
Woman Ends 4-Year Relationship Over BF’s Drunken Outbursts, Guy Says She’s Overreacting
Interview With ExpertThere’s nothing wrong with enjoying a few drinks now and again. Millions of people do it around the world. But when alcohol gets in the way of your relationships, work or other aspects of daily life, it can cause major problems. Booze can cause people to act in ways they normally wouldn’t. And researchers have found a strong link between alcohol and aggression.
One woman says she suffered so much at the hands of her aggressive, binge-drinking boyfriend that “sorry” just didn’t cut it anymore. She’d been screamed at, seen him banging his head against the wall, and witnessed some other scary stuff. She eventually decided to break things off. But her boyfriend didn’t understand what the big deal was, and accused her of overreacting. The woman went online to share her story and ask for advice. Bored Panda reached out to a family counseling and addiction expert from the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation for their take on the matter.
The woman said she’s had to deal with four drunken tantrums from her boyfriend over the past two and a half years
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She claims she got tired of his belligerent behavior, bottomless apologies and was done with being mistreated
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Image credits: LightFieldStudios (not the actual image)
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The woman mentioned heavy weekend drinking, so it seems her boyfriend could be a binge drinker
Binge drinking is also known as heavy episodic drinking, and is basically drinking a lot of alcohol in a short amount of time. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) defines binge drinking as “a pattern of drinking alcohol that brings blood alcohol concentration (BAC) to 0.08%—or 0.08 grams of alcohol per deciliter—or more.”
For most men it equals about five drinks, and for women it could be about four. But it depends on their weight and size. A 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) found that more than 61 million Americans had done some sort of binge drinking in that month. Some of them were as young as 12 years old. “Binge drinking increases the likelihood of both becoming aggressive or angry and also being on the receiving end of someone else’s temper,” notes drinkaware on their site.
Jessica Garrison is the Family Services Supervisor for Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. It’s an NPO specializing in addiction treatment and mental healthcare. “Get help and support immediately for yourself from a professional, ideally someone who specializes in understanding addiction and mental health concerns,” Garrison told Bored Panda. “This professional can offer evidence-based skills and provide insights regarding the impact, and how the person can build up their own skills to manage stress.”
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The OP said the relationship became toxic because of her partner’s drinking
It’s a common complaint from people who have partners that binge drink. As drinkaware reports, “Studies also show that there is a clear link between alcohol use and intimate partner violence – which is any form of physical, sexual or psychological violence against a current or former partner.”
The stats show that women are at greater risk of being harmed than men. While the OP didn’t specify physical violence, she was very clear that she felt emotionally and verbally abused. She also noted in the comments that her partner’s behavior was bad for her own mental health.
Garrsion told Bored Panda there’s no clearcut answer on when it’s time to leave the relationship. “But utilizing professional help will ensure that a person has the support they need regarding when and how to leave, and that they maintain their own safety and health above all else,” she said. “By seeking professional help individually first, you can clarify boundaries, maintain your own safety and emotional health, and develop a plan for addressing the issues.”
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Experts say its best not to confront someone about their drinking while they are drunk
Clearbrook Treatment Center is an alcohol rehab facility in Pennsylvania. They’ve helped loads of people get their lives back on track. Their advice is to wait until your partner is sober before confronting them about their problem. Otherwise the person possibly won’t comprehend or remember the conversation.
“One of the worst mistakes you can make when learning how to get your partner to stop drinking is confronting them when they’re intoxicated. Do not attempt to talk to them about their drinking patterns when they’re drunk or in the middle of a binge,” reads the Clearbrook site.
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The woman said she’d confronted her partner on several occasions, but sometimes kept quiet to keep the peace
The center advises people to think about what they want to say to their partners, so that there can be a positive impact. And to jot down some notes before having the conversation. Include examples of when and how their drinking has affected the relationship. “Not only will your notes act as a guide when you hit a mental block, but they’ll also prevent you from going off on an angry tangent that could potentially escalate the situation.” They also suggest getting support from friends, family, therapists or a treatment center.
The Recovery Village has rehab centers across America. It notes there are quite a few symptoms that signal someone has a problem with alcohol. Some include “spending a significant amount of time drinking, continuing to drink even when it interferes with relationships, and showing signs of alcohol tolerance and withdrawal”.
They advise that it’s probably best to leave a partner if “you’re stuck in an unhealthy relationship full of lies, arguments or abuse”. And adds that this is especially true if you’ve offered your partner support but they continue to deny there’s a problem.
