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For the last 30 years of my life I have been dealing with my alcoholic Father. He never abused me physically and actually was kind and charming most times, but I was a typical enabler. Fast forward to now...he has COPD and CHF and does nothing to help himself. He lives an hour from me and I go every other weekend to get him groceries and do laundry. I did finally get someone to help with the lawn and deep cleaning here and there. He is now on his 6th hospital visit this year, each visit is 7 to 10 days of hell. Constant phone calls all day while I'm trying to work. He is nasty to the Nurses and expects me to run all over and bring him this or that. All for him to get discharged at the most inconvenient times, then go home and get someone to bring him ciggs and booze again. I am so tired of this rinse, wash, repeat cycle. Earlier this year I had a mental break trying to handle everything and my Husband threatened to leave me if I didn't start telling Dad NO. I have since gotten my mental health under control and promised my Husband I will try to make he and I more of a priority rather than this man, my Father who continues to abuse himself, me, and everyone around him. Has anyone else in a similar situation found a way to get through to their parent in a situation like this?

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Alcoholics abuse and manipulate all around them. The only way to even try to deal with it is to detach. Stop doing anything for him. Join Alanon, attend meetings get a sponsor and stand your ground.

STOP catering to your dad!
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JESLISE Dec 2022
I did not realize they have sponsors in Al Anon, I always though they were for the users. I'm starting to see now I have my own addiction to trying to fix things.
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Have you ever tried saying "I can't possibly do that"?

Your father obviously has ways of getting need for smokes and booze met. Let him deploy those resources while he's in the hospital, including discharge.

Next time he is hospitalized, don't show up.

Call discharge planning on day 1 and say " I am stepping away from enabling my father's charade of independence ".

They will quickly find him placement.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
Wow, my good friend just had me practice saying I can't the other night. I really have to practice, it is hard for me. I've always been the, "OK, sure" person then expect an award and get upset when I don't get one. I need to face this.
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His charm has allowed him to manipulate you all your life. You won’t be able to get through to him because he’ll become angry if you don’t respond the way you always have. Alcoholism is complicated, and alcoholics are sly and crafty in order to get the most important thing in their life, which is booze. Alcohol is first in his life, you’re second or third or fourth. Stop being manipulated and your life will improve. He is who he is and he won’t change. Consider him the wake-up call not to have anything to do with alcoholics ever again.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
Yes, alchoholism is complicated. I'm thankful for this group who understands that without giving all the details. And yes, always charming when he needs something and then the ugly comes out if it's not going his way.
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Sounds like a rough situation. When he is in the hospital, do not take his calls while you are working. Ignore them and do not engage and try your best not to get pissed off about it. You don't need more stress! The nurses can call you if there's an actual issue that you really need to deal with. I would think that he should be discharged to rehab. With that many hospitalizations for such long periods, it sounds like he's in pretty rough shape. Is he currently in the hospital? If so, let the staff know (social worker, I think?) that you can no longer support him like you have been.

So sorry that you had a breakdown and I'm glad that you are learning to put you and your husband first. Your dad's addictions are totally prohibiting him from taking care of himself. He's just going to get worse and worse. Don't let him take you down with him.

You do not need to go back and forth to buy him groceries and do his laundry. He can hire someone local to do this for him. Or hire an aide once a week to do these things for him. YOU do not have special powers that make you the only choice to do these mundane chores.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
Thanks for the reply. I work from home now which made me available all the time to him. This is my fault, and I allowed it to get here. Tomorrow I'll put my phone in the other room, just like we used to have to do in the office and I survived then!
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You asked: Has anyone else in a similar situation found a way to get through to their parent in a situation like this?

Friend you will never successfully change another person. We can make suggestions of behavior change you'd enjoy seeing but that only works if the person is interested in making that change. Addicts don't ever successfully face their addictions until they want to, and collateral damage be damned.

I have good news though, which is that you can change your response to his behavior. For example the barrage of phone calls can be put on silent and addressed once a day, once a week, or whatever frequency suits your life. At that time he's in the actual hospital for goodness sakes. He is in zero danger and receiving every care he could possibly need. Wants, not needs, which is an important difference.

Regarding his discharge if he's able to get people to bring him beer and cigarettes he's able to ask those people for a ride. Depending on where he is he can call a cab or use Uber. He can hit the hospital cafe and have a coffee and lunch until you have time to get him!

I feel for both you and your husband, regarding the leaving you threat. That's pretty aggressive but he's communicating what he needs, which is for you to stop destroying yourself for no reason.

Look into Alanon and the concept of boundaries. Remember a boundary is something you do, not a tool to get anyone else to do what you want. For example a boundary around phone calls means you answer, respond, etc when it suits you. It doesn't make dad stop calling at all hours. Best of luck this is all hard stuff, but worth it!
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JESLISE Dec 2022
I agree I need to set boundaries. I've gotten better but have a long way to go. Thanks for the Al Anon suggestion. I forgot I had this resource, it's been years.
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6th hospital in 1 year and 7-10 days each time. How does he get discharged? Does he tell Discharge that you will be caring for him when he gets home? Do u have Financial and Medical POA?

