Hi Lynn,
I really feel for you and think you are an amazingly strong person. You are his guardian angel; taking care of him; loving him no matter what. As a Nurse you have the perfect caring disposition. The problem is, he might not see it this way.
I put my wife through hell with my binge drinking and it changed her behaviour. She'd try to take drinks away from me when I had too much; when away with work I had to check in via text every hour. I saw my wife’s caring behaviour as being controlling and I rebelled, drinking more tequila or lying to her about how much I was actually drinking. At a marriage counselling session, I was told;
“Your wife's controlling behaviour will stop when you can control your drinking.”I've thought long and hard about how I can respond to your post. I can see how difficult it is trying to change your husband. But that might be the problem. He must want to change himself.
Drinking Vodka is a terrible idea and it will really cause problems. But the problem is that ‘banning’ your husband from drinking Vodka might backfire. The alcoholic part of his brain may rebel and he might drink more – or start hiding his drinking from you.
If he’s taking the Naltrexone then brilliant. I’d suggest the best way to measure success is through his actions.
Is he leaving drinks unfinished?
Does he still have blackouts where he admits to not remembering anything?
Is he still doing foolish / embarrassing things?
My feeling is that he will start leaving drinks, he will no longer blackout and slowly over the next 3 - 6 months you will get the husband that you want and deserve. Naltrexone will have an effect on him at a subconscious level – so watch out for these changes and post back with your success stories!
I wish you all the best - stay strong,
Andy.