“Hi, my name is Kathy and I am the wife of
an alcoholic.”
I have never actually voiced those words to
anyone, except to an empty room or to the hydro towers neatly placed in the
green space that joins two walking paths near my house.
I have, over the last 50 years, reflected
on who else dwells in the face in the mirror.
“Hi, I’m Kathy and I’m a battered wife,” 30 years ago.
“Hi, I’m Kathy and I have anorexia,” 25 years ago.
“Hi, I’m Kathy and I am so the unluckiest
bitch on the planet between Post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.” Pick a time.
“Hi, I’m Kathy and despite all of the
above, I AM a writer and that’s what kept me from putting a gun to my head.”
His sister, my grandmother, an evil piece
of work by any description was the raging type of morose alcoholic. Verbally
abusive. Self-destructive. Materially destructive. A sociopath who had to cut
through the swath of thick blue smoke that surrounded her 98 pound frame as she
consumed dozens of stubbies of Carling Red Caps and filterless roll your own
cigs starting about 11 o’clock in the morning and carrying through until the
wee hours of the following day. That in itself was enough to label her one
tough old broad, the kind you’d imagine you’d find camped out in the local bar,
wearing a faded silk blouse, tweed skirt and babushka. Her pale skin yellowed
by smoke and broken only by a smear of Elizabeth Arden No. 6 Red lipstick. Yep –
Mary-Gene – road hard and put away wet. The stench of stale smoke and warm beer
clung to her skin to the point that I nearly vomited anytime I was forced to
give her the mandatory holiday hug. Shabby. Anemic. Drunk. Hard to believe she
used to be same beauty whose photos I have buried in the bottom of the
sideboard drawer. Proof to me, I guess that however I remember her for all of
my childhood until she died, she was once a person, a woman, with soul and a family.
In the end, however, all she had was her booze. Fittingly, she died alone after
a breaking her hip from a fall. I understand she lay at the bottom of the
stairs in her condo for days before she was found. Not the same stairs she had
once pushed me down as a child during one of her drinking binges and then
blamed it on Sandy, my grandfather’s dog. In the end, it wasn’t the hip but
alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver that took her.
So here it is, my resume into the world of
AA. Luckily – very much so – I don’t have the head for binge drinking, or for
any drinking for that matter. My stomach rejects anything more than a couple of
glasses of wine. The rest of me doesn’t react all that well either so the
bottle and I tend to steer clear of one another, in light of my excellent
references.
But now I have a different battle. Someone
I love has been snatched away by this obscene disease. Harming only themselves,
so they think, I see a different kind of alcoholic. One who was led down the
path to the slippery slope of ‘casual-social drinking’; the friendly guy who
jokes and laughs easily, the life of the party and the straight up guy everybody
wants to be friends with. The ‘sure, I’ll have another one’ drinker who started
innocently enough only to be abducted and pushed into the vast pit of ‘I NEED
another one…and another one…and a few when I get home from work and a few before
I go to bed. Make that a several, but
only after my wife goes to bed.’ Obviously, I sleep too soundly to hear him get
up and go to the kitchen cupboard where 2, 3 or sometimes 4 60 ounce bottles of
vodka live every week. Yes, every week. I am also too deep in slumber to feel
the mattress sag as he gets back into bed an hour or two later, kisses me on
the cheek with a mouth tasting of vodka and whispers, “I love you” before
burrowing into the blankets for the night, safe in the knowledge that I am seemingly
oblivious to the dangerous game being played out in my own home – one I swore I
would never have to face because I thought I had a choice. Because I thought I
had closed up all the scars of my past and left them all behind in my bad
memories and sometimes nightmares.
How wrong I was. That “elephant in the room”
is now firmly lodged in my house. In my bed. In my life. For whatever reason
God has chosen to place this affliction in my life once again, at least I know what
I am facing. I can look deep inside its ugly heart and face it head on. Because
this is one family member it’s not going to get. I know its tricks, its false
promises, its weaknesses. It’s going to be a long, hard fight. I might not win
every battle, but at least I know my enemy.
Because my name is Kathy and I am the wife
of an alcoholic. And this is the beginning of my story.