The next time Dad ends up in the Hospital, you refuse to be at his beck and call. You also tell the Social Worker that you will not be picking him up nor will you be there with him 24/7, you are not his Caregiver. So if he needs 24/7 care, there is no one in his home who can care for him. This is a "unsafe" discharge. If its felt he needs 24/7 care then they have to find a place for him. You can refuse to be involved in this and allow the State to take over his care. This can happen if he goes to Rehab. You refuse to pick him up and your refuse to care for him. Don't let them say there is help out there for him, once you walk him out the door, it will be your responsibility to get this help. You will only be pointed into the right direction.

I would assume that your Dads problem with hospitalization, is he goes into withdrawal. Once u married your husband became #1. You need to set boundries because Dad will always try to cross him. Block his calls. If someone can get his booze and ciggs for him, he can get someone to pick up groceries or have them delivered. He could hire someone to clean and do laundry. He probably should be in an AL or LTC.

Again, if he goes into a hospital and the Hospital calls you say your sorry but you can no longer be involved with him. That they are not to call you to pick him up, because it won't happen. Make them aware that there is no one in the house who can care for him. That you work and live an hour away, so can not come when he or them expect you to. If they feel he can be released on his own, they will need to call a taxi or he calls the friend who supplies him with his alcohol.

Good Luck and update us.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
The discharge process is my least favorite part of this Hell. The Healthcare system doesn't know what to do with someone like him, so yes they force (guilt trip) me into picking up and they send home nurses since I'm not close then he is mean and nasty to them and they don't return. Over and over. I'm going to be less available this round and enjoy Chritmas with my family. Yes he is there again, after only being home for 16 days since the last 10 day stunt.
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There is no way to get through to an alcoholic who wants alcohol. As you have been proving to yourself for thirty years.

Get a new phone, DO NOT let your father (or anyone e.g. nursing staff who might inadvertently pass it on) get hold of the new number, and keep your current one on for restricted hours only. Nothing bad will happen to him or to anyone else as a result of your doing this.

Let's be blunt. It makes no difference to your father if you run his errands all day long, don't turn up at all, set fire to yourself outside his window, or stand at his bedside and scream abuse at him. Nothing you can do or have ever done will register with him compared to his addiction. I am very sorry, for you and for all the many thousands of people like you who won't give up on people they love - but that doesn't make it any less true that you're wasting your time. So please, carry on building those boundaries.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
Thank you for your blunt answer. I needed to hear this. I have heard it before from friends and family so to hear this also from a stranger is a reminder that I need to actually HEAR it.
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It sounds like your father has been running your life. Thirty years is too long to deal with this. There was a brochure in Al-Anon called; A Merry-Go-Round named Denial. I'm not even sure if this is still in print, but it would describe the players in the alcoholic situation and how they were running around in circles. It described the players in the alcoholic situation and their roles in that mess. You mentioned a mental break. Did you get help for it? It is time to take care of yourself. Take it from a long time Al-Anon member. Draw some boundaries with your dad. You must protect yourself and your health.

We are considered ACOA's or Adult Children of Alcoholics. Read the literature. Your response is typical of someone who grew up with alcoholism. We get caught up in a FOG (Fear, Obligation and Guilt). Also practice the three C's of Al-Anon. You didn't cause it, you can't control it, and you can't cure it.
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JESLISE Dec 2022
Thank you for taking the time to find that link. That hit hard. I had never heard of FOG (Even though I live it). Several here mentioned Al Anon, which I did as a teen and realize now that might be just what could help me get some perspective.
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Link to Merry Go Round named denial.

https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.drugfam.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/A-Merry-Go-Round-Named-Denial-2021.pdf&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwimoe7Y54n8AhVElWoFHRY9AhcQFnoECAkQAg&usg=AOvVaw15XAec00-5pa8ZHiQcRBI0
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Stop dealing with him, you're not gonna change him. Leave him to his self-imposed fate. If that means he dies coughing and alone in a filthy house, so be it. Stupidity should not be rewarded. Stop going over there, and ignore phone calls, unless you call him.

You said in a comment below that discharge "forces" you to get him. No, they don't, it's your decision, and it sounds like a poor one. Let them deal with him and cut this toxic person out of your life permanently.
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It's late here & Xmas stress is getting to me but I just wanted to write you this.

It IS possible to not pick someone up when they are discharged from hospital.

I have a friend that had to do this for an aging Father (with possible dementia). So different from addiction issues, but boundary making is similar. In that case the message was if you are independent, you can taxi home. If you can't do that - can't call a taxi, pay, open your front door, walk yourself in then you probably won't cope at home. So please follow your Doctor's advice to go to rehab/respite care instead.

In my case, when I said no..

It was due to mobility issues. I put my common sense hat firmly on. If you can't get in my car safely, then I am not your ride. I gave fair warning, to both my family & staff. Family surprised but actually accepted of my new 'rule'. Staff member was initially taken aback... But then just moved from plan A: family collect, to plan B: taxi. I believe the next plan may have been a derailed discharge - if patient not able to get home then why not? Are there mental health, cognitive, mobility, frailty issues? Back to the medical team or social worker for rehab/respite/alternative care planning.

He's a grown man. Let him arrange his own discharge like a grown man would.

"You live close. What if you didn't?" A councillor asked me that. We joked about if I was a long haul truck driver crossing the country instead. Would I be there running errands? Groceries? Laundry? Would I be the discharge plan?

What if you channelled your inner truck driver today? "Can I come get you from the hospital again? No. Sorry Dad, can't do. You'll have to make other arrangements this time."

I also visualise a trucker hat with NO on the front. That's my secret weapon.

Over & out for now.
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