I have been aware of and deeply impacted by my brother’s alcohol addiction for over 3 years, but it wasn’t until recently that I allowed myself to truly feel it’s impact of his sibling. Since I’m not very close to my brother, I understood his addiction’s impact on me as a ripple. I was hurting because my mom was hurting. With his last near-death hospital stay, I finally realized I was in the inner ripple. I was being impacted directly and that recognition unraveled me in ways I was not prepared to feel. Reading this book was a first attempt to understand and embrace my identity as a sibling of an alcoholic.
There are many useful takeaways from this book. I wish I would have read this book many years ago. Many of the sections felt “too late” for me and my family but having some of the tools/talking points 5 years ago may have been helpful. I found many of the quotes at the start of each chapter comforting and/or validating.
Where I needed more from this book, though, is for it to go deeper into the sibling relationship. At times I felt most of the advice was generic and could apply to any relationship. I needed to hear more about the family as a whole and how a sober sibling navigates their relationship with their parents while their parents are overwhelmed with the pain that comes with a sick and dying child. I also needed more about navigating the sibling relationship when you’re not close but nonetheless are still deeply impacted by your sibling’s disease.
I found the epilogue to be the most honest and most necessary part of the entire book. The move away from self-help to first person narrative was moving.
Overall, this book was helpful and I’d recommended it to others who are in families navigating loved ones who are addicted to alcohol - my hope is that they find it much sooner than I did.