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Netizens agreed the woman had done the right thing by leaving, with some saying they wouldn’t have lasted four years
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
On a Valentines day, many years ago, my abusive alcoholic ex went drinking with his buddies instead of being with me. I shared a bottle of wine with my flatmate, packed my bags and left in the morning while he was still sleeping of his hangover.
Im glad you didnt tolerante that s**t anymore. You deserve better and you went for it!
Load More Replies...His self harm is not self harm, which is done to relieve internal agony. His harming is "you harm", as in "LOOK! You HAVE to stay, and watch me suffer. I 'm not actually going to help myself, but it's so nice to have a human stress ball to take any rubbish I want to dish out". TDLR. He's using your love to tie you to him on his path to sell destruction and will take you down with him.
Exactly, his SH is a form of emotional blackmail. I'm surprised he didn't threaten suicide when OP said she was leaving him.
Load More Replies...As a person who had a drinking problem I can honestly say OP is doing the right thing. She needs to protect herself from hus drinking and not just because of how abusive he gets but because it will cost financially, emotionally, it'll damage her relationships with family and friends and he will blame her for his problems. She hasn't actually waisted those four years though because she has learnt what she is willing to put up with and what not, she will recognize signs of substance abuse, she will also now recognize in herself why she was attracted to him and how to not fall into the same trap again. I hope he gets the help he needs and I hope she does as well as there will be a lot of emotionally stuff she needs to work through so she can choose her best partner next time... oh and I'm not saying any of this is in anyway her fault, but moving on from any relationship, especially bad ones need time to work through. Don't rush into the next one
So drunk-him is an a*s, sober-him doesn't get why this is a problem...that makes sober-him an a*s 🚩‼️
You are underreacting. He yells at you, humiliated you in front of friends and family. He's abusive. He's making you miserable. Don't continue to date him, don't have anything to do with him, it doesn't matter If he thinks it's unfair. Get away asap.
Does he deserve to unwind? Hell yeah! Does he deserve to be verbally, mentally, and surely someday physically abusive? Nope. This loser is one bender away from punching you. Check out now.
I feel this so deeply. My partner is a terrible alcoholic and right now has been drunk hiccuping for now 3 hours. He's not abusive but will absolutely drive while completely intoxicated which is unacceptable. I will be moving out soon, as he says he's going to change his behavior, does for a few days and then is back to being stupid drunk.
I hope you find the strength to leave and take care of yourself.
Load More Replies...He is an alcoholic. He is not ready to deal with his addiction, nor face up to why he makes these decisions. It is not his partner's responsibility to try to chance him, or to get him sober - it won't work. It really won't work, and she'll be letting herself in for a huge deal more heartbreak and suffering.
Sadly he will not change until he hits rock bottom. That is how it works with alcoholics. They need a serious wake up call before they will do anything about it. I would post back why I'm throwing away 4 years and let the chips fall where they may. Chances are his mates are just hoping she will keep putting up with his s**t so they don't have to deal with it.
She shouldn't have given him so many chances, but now it's time to end it and never go back
Giving up 40,000 hours to avoid what? 80,000 or 160,000+ hours of future abuse?
Even if he didn't consume alcohol as an excuse to act out his work and life frustrations out on his gf, he obviously feels justified in treating her as a human punching bag so he can "unwind". He needs to grow the f*ck up and take responsibility for his actions. It's up to him to find healthy coping techniques... The gf needs to find her own path without him dragging her down into the personal hell (pit of self pity) of his own creation.
Over reacting? How about under reacting? Your BF shows you exactly who and what he is at every incident. You, actually no one, deserves this behavior. NO ONE! Nothing you do or say will change him. He is what he is until he is either mature enough to seek help or he continues to fail. It is important to understand that he chooses to drink heavily, chooses to engage in abuse, continues to blame others and refuses to recognize the harm in his behavior. His drunken outbursts don't happen because he drinks. He drinks because he holds all sort of pain and anger within. He needs help, but not from you and certainly not at your expense. (emotional health, not money) It's past time for you to move on and leave him behind. Of-course it won't be easy. These things are never easy. But you will heal, grow and be far better in the future by dumping him today.
He told you that he fully intends to keep getting drunk and verbally abuse you. Just because he doesn’t do it every day doesn’t mean it’s not abuse. Run.
She should get out and never look back! 4 years wasted is better than a lifetime, and it sounds like his behavior will only get worse over time. He doesn't respect her enough to make any effort to acknowledge what he has done or change his behavior. She has to moderate her behavior every time he drinks, and that's no way to live.
He sounds like a narcissistic binge drinker, a really bad combination. For those not in the know, he is not an alcoholic, alcoholics drink all day, every day. He is a binge drinker. That is someone who once they have a certain number of drinks, cannot stop, often until they pass out. They are actually the lucky ones as they can choose not to drink and be just fine. How do I know? Because I'm a binge drinker. I can easily go days, weeks, or months without a drink. I can even have up to 4 drinks and stop, but once I pass that, it's binge time.
