jane86 wrote:
... "She hasn't hit her bottom" (uh, this is her fourth DUI and her husband has left her and taken the kids…doesn't get much worse)...
A personal favorite of mine. "Bottom" is a stupid and meaningless concept, because it can only be known in hindsight. You can't really say anyone has hit bottom, because they may relapse and get a brand new one. I've learned that "bottom" is apparently whatever was going on when someone decided to join AA.
jane86 wrote:
... "he's in denial"...
Or maybe he simply doesn't want to give himself a label that comes with a lot of baggage. Or maybe he has the crazy idea that he knows himself and his situation better than you do.
jane86 wrote:
... "has she been going to meetings?"...
I hope so, because no one has ever shown up drunk at an AA meeting, and I know that no one ever gets drunk afterwards either.
jane86 wrote:
I'd like to tell my brother about TSM, but I know the kind of reaction I'm going to get for even suggesting such a thing. My family will disown me; I'm not being dramatic...
This is a good example of why AA is obviously a religion. If it were merely a self-help program, no way would anyone take it so personally.
I think you owe it to your brother to at least give him some information about TSM (and all the other medical options). If it were someone I loved, I would take them for a Vivitrol shot as soon as possible (with their consent, of course). If your brother was bipolar and instead of lithium your family wanted an exorcism, I assume you'd get him the care he needed even if it meant getting disowned. I think you are in a very similar situation.