The Hidden Pain of Selfish Alcoholic Christmases

Hanging Stockings with Care

Christmas Eve was one of the biggest days of the year, not just personally or spiritually, but for our business. For fifteen years, my wife and I were bread bakers. We owned a neighborhood whole grain bakery, and holidays that brought families together around the dinner table where huge for us. Christmas Eve meant long production hours, stressful decisions about how much of each product to bake and hundreds of additional customer interactions. Many people think of relaxation and family when they think of Christmas Eve. For those of us in retail or hospitality, Christmas Eve means balls to the walls work. While everybody else was listening to Andy Williams sing about, “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year,” I was working my ass off.

 

One particularly stressful Christmas Eve about a decade ago, I was working late to closeout the Christmas season at the bakery while my wife took our four small children to church with my parents who were visiting for the holiday. The bakery was closed and the door was locked. I turned out all the lights and turned up the volume on the Christmas music. I drank eggnog as I worked in the dark. I blended it about 50/50 with the whiskey I kept in my desk drawer, like Lou Grant, for just such occasions.

 

I felt euphoric. The warmth of the whiskey mixed with the tunes and the business success of the holiday season to have me floating through my chores as I prepared the bakery for a few days idle. I had worked so hard, and I deserved to jam out to Trans Siberian Orchestra. I deserved to miss church and avoid other people for an hour or so. And I DESERVED the booze.

 

When I returned home, I was drunk. As a high-functioning alcoholic with years of experience, I went about the routine of hiding my inebriation. I spoke slowly and deliberately to avoid tripping over my own words. I poured a drink making a big deal about announcing it as my first drink of the evening. I was careful not to be too jovial or festive as I blended back into my family’s night-before-Christmas activities.

 

As soon as we got the kids to bed, I passed out on the couch. I awoke in the middle of the night, disoriented and dehydrated. I found my way quietly to bed attempting not to wake my wife. The next thing I remember was four little people jumping on us early in the morning.

 

What had happened while I was passed out? My wife and my parents had put together a bike, filled stockings and consumed some milk, cookies and carrots. It was a long night for the three of them as they worked around my snoring carcass. I drank myself into oblivion right in front of them, and I’d gotten away with it, too, just like I’d done hundreds of times before.

 

In the morning, my wife was agitated and short with me. She wasn’t mad. She knew how hard I had worked. But she was distant and disappointed because she also knew I had drank far more alcohol than I let on. My parents, too, understood my long arduous hours, and were willing to write-off my evening nap to exhaustion. It was Christmas Day. Everyone, myself included, was very interested in avoiding conflict of any kind.

 

I got away with it. Yes! Another time where only I knew the details of my shameful drinking. My wife knew I was hiding something, and my parents probably had an inkling, but my workload gave me plausible deniability. There would be no Christmas Day intervention for another year!

 

But here’s what this incident means to me looking back, now with significant sobriety under my belt: I completely hosed my beloved wife that Christmas Eve. Being a parent means sacrifice and effort. There is a lot to do the night before Christmas, and I completely shirked my responsibility. It’s not like my wife is a single parent, and she expected the load to fall completely on her. She was counting on me to get some serious Santa work done, right up until I abandoned her at nine pm. I didn’t leave to go to a bar. I didn’t retreat to the basement to drink alone. But what’s the difference? I passed off my passing out like it was physical exhaustion from a string of hard days of work. What a crock. What a let down. What a useless excuse for a father.

 

In many ways, snoring on that couch was worse than running off to a bar. If I had been in a pub, I would have been drunk and useless. But at least I would have been honest about it. Passed out on the couch, I was drunk, useless and deceitful.

 

Alcoholism is such a selfish disease. When we awake from a night of reckless drinking, we immediately focus on the impression we left on others. Our first concern is our reputation. That Christmas Eve, I had a reasonable excuse for snoozing. I wasn’t completely embarrassed. My reputation hadn’t taken yet another hit. In my self-centered mind, everything was fine.

 

But shame and embarrassment are never the whole story. I had completely disappointed and burdened my wife. My parents were at least a little curious or concerned. I had inflicted damage on the people I love.