I had a guy who I thought was a friend. He used to call me from bars, drunk, and even when he has a hangover. I stayed for the right reasons but he was trying to control me and emotional and mentally abusive over the years. Thank God I walked away and haven't looked back!
Many years ago when I was first dating my now Husband (I was 23), we kept getting into fights whenever we drank and I was typically the starter of said fights. We talked about it. I knew/know that I love him so much and he's such a good guy that I didnt want to lose him. So, I stopped drinking. I will do whatever it takes and I know he'd do the same. This guy doesn't care about losing his girl. I hope she moved on.
OP is being cheated on. Her STBX bf is having a serious, long-term affair with Ms. Alc O. Hol. She's the only lady in his life. She determines how, where, and with whom he spends his time. She sees OP as a threat, so she manipulates BF into neglecting and verbally abusing her at every opportunity. Eventually, Ms. Hol's jealousy will reach a point where the abuse turns physical. OP isn't overreacting; she isn't reacting nearly as much as she should. Ending the relationship is probably the only way for BF to see just how much destruction booze has caused in his life. It may be the kick in the seat he needs to get help, before he reaches a point of no return.
He CHOSE to get pissed KNOWING what the consequences MIGHT BE, and had to pay the piper for HIS CHOICES. You are not over reacting, he PROVED more than once, his choices make him dangerous around Look up AC-DC and how their original lead singer died and make him look it up and say I can imagine you doing this, with your CHOICES to unwind. I'm not sticking around to see you do it.
He’s an alcoholic and won’t change unless he hits his rock bottom and has nowhere eleven to go except jail or rehab
Oh my dear lady, I'm not going to chastise you for not leaving the first time, but three strikes and he's OUT!
He needs to cut out the alcohol and switch to weed. It helped me move on from my drinking and allowed me to mellow out at the end of the day. He is definitely going overboard, not having the bar tab alone can probably help him from overdrafting on his bank account. It's a shame, but she needs to leave him. Especially since he went back on his word multiple times.
Having spend that much time with someone, that makes you unhappy can be a hint not to waste another minute with him/her.
On a Valentines day, many years ago, my abusive alcoholic ex went drinking with his buddies instead of being with me. I shared a bottle of wine with my flatmate, packed my bags and left in the morning while he was still sleeping of his hangover.
Im glad you didnt tolerante that s**t anymore. You deserve better and you went for it!
Load More Replies...His self harm is not self harm, which is done to relieve internal agony. His harming is "you harm", as in "LOOK! You HAVE to stay, and watch me suffer. I 'm not actually going to help myself, but it's so nice to have a human stress ball to take any rubbish I want to dish out". TDLR. He's using your love to tie you to him on his path to sell destruction and will take you down with him.
Exactly, his SH is a form of emotional blackmail. I'm surprised he didn't threaten suicide when OP said she was leaving him.
Load More Replies...As a person who had a drinking problem I can honestly say OP is doing the right thing. She needs to protect herself from hus drinking and not just because of how abusive he gets but because it will cost financially, emotionally, it'll damage her relationships with family and friends and he will blame her for his problems. She hasn't actually waisted those four years though because she has learnt what she is willing to put up with and what not, she will recognize signs of substance abuse, she will also now recognize in herself why she was attracted to him and how to not fall into the same trap again. I hope he gets the help he needs and I hope she does as well as there will be a lot of emotionally stuff she needs to work through so she can choose her best partner next time... oh and I'm not saying any of this is in anyway her fault, but moving on from any relationship, especially bad ones need time to work through. Don't rush into the next one
So drunk-him is an a*s, sober-him doesn't get why this is a problem...that makes sober-him an a*s 🚩‼️
You are underreacting. He yells at you, humiliated you in front of friends and family. He's abusive. He's making you miserable. Don't continue to date him, don't have anything to do with him, it doesn't matter If he thinks it's unfair. Get away asap.
Does he deserve to unwind? Hell yeah! Does he deserve to be verbally, mentally, and surely someday physically abusive? Nope. This loser is one bender away from punching you. Check out now.
I feel this so deeply. My partner is a terrible alcoholic and right now has been drunk hiccuping for now 3 hours. He's not abusive but will absolutely drive while completely intoxicated which is unacceptable. I will be moving out soon, as he says he's going to change his behavior, does for a few days and then is back to being stupid drunk.
I hope you find the strength to leave and take care of yourself.
