Read Diary of an Alcoholic Housewife Online
Authors: Brenda Wilhelmson
Step Two: “Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.” I never thought I was insane. I was a pothead-turned-drinker who let alcohol spin out of control.
I started smoking pot my junior year of high school. I liked it. It made me feel uninhibited and comfortable in my own skin. My usual negative thoughts—I’m not pretty enough, I’m too skinny, I’m a Seventh-Day Adventist freak—evaporated when I got high.
I had attended a parochial Seventh-Day Adventist school from first grade through ninth grade. My mother was devout and she, my sister, and I kept the Sabbath from Friday night sundown to Saturday night sundown and went to church on Saturday. My sister and I were taught that drinking was bad, gambling was bad, dancing was bad, wearing jewelry was bad, reading novels was bad, going to movies was bad. My father, however, had immunity. He spent Friday nights at the Moose Lodge playing poker and getting sloshed and never went to church.
Paula and I were allowed to watch
The Brady Bunch, Little House on the Prairie, Happy Days,
and
The Waltons.
We wished we could be like the normal kids on TV who went to parties and danced.
My sophomore year of high school, I began attending public school. The Adventist school I’d gone to for nine years, North Shore, ended after ninth grade. The plan had always been for me to attend an Adventist boarding school, but I decided I wanted to mainstream and go to public high school. One evening, while my mother was filling out the paperwork to send me away, I told her I wanted to go to the public school. My mother told me I was going to Broadview Academy. I told her I wasn’t. She told me I was.
“If you force me to go to Broadview, I’ll get kicked out,” I threatened. “You’ll have to pack me up because I won’t pack. When we get there, I’ll sit in the lobby of the girls’ dorm and chain smoke and swear at everybody. We’ll be out of there in ten minutes.”
My mother glared at me and said, “If you go to public school, your sister won’t have to go to North Shore for her freshman year. I’ll send her to Broadview this year instead of you.”
I had begged my mother to send me to Broadview a year ago. North Shore was the last place I wanted to spend my first year of high school. I resented having to attend a school where first and second grades share a classroom, third and fourth grades share a classroom, fifth and sixth grades share a classroom, and seventh and eighth grades share a classroom. Paula was a year behind me so every other year we were in the same room. Ninth grade, high school, got its own classroom. What a privilege.
“Go ahead,” I told my mother. “Put Paula’s name on the paperwork.”
This was working out better than I expected. I was going to public school and getting rid of my sister in one fell swoop.
A hateful look crossed my mother’s face. “You’re going to be miserable in public school,” she growled. “You won’t be able to participate in anything. All extracurricular activities are on the Sabbath. You’ll go to school and do nothing else.”
I knew from watching TV that the popular girls were cheerleaders, and I desperately wanted to be one. Football and basketball games were on Friday nights or Saturdays, however, so I didn’t bother trying out. Instead, I auditioned for the school musical. I was cast in fifty percent of the show, but one of the performances was on Friday night. After going to two rehearsals, I got up the courage to tell the student directors, two upper-classmen, that I couldn’t perform on Friday night.
“We can’t recast all your parts for one night,” Ellie said. “Why don’t we talk to your mother and see if she’ll change her mind.”
I shook my head and started to cry. “You don’t know her,” I said. “She’s not going to let me do it.”
Norman, Ellie’s codirector, drove me home. My mother was in the kitchen, and I sat down at the kitchen table and sobbed. My mother sat down next to me. When I lifted my head, I saw that she was smirking. “I told you this would happen,” she said.
Next year, I discovered the joys of marijuana and alcohol. I started questioning authority, who I was, the existence of God. The first two questions persist today. As for the third, once I had Max, I started thinking it might be a good idea for him to believe in God. Believing in God would give Max a moral compass, and why not hedge Max’s bets? If there were a heaven and hell, believing in God would be Max’s ticket to the good life. But I couldn’t teach Max something I didn’t believe.
