Navigating grief

Replies
0
Voices
1
Freshness
Followers

0

stripenecessary

Hi all, I’m new here and usually just view the message boards. I lost my dad in October 2025 to an alcohol overdose, he was 44 and I’m 24. Growing up I can’t remember a time where my dad wasn’t dependent on alcohol, one of my first memories is being stood in the kitchen while she cried and shouted at him because he was urinating on the kitchen carpet thinking he was in the toilet. My mum and dad divorced when I was 7 and I decided I wanted to live with dad because I felt I needed to look out for him and felt like my mum was abandoning him, my 2 little brothers also lived with me and dad and they were very young so most of my childhood was spent being a parent to my little brothers and my dad when he was drunk. He remarried when I was 10 and I was relieved at first but soon found out she was emotionally abusive and really spurred on my dad’s addiction to make him more dependent on her. From 10-16 was just chaos (I witnessed a lot of domestic abuse and was the mediator) and I went to a boarding college at 16 to get away from it all. We were never allowed to say he was an alcoholic outside of the house although everyone knew, no one helped us though. I was still very close with my dad but never moved back home and had a baby and got married when I was 23, the years up until his death his alcoholism was hidden from me by his wife and my brothers because they knew how much I hated it and I was always on his case. I didn’t know he was still drinking that much as he would always tell me he’d stopped and I was so busy with my own child I believed him. He died in his sleep last October which was a complete shock and no one understood why. Until the post mortem was released and his wife had given statements in it saying he was drinking a litre of straight vodka a day and was drunk the night he died, but she has never admitted that directly to me. His death was ruled to be as a result of intoxication after they did toxicology. And now I’ve cut off all contact with his wife.

I’m really struggling with guilt because I feel like I could’ve saved him if I’d known. Or I should’ve atleast tried and looked close enough to know he was drinking so much still.

Leave a Reply

Recent topics

  • Navigating grief
    Hi all, I'm new here and usually just view the message boards. I lost my dad in October 2025 to an alcohol overdose, he was…
  • Different feelings different days
    I haven't spoken to my mum and step-dad properly now for over six months. I guess the best place to start would be at the…
  • Newbie here
    Hi everyone, I am new here but have been reading all the posts from children to adults and have to say they all resonated with…
  • I have never admitted this before
    No-one that knows me (apart from immediate family) knows that I live with my mother who is alcohol dependent and has been all of my…
  • Anger
    Hello everyone I wanted to come on and talk about something I haven’t really noticed before. It’s that when my mum drinks she seems to…

Recent replies

  • Thank you . It has really helped coming here . The counsellor who has helped me is a parent I met at my sons football…
    kezza2 on Newbie here
  • Thanks for your reply. I have found it really helpful reading all the messages on here and listening to the podcasts.
    kezza2 on Newbie here
  • Thank you so much reaching out and sharing your story. I am sorry to hear of your experiences as a child where alcohol was involved…
    listener on Different feelings different days
  • Welcome! I’m so pleased you have found this little community at Nacoa and, more importantly, that you’re finding things that resonate you – I hope…
    listener on Newbie here
  • Hello Laila, I am really sorry to hear about your mum’s drinking and the impact it has on you. It sounds like you are navigating…
    listener on I have never admitted this before

Keep in touch

To find out more about our events and activities, subscribe to our mailing list

We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp’s privacy practices.