Load More Replies...He is an alcoholic. He is not ready to deal with his addiction, nor face up to why he makes these decisions. It is not his partner's responsibility to try to chance him, or to get him sober - it won't work. It really won't work, and she'll be letting herself in for a huge deal more heartbreak and suffering.
Sadly he will not change until he hits rock bottom. That is how it works with alcoholics. They need a serious wake up call before they will do anything about it. I would post back why I'm throwing away 4 years and let the chips fall where they may. Chances are his mates are just hoping she will keep putting up with his s**t so they don't have to deal with it.
She shouldn't have given him so many chances, but now it's time to end it and never go back
Giving up 40,000 hours to avoid what? 80,000 or 160,000+ hours of future abuse?
Even if he didn't consume alcohol as an excuse to act out his work and life frustrations out on his gf, he obviously feels justified in treating her as a human punching bag so he can "unwind". He needs to grow the f*ck up and take responsibility for his actions. It's up to him to find healthy coping techniques... The gf needs to find her own path without him dragging her down into the personal hell (pit of self pity) of his own creation.
Over reacting? How about under reacting? Your BF shows you exactly who and what he is at every incident. You, actually no one, deserves this behavior. NO ONE! Nothing you do or say will change him. He is what he is until he is either mature enough to seek help or he continues to fail. It is important to understand that he chooses to drink heavily, chooses to engage in abuse, continues to blame others and refuses to recognize the harm in his behavior. His drunken outbursts don't happen because he drinks. He drinks because he holds all sort of pain and anger within. He needs help, but not from you and certainly not at your expense. (emotional health, not money) It's past time for you to move on and leave him behind. Of-course it won't be easy. These things are never easy. But you will heal, grow and be far better in the future by dumping him today.
He told you that he fully intends to keep getting drunk and verbally abuse you. Just because he doesn’t do it every day doesn’t mean it’s not abuse. Run.
She should get out and never look back! 4 years wasted is better than a lifetime, and it sounds like his behavior will only get worse over time. He doesn't respect her enough to make any effort to acknowledge what he has done or change his behavior. She has to moderate her behavior every time he drinks, and that's no way to live.
He sounds like a narcissistic binge drinker, a really bad combination. For those not in the know, he is not an alcoholic, alcoholics drink all day, every day. He is a binge drinker. That is someone who once they have a certain number of drinks, cannot stop, often until they pass out. They are actually the lucky ones as they can choose not to drink and be just fine. How do I know? Because I'm a binge drinker. I can easily go days, weeks, or months without a drink. I can even have up to 4 drinks and stop, but once I pass that, it's binge time.
I had a guy who I thought was a friend. He used to call me from bars, drunk, and even when he has a hangover. I stayed for the right reasons but he was trying to control me and emotional and mentally abusive over the years. Thank God I walked away and haven't looked back!
Many years ago when I was first dating my now Husband (I was 23), we kept getting into fights whenever we drank and I was typically the starter of said fights. We talked about it. I knew/know that I love him so much and he's such a good guy that I didnt want to lose him. So, I stopped drinking. I will do whatever it takes and I know he'd do the same. This guy doesn't care about losing his girl. I hope she moved on.
OP is being cheated on. Her STBX bf is having a serious, long-term affair with Ms. Alc O. Hol. She's the only lady in his life. She determines how, where, and with whom he spends his time. She sees OP as a threat, so she manipulates BF into neglecting and verbally abusing her at every opportunity. Eventually, Ms. Hol's jealousy will reach a point where the abuse turns physical. OP isn't overreacting; she isn't reacting nearly as much as she should. Ending the relationship is probably the only way for BF to see just how much destruction booze has caused in his life. It may be the kick in the seat he needs to get help, before he reaches a point of no return.
He CHOSE to get pissed KNOWING what the consequences MIGHT BE, and had to pay the piper for HIS CHOICES. You are not over reacting, he PROVED more than once, his choices make him dangerous around Look up AC-DC and how their original lead singer died and make him look it up and say I can imagine you doing this, with your CHOICES to unwind. I'm not sticking around to see you do it.
He’s an alcoholic and won’t change unless he hits his rock bottom and has nowhere eleven to go except jail or rehab
Oh my dear lady, I'm not going to chastise you for not leaving the first time, but three strikes and he's OUT!
He needs to cut out the alcohol and switch to weed. It helped me move on from my drinking and allowed me to mellow out at the end of the day. He is definitely going overboard, not having the bar tab alone can probably help him from overdrafting on his bank account. It's a shame, but she needs to leave him. Especially since he went back on his word multiple times.
Having spend that much time with someone, that makes you unhappy can be a hint not to waste another minute with him/her.
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