Marc, I would be willing to drive (and if you read some of my posts you'll know that I will not drive very far due to disabilities) to talk to him. It's that important to me to see a fellow vet obtain help for his personal problems.
I ate lunch at my American Legion yesterday with an 80 year old Army vet (Big Red 1 unit) from WWII. He shared a few war stories with me and kept saying, "I don't know why I'm talking about this. I never talk about this. Why am I talking about this?" He had tears in his eyes, his voice was cracking and he kept shaking his head. He told me that he had kept almost everything from the war inside of him all these years because he saw no need to "burden" - as he put it - anyone else with what he saw/did/heard all those years ago and he said he was reconsidering his stance of "just man up and take it" that he had maintained all these years.
I don't want to see your brother bottle up whatever is eating at him and live all those years with it. And if he is drinking/driving like you say he is, he may not live all that long.
I'm not trying to guilt you into making any decision about your brother, but if he's hurting, there's help available and people who care.
Peace.
well turns out last night he went to an AA meeting and he also went to one today at noon so he is moving in the right direction.
thankyou all for your support, advice and prayers i appreciate it extremely
Marc
cutting ties is something i am considering if he keeps this up, also my mom asked him if he would like to be a part time dad cause his wife will not put up with it and leave him and find someone else and his daughter will have a new dad. also i told him that he is going the path of our uncle who is also a drunk and has nothing lost his wife house and kids. something else i have been thinking about is alcohol ruins so many more lives than guns, maybe the government needs to redirect its focus. not trying to turn this into one of those threads but still look at the statistics.
Why do we blame objects instead of people ! did the bottle of (you name it) jump up and attach itself to his lips or did the gun jump in the hands of a troubled person and kill !
wow
positive note glad he is seeking help and is ok, recovery is a hard road . been there its a fight for life will pray for him
Marc, I would be willing to drive (and if you read some of my posts you'll know that I will not drive very far due to disabilities) to talk to him. It's that important to me to see a fellow vet obtain help for his personal problems....
Peace.
Repped. This is impressive.
Marc, my last drink was on the Marine Corps birthday in 2000. This coming November, I'll be sober for 10 years on 10-10-10... hadn't thought of it that way before, but you can be sure I'll be buying a lottery ticket on that particular Wednesday.
I'll say that (1) if a guy is ready to quit, there's nothing that's going to get in his way, and (2) if a guy is not ready to quit, there's nothing a brother can do to make him stop.
The most we can do is to live an example, and stand ready if/when a brother reaches out. When I'd had enough, when I was tired of puking blood and losing friends and flooding my apartment and wondering why there were broken capillaries in the whites of my eyes and crashing cars and getting into fights and having no money, I didn't reach out to the drunk on the other side of the pool table. "How come we're so jacked up, huh? You got any answers over there, Tommy?"
Instead, I called the friend I knew was making it work.
"Rod?"
"Yeah?"
"Are you still going to those meetings where they talk about not drinking?"
"Yeah."
"..... will you take me?"
"I'll be there in a hour."
Sending good thoughts the way of your family, and hoping that your brother has somebody like BTS to reach out to when he's really ready.