 

It is universally accepted that you shouldn’t have a family if you aren’t willing and able to care for it. I didn’t think that admonishment applied to me at all. I was there. I worked hard. But when I drank too much, and retreated to my euphoric neverworld, I might as well have been dead. Being a father is about a lot more than making money and being faithful. It is about being there.

 

I wasn’t there that Christmas Eve to fill the stockings or put the cranks and kickstand on the bike or to share the cookies in proud satisfaction when the work was done. I wasn’t there. And being there is all that really matters on nights like Christmas Eve.

 

My absence that night was part of a massive collection of holiday resentment with which my wife and I have dealt on our road to recovering our marriage from my alcoholism. In our latest episode of the Untoxicated Podcast, we discuss the transition of our holiday seasons from active alcoholism, through early recovery, and now in our third year of sobriety. It is a long road from snoring on the couch, to the progress we’ve slowly made. I hope you’ll listen.

 

If you are drinking, and you think you are functioning pretty well, you might be measuring your performance against the wrong metric. The shame and embarrassment you bring or avoid is only part of the issue. Think of the pain you are unwittingly inflicting on the ones you love. Having a believable excuse for your behavior doesn’t change the burden you cause others. It is not enough for them to understand. It is more important for them to have your full, unaltered presence.

 

If you need some help being fully present, please consider enrolling in our SHOUT Sobriety program for people who want to stop drinking. We are an alternative to AA, and our curriculum is grounded in science and connection. We are a donation-based program, and we ask participants for $25 per month ongoing donations to keep this mission alive. To donate, to enroll or for more information, please click the button below.

SHOUT Sobriety

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6 Comments
  • Reply
    Stephanie Jones
    December 18, 2019 at 5:07 am

    As always, fantastic! Do you have Denver face to face meetings?

    • Reply
      Matt Salis
      December 18, 2019 at 7:34 am

      Thanks for reading, Stephanie. Why don’t you send me an email explaining what you have in mind, and we’ll figure it out. I love meeting people here in Denver!

  • Reply
    Eddie
    December 18, 2019 at 5:21 am

    In past moments of clarity, and evermore in these early days of sobriety, the realization that each and every time I drank I was abandoning my family. I was either the passed out snoring carcass you mentioned, the absent father out for a night or long weekend of debauchery, or simply hiding myself behind booze.

    As with your wife, mine was left to hold our little slice of the American dream together all on her own. She made the meals, fed the dog, talked with our son, and the hundred other duties the responsible adults and parents do, all while worrying about what she was going to find out that I had done or if I’d even make it home. I’m sure my son had similar impacts and feelings.

    While I attended to my selfish desire to hide myself from the world (and myself) through drinking and partying, she was left with my share of the work and no feeling of security or love from her husband. This all effected my son directly in many ways, as well as how he saw it impact his mother.

    I may have been physically present, but that was all. Alcohol was like a mistress and the bars or drinking pals were my second family, all taking priority over the ones that really matter.

    I look back with regret, but look forward to the future where I can work through the resentments that my wife and son are holding onto, and hopefully create enough good memories to eventually outweigh to bad. Now that I’m sober, it’s finally possible. Now that I’m sober, we can begin the heal.

    Thanks for everything you do Matt! SHOUT has literally saved my life and given me a shot at saving my marriage, as well as a chance to earn back my son’s admiration.

    • Reply
      Matt Salis
      December 18, 2019 at 7:37 am

      Thanks for reading and sharing your story, Eddie. Keep looking forward, but definitely do address the resentments as you explain. I’ve got high hopes for you and your family for sure!

  • Reply
    Drink4Lyfe
    May 30, 2020 at 7:02 pm

    Or maybe you did earn that 50/50 whiskey/eggnog after busting it so hard on Christmas Eve. Pretty unfair if you’re expected to manage the business solo and then share household duties equally with your wife. You were home and faithful and taking a much needed sleep. She shouldn’t be looking at you cross-eyed and neither should your parents.

    • Reply
      SoberMom12
      January 15, 2021 at 5:56 am

      Sure, who cares if your kids barely know you and stop talking to you when they grow up. Male entitlement is more important, amirite?

      Also where does it say that his wife is a stay at home parent? The way I read it, they run the bakery together. Maybe if you weren’t drunk, you would have retained all the information you read? Food for thought.

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