an on-coming train. He might
be accepted into the Vet’s Hospice Program and be placed in the hospice unit at
the VA hospital. He would be allowed to stay there for six months. What a
blessing that would be!
Saturday, November 14, 2015
Five year journey to end-stage
On October 19, 2010 I began a blog about life with an
alcoholic who seemed to defy all logically anticipated end-of-life
expectations. I wrote humorous little stories detailing the absurdity of the
things he did. I wrote about the past and the present, the good and the bad,
the laughter and the tears. As time went on and months turned into years, I
continued to write. I can’t believe that I’ve been writing for five years.
As the years past, the posts changed. I did more and more
research and shared my learned knowledge with anyone who visited my pages. I
thought to myself “this is good, useful stuff and should be shared in an easy
to understand, easy to find format…” so I wrote the Workbook.
A few months into writing the blog, my e-mail in-box began
straining at the seams
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Plan for the worst
I read that a commenter took a “life expectancy” test to see
how long she and her alcoholic can expect to live. I went to the website she
used and did the test for both myself and Riley. I should die at age 80 and he
should be dead within 3 years. I was impressed because in my gut, I think I
really can live to age 80 or maybe even longer. Riley’s result didn’t surprise
me at all, but, let’s not forget that he IS The Immortal Alcoholic AND he is in
hospice, so all bets are off when it comes to his exit date.
I guess this test is a good one for a general ball-park for
some planning. But, I find it to be a bit deceiving when it comes to
determining the lifespan of an alcoholic.
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