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She gets very nasty at me and my daughter and then apologizes saying it's just her. What to do?

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Well I hope to God that your mother is not living with you or you with her, and if you are living together....GET OUT!!!!!
And if you're not living together, just stay away..... as in far away.
You nor your daughter deserve to live your lives with an alcoholic. Period, end of sentence.
I would like to think that you would think enough of your own daughter that you wouldn't continue to expose her to this BS, and your alcoholic mother.
So stay away, call APS and report a vulnerable adult living by themselves and let them handle things from there.
If and when your mother seeks help for her drinking, then you can decide if you want to be back in her life, but until then make sure that you and your daughter are attending some Al-Anon meetings as they will be able to help you both be stronger and learn the danger of enabling an alcoholic.
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If your mother has no desire to change her life and choices, there’s not much you can do for her. There’s action for you and your daughter, stay out of the line of fire and limit the time you’re around to experience her nasty behavior. No one deserves bad treatment, no matter the cause
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Alcoholics take out their frustration on the nearest