One evening, while I was flipping through TV stations, I landed on a cartoon where a rabbi and a priest were explaining God to children. The cartoon rabbi pointed to objects in a room. He explained that everything in the room had to be designed before it was made. Before the world existed, the rabbi said, it had to be designed, too. You can think of God as the master designer, he explained. That made sense to me.
So back to Step Two: “Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.” I do believe in a Power greater than myself. And recently, I came to believe my behavior—throwing mass quantities of booze down my throat and repeatedly promising myself I wouldn’t drink like that again—was, yes, insane.
So I guess I’m on the Third Step: “Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God
as we understood Him.”
I don’t know about this. What if God’s will doesn’t jibe with mine? What if God’s will is going to be unpleasant and painful, as most character building stuff is? How am I supposed to figure out His will anyway?
Last night I went to a meeting and the woman who gave the lead talked about Step Three. She said she used to have grandiose ideas of making a mark on the world, becoming a historical figure. “But now,” she said, “I’m looking for something right-sized, not so big, so grand. I just want to do the next right thing, not focus on winning prestige and honor.”
How uncomplicated and pure. But what’s wrong with wanting to make a mark on the world? Furthermore, it’s not always clear what the next right thing to do is.
When Charlie and I went to dinner with Reed and Liv on Valentine’s Day, Reed said he was reading a book about the fifteen rules of success. The most important rule, Reed said, was to avoid the unhappy and unlucky at all costs. Last night, when I looked around the room at the people in the meeting, I thought,
Here are the unhappy and unlucky.
[Saturday, March 15]
Tonight was Kelly’s turn to host the Bacchanal Dinner Club. She had a fondue party—again. The last time Kelly served fondue, Charlie had to sling me over his shoulder and carry me out of her house after I lost my balance and fell into her recycling bin while smoking a cigarette in her garage.
I believe Kelly wants to get her guests as plastered as possible. Fondue requires heating oil to the right temperature in little pots, placing bowls of dipping sauces all over the table, and diners cooking each bite-size morsel of food before eating it. Kelly’s first fondue was served just before midnight. I don’t even remember eating. Tonight, it was served just after nine and everyone was sloshed, except me.
Before dinner Liv started tap dancing and unsuccessfully attempted the pepper grinder. The pepper grinder is when the dancer squats and swings her legs around like the top of a pepper grinder. Liv gave it a try, flopped on the floor, picked herself up, and yanked Wendy into the family room and begged Wendy to dance with her. Wendy humored Liv for a couple of minutes and when the song ended, backed away saying, “Enough.” Liv grabbed Joel and danced him into the couch. She fell onto the couch, yanking Joel on top of her. Kelly watched her husband and Liv struggle to get up with an unpleasant look on her face. She turned and set out a pot of bubbling cheese fondue. I grabbed a bowl of bread cubes and placed them next to the molten cheese.
“I’m determined to get you drunk,” Kelly said. “Eat a lot of this cheese. There’s a shitload of alcohol in it.”
“Cooking burns off the alcohol,” I laughed and popped a cheese-drenched chunk of bread into my mouth.
Kelly made a face. “I could never quit drinking.”
“You could if you wanted to.”
“I don’t want to.”
“Then don’t.”
Kelly frowned.
Feeling compelled to make Kelly feel better, I said, “I can’t have one or two glasses of wine. I want a bottle or two.”
“Well I drink a bottle or more.”
“Yeah, but I drank like that almost every night.”
“Hmm.”
Wendy walked over. She patted my head like a puppy and hugged me. “I’m so proud of you,” she said. “You’re so strong. You just decide not to drink and you stop. What willpower! I don’t think I could do that. I know I couldn’t.”
“I got bored with drinking,” I said. “It was old. Being sober is different and interesting.”
“That’s what my brother said,” Wendy said. “He quit drinking for thirteen years. He just started up again. He got bored with not drinking.”
“How’s that going for him?” I asked, feeling giddy at the thought of drinking again.
“Okay, I guess.”
“I’ll probably get bored with not drinking, too,” I said.
