Prima (UK)

‘No one knew I WAS AN ALCOHOLIC’

She was drinking three bottles of wine a night, so how did Claire Hatwell, 39, hide her secret and how would she ever escape her addiction?

- • beesoberof­ficial.com

Ipoured myself a large white wine and sank on to the sofa. I’d finished another day at work with children who had special needs, done the coursework for my Open University degree, vacuumed the house (twice) and cooked tea for my three kids, who were now in bed. With my husband, Lee, working away, it was ‘Mummy wine time’.

I topped up my glass, again and again. When the bottle was empty, I opened another, then another. When my alarm rang early next morning, my head was foggy, but I knew that night

I’d do the same all over again.

It had crept up on me, the drinking. To the outside world, I was a smiling, competent 30-year-old. I’d had a happy enough childhood, though at school

I’d found it hard to fit in. Anxiety, feeling I wasn’t good enough, had taken hold.

I met Lee on a night out in Newquay, Cornwall, when I was 16. We married three years later and were thrilled when Joe was born soon after. Katie arrived on his second birthday and Barney two years on from that.

HOW IT BEGAN

It was only when I went back to work in 2007, when Barney was two, that I started drinking at home. Lee’s job, setting up exhibition­s, meant he travelled a lot and, while I was able to cope on my own, wine at the end of the day was my reward. ‘Where’s the harm?’ I thought. I never touched a drop when I was pregnant, and wouldn’t have dreamed of drink-driving – although looking back, I was probably over the limit taking the kids to school, which horrifies me now. I never drank in the day, but sometimes after the afternoon school run I’d pour a glass while cooking and chat on the phone to a friend who was doing the same. Wasn’t this happening in kitchens up and down the country? For heaven’s sake, you could even buy a clock that said ‘Prosecco time!’

I loved my job, but many of the kids could be challengin­g and I found it hard to switch off. I’d run around cleaning, vacuuming again and again, but my focus was on the wine in the fridge.

When Lee was home, I’d say, ‘Let’s wind down for a bit,’ as an excuse to open a bottle. He didn’t mind, could take it or leave it, whereas I was increasing­ly desperate for the numbing hit of alcohol. Knowing the issue was spiralling, I’d stop for a few days, then fall off the wagon again. I’d sign up for ‘Sober October’ or ‘Dry July’, but my resolve never lasted more than a day. What was the point of life without wine? How would I celebrate without it, drown out the pressures?

In 2014, Lee set up his own company with his parents and I left my job to join the family firm. I wanted to prove myself, but it was harder than I’d imagined. My anxiety levels went through the roof. I barely ate, picking at biscuits and leaving half my dinner. I went from a size 12 to an eight, despite the three bottles of wine that were by now a habit.

HEALTH CONCERNS

The NHS advises women to drink no more than 14 units a week; I drank nearly double that every night. I was worried what the neighbours would think of the empty bottles on recycling day, so I’d load them into the car and take them to the supermarke­t bottle bank instead.

I was beginning to have stomach problems and migraines. Stopping at traffic lights one day, I didn’t recognise any of the colours. The GP told me my blood pressure was dangerousl­y high, but when it came down the following day, he prescribed migraine medication.

Deep down, I knew what was to blame, but I didn’t fit the stereotype of an alcoholic and he didn’t ask me about my drinking. I was too scared to admit I had a problem, because then I’d have to do something about it. I just left the pills untouched in a drawer, preferring to self-medicate with Pinot Grigio. I knew my eyes were a little cloudy, my skin dull, but I kept up appearance­s. Although I’d inevitably drink too much on the odd night out, my friends were oblivious to what was going on.

Lee didn't realise the extent of my drinking, but he was worried. ‘Do you think you’re drinking too much?’ he’d ask. So I’d cut down for a few days, but it soon built up again. I took to secretly filling up my glass when he went to the loo. If he was working late, I’d drink until he was due home, then wash and dry my glass so that when he came in I could pour another, pretending it was my first. I didn’t stagger or sway, so the kids weren’t aware, but I began to suffer memory blackouts.

I’d wake up feeling sick as I pieced together the night before. Had I been snappy? Taken to social media and said something I shouldn’t? The kids

‘After the school run, I’d pour myself a glass of wine’

would chat about something we’d watched on TV and I wouldn’t remember a thing. That frightened me enough to dig out a leaflet for a help group I’d once picked up at the doctor’s and stuffed in a drawer, but the counsellor I saw wasn’t any help. ‘Three bottles of wine?’ he said. ‘I’d be on the floor.’ Surely this wasn’t a competitio­n?

GETTING HELP

Then I attended a support group, where another addict mentioned a drug called Antabuse, which makes you ill if you drink alcohol. So I summoned the courage to see my GP, who prescribed the tablets but advised me not to go cold turkey, just to reduce my intake by a glass or two a week. One night, when the kids were asleep, I was on the way to top myself up when I snapped. I hurled my glass against the wall, yelling: ‘I hate this stuff!’ I was furious with wine, with myself, with the fact there was no magic wand.

In 2015, after a row at work one day, I went home to bed and didn’t leave for a week, telling the kids I wasn’t well. I felt detached from reality, not fully alive. Lee kept calm, but he must have been concerned because he’d drive 40 miles to check on me during the day.

After two months, I stopped taking the pills. ‘You’re back in control,’ I thought. ‘One glass won’t hurt.’ But the moment I’d had my first, my willpower crumbled. I had to face it – I was incapable of moderation. Tearfully, I told Lee,

‘I can’t do this any more.’

He hugged me, saying, ‘I just want you to be OK.’

He had always supported me, never pushed me further than I was able to go. We’d talked about having another baby and now our youngest was 12, the timing felt right. Discoverin­g I was pregnant felt like a new life had begun in more ways than one. On 7 September 2016, I tipped all the wine in the house down the sink and I haven’t touched a drop since.

KNOWING YOUR LIMITS

Baby Stanley arrived, and it would be lovely if my story ended there, but alcoholism is complicate­d. I felt fragile as I learned how to reframe life without alcohol. Gripped by panic attacks, I thought: ‘I got sober for this? Where’s my reward?’ But I stuck to the alcohol-free wine and diet cola, although when I got through boxes of that a week, I gave that up, too. Then I started running as a stress-buster, but 5k became 10k… After six half marathons, I realised my addictive personalit­y needed new outlets.

I began writing posts on social media, then a blog. Sharing my story and hearing others’ was the best therapy. There was no shame, no judgement.

I’m now an ambassador for Bee Sober, a global organisati­on with daily meetings.

I can never drink again because one would lead to another, but I enjoy life so much more now. I’m so grateful

I’ve survived with my home, job and relationsh­ips intact, because others aren’t so lucky. The whole family is proud of what I’ve achieved and, at last, I can

be proud of myself, too.

Claire’s book, My Not So Secret Recovery, is available at Amazon, £6.99.

‘I hurled the glass against the wall, yelling: “I hate this stuff!” I was furious’

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 ??  ?? Having a fourth child, Stanley, helped Claire get back on track
Having a fourth child, Stanley, helped Claire get back on track
 ??  ?? Lee has been a constant support
Lee has been a constant support
 ??  ?? Claire saw wine as a ‘reward’. Below: with Lee and her oldest three
Claire saw wine as a ‘reward’. Below: with Lee and her oldest three
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