Daughter of drunk driver has obligation to protect

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Dear Annie: My parents had been married 25 years when my father died at age 45. With her world crashing down around her, Mom began drinking. Dad has been gone 6 years, and my mother has become a full-blown alcoholic.

Mom is a mean and hateful drunk. Worse, she gets behind the wheel of her car and doesn’t remember things afterward. I’m scared she is going to hurt herself or someone else.

I know she is stronger than she is choosing to be, but how do I help her realize that?

– Worried Daughter in Homosassa, Fla.

Dear Worried: Loving her is not enough. Alcoholism is a disease. Mom must want to stop and take the steps to do so. You should contact Al-Anon (al-anon.alateen.org) at 1-800-4AL-ANON (1-800-425-2666) for support and information. More importantly, you need to notify the police that she is driving drunk. You have an obligation to protect others from your mother’s reckless behavior, and if it means she gets arrested, so be it. It could save her life and the lives of innocent people on the road.

Dear Annie: I do not agree with your advice to “Stewing in the West,” whose sister-in-law left money after a visit.

Many years ago, my father sent a very generous Christmas check to me. I knew how limited his income was so I returned the check with a kind note. His feelings were hurt.

Who was I to tell him what he could or couldn’t do with his money? It’s rude to return a gift. “Stewing” should appreciate her generous sister-in-law and hope she comes to visit again soon. I learned just to say thank you.

– Been There

Dear Been: There is a huge difference between parents giving their children money as a Christmas gift and guests leaving a “tip,” especially if it insults the hostess. But you are right that things that cannot be changed should be accepted graciously.

Dear Annie: My friend “Lucy” was like a sister to me. She doesn’t drive, so I took her to all her hair appointments, doctor’s visits, shopping, etc. She hated bad weather, so when it rained, I would sit with her. After her surgeries, I was the one who stayed overnight, helped her bathe and did her housework.

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