“Wanna smoke?” Wendy asked.
“Yeah.”
We walked out the sliding glass doors that led from the kitchen to the back deck. Kelly followed us out. “What do you think about the book club book?” Kelly asked me with a smile.
“I don’t think there’s much to discuss,” I said. “The characters are cardboard cutouts. It’s a cheap romance novel, for God’s sake.”
Kelly’s face fell.
“But I’m enjoying it,” I added quickly. “It’s a page-turner.”
Kelly looked crestfallen. I wished I’d kept my mouth shut. She hadn’t picked the book, but she apparently loved it. We left the deck and returned to the kitchen.
“You left me out!” Liv bleated, staggering over. “You didn’t come get me before you went out! You didn’t want me around!”
“We need a group hug!” Wendy said. We group hugged and almost fell over.
“Let’s have dinner,” Kelly said.
Everyone sat down to dinner, skewered chunks of meat and vegetables, stuck their skewers into pots of bubbling oil, and waited for their food to cook. Wendy’s husband, Tom, leaned over the table. “So what’s it like not drinking?” he asked. “Does everyone seem stupid?”
“Yes,” I said.
Tom blanched. “Really?”
“Oh, you know, it’s funny,” I laughed. I couldn’t wait to get the hell out of there.
[Sunday, March 16]
I called Kelly and thanked her for a lovely party.
“I hope you had a good time,” she said.
“Charlie and I had a great time,” I said.
“Charlie looked bummed when you said you had to leave,” she said. “He looked like a sad puppy.”
“Really? He was the one who tapped my watch and pointed out we had to relieve the babysitter.”
“Did he have a good time?” Kelly asked, sounding worried.
“Yeah. Did everyone else stay late?”
“Liv and Reed stayed until two,” she said. “I had so much fun with them. I just love Liv. I’m so glad she’s my friend.”
I pictured Liv and Kelly hugging and telling each other how much they loved each other. It turned my stomach.
When I got off the phone, I called my new sponsor, Sara, and told her about the party.
“What was interesting,” I said, “was that I had no problem not drinking. I wasn’t tempted at all.”
“Look out for that,” she said. “Thinking you have no problem not drinking can get you into trouble. It can sneak up on you at unexpected moments in unexpected ways.”
[Monday, March 17]
Charlie and I flew to Savannah, Georgia, today. Charlie’s here for a conference and will be working most of the five days we’re here. I’ll sightsee on my own, which is what I like to do anyway, and save the best stuff for when Charlie can join me.
I took Van to my parents’ house last night, dropped off Max at school this morning, and pulled into Liv’s driveway. Liv is watching Max for us while we’re gone. I gave Liv a hug and a kiss, thanked her profusely, handed her Max’s suitcase, and took a limo to the airport.
Since tagging along with Charlie was a last-minute decision, he and I were flying separately. I got to O’Hare, presented the agent with my ticket, and he told me my flight to Savannah had been cancelled and there wasn’t another. After messing around on the computer for a while, he booked me on a flight to Charleston. I killed several hours in the airport, flew to Charleston, rented a car, and drove to Savannah. The drive was supposed to be lovely, but it was pitch black by the time I hit the road and the only thing I saw were bright cigarette depot signs. Halfway to Savannah, it started to rain. I flicked on my windshield wipers, and they made one swipe and stopped. I tested the settings. I couldn’t get them to work. I flicked the wipers on and off manually all the way to the damned hotel. Charlie was asleep when I got there. I wanted a drink, bad.
[Wednesday, March 19]
Charlie had a couple of hours free this morning, so we went to Shavers Book Store and gawked at Jim Williams’s infamous Mercer House immortalized in John Berendt’s
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.
Charlie left for his conference and I drove to Bonaventure Cemetery. Berendt had written about an eccentric old woman he’d met there who was sitting on a bench shaking up martinis for herself and a dead guy. The thought of drinking a cold vodka martini as I strolled through the cemetery was enticing, but I kicked the thought out of my head.