Last year, on the first Tuesday in February, I attended my first meeting. It started as one of the worst days of my life—worse than the day I lost my dad to a sudden heart attack, worse than the day I lost my mom to a horrific infection. It was the day I had decided to end my suffering by driving off a winding road that overlooked a lake from several hundred feet above. I had found my spot and was getting ready to follow through with it when, suddenly, I heard my father’s voice in my head telling me, “No one is worth taking your own life over. Smarten up and get yourself some help.” It was as if he were sitting next to me in my car.
After a good 20 minutes of crying, I looked at the time, turned my car around, and drove straight to that meeting. I sat outside for about half an hour before people started arriving. I was petrified and couldn’t find the courage to get out of my car. But then, two women walked up to my window and asked me if I needed help walking into the church. I am so very grateful for them, as I didn’t have the strength to walk in on my own. The lowest day of my life turned out to be the day I gave up on trying to fix my alcoholic husband and started focusing on myself.
One year later, I am a much better version of myself. Our marriage is still intact, which is shocking considering where we were last year. It’s exactly as I hear in the rooms: if we can help ourselves, then the people around us are bound to notice and might see things in a different light. My alcoholic husband is trying very hard to fix his issues. Because I now fully embrace that they are his issues to fix, not mine, I have more serenity than I have ever had. The three Cs come to mind for me today: I didn’t cause it. I can’t control it. I can’t cure it. However, I can continue working on myself, and Al‑Anon has given me all the tools I need to do so.
By Anonymous
The Forum, November 2025
Feel free to reprint this article on your service arm website or newsletter, along with this credit line: Reprinted with permission of The Forum, Al‑Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA.
Being affected by someone else’s drinking comes in many forms, from feelings of obsessing over everything they do to feeling despondent, as you have described. Attending Al-Anon Family Groups helps us in many ways, as we learn we are not alone in our suffering and hear others share their experience, strength, and hope in living with nearly identical situations. We urge you to try several Al-Anon meetings to find ones in which you are comfortable. Find meetings here: https://al-anon.org/al-anon-meetings/find-an-al-anon-meeting
This is kind of the point I’m at. My alcoholic son puts me down so much, makes me feel so worthless, and like it’s my fault that he drinks, that sometimes I feel like if I weren’t around, maybe he’d be better off and he’d get help. He lives with me. At 34 years old. He’s a functioning alcoholic and doesn’t care if he lives or dies. It hurts.
Wow. Powerful. Thank God she didn’t take her own life and listened to her higher self.
How brave of you. How wonderful you found a home in Al-Anon Family Groups. What a difference a year makes in your life! You must be very proud of yourself. You should be!
I’m so glad you’re still here. God bless you and your family.