The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Spouse worries about husband’s drinking

- Contact Amy Dickinson via email at askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

DEAR AMY >> I have been married for

45 years to a man who has a severe drinking problem.

It wasn’t this way in the beginning, but over the years his drinking has progressed into alcoholism.

I have tried to help him in every way I know. He went to rehab last winter but didn’t follow through with any of the support that was offered to him.

Now he is drinking again and although it is not as bad as it was, he is headed down that road once more.

I want to leave him if he won’t quit drinking, but I am afraid of what he will do if I leave.

To make matters worse, he was recently diagnosed with cancer.

What should I do? - Worried

DEAR WORRIED >> You might need to make a stark choice between the possibilit­y of your husband self-destructin­g in your absence, or of him self-destructin­g in your presence.

What I’m trying to express is that you are not the answer to his existentia­l question. You do not possess God-like powers to save him.

Your husband has alcohol use disorder, and - as with other serious medical disorders (his cancer, for instance) - in order for him to get well, he requires treatment and follow-up care.

If you want to continue to help him, it might be wisest for you to focus on his cancer diagnosis and treatment. Make sure his physicians know about his alcoholism. I’m assuming that alcohol could prove extremely toxic along with other drugs he might be prescribed for cancer treatment. His team might prescribe a medication to assist him in staying off of alcohol (several medication­s have FDA approval for treating alcohol use disorder).

Sometimes ultimatums (“Stop drinking or I’ll leave”) do work, but I believe it might be more powerful and useful for you to make a choice based on your own needs and capacities - and so an alternativ­e would be for you to simply separate with no strings attached while you focus on your own self-care. You can then continue to make choices about the relationsh­ip, based on your own judgment and non-negotiable­s, as well as his needs.

And - as always - when coping with the addiction disorder of a loved one, Al-Anon could be a gamechange­r for you.

This is how Al-Anon defines detachment: “Separating ourselves from the adverse effects of another person’s alcoholism can be a means of detaching: this does not necessaril­y require physical separation. Detachment can help us look at our situations realistica­lly and objectivel­y.” Check Al-anon. org for more.

DEAR AMY >> My boyfriend and I play tennis at a local park.

We disagree on how to handle the following: A man used the court’s back fence as a practice soccer goal. He lined up his shot and kicked the ball into the fence directly behind where we were playing.

He did this over and over again as if we were not there.

I wanted to talk to him. My boyfriend objected, stating that I should be aware of and sensitive to perception.

The man happened to be Hispanic, while we happen to be white. I would talk to anyone who exhibited this type of intrusive behavior to our playing regardless of race/ethnicity, in a pleasant way.

While my boyfriend won this one, and I said nothing, I would like to know your opinion.

- Tennis Bums

DEAR BUMS >> It seems obvious that at a public park, a person has a right to use the fencing around the tennis court as a backstop, certainly if there are no other options.

Must others around you behave quietly, as if you are in the final rounds at Wimbledon?

All the same, if someone is behaving in a way that bothers you, you have the right to respectful­ly ask them to stop, regardless of their ethnicity.

If you had done so, the soccer player might have chosen to remind you that soccer is the most popular sport in the world for a reason and that even though your tennis playing might have bothered him, he had chosen to be tolerant.

DEAR AMY >> In a response to the “Testy Traveler,” the traveler who was bothered by her chatty seatmate on an airplane, my response to talkative seatmates is, “I hope you don’t mind pausing our conversati­on, but I must rest my mind, now.” I then close my eyes and relax.

- Florida Reader

DEAR READER >> I like your polite and definite response. I hope my own defenseles­s seatmate will use it on me the next time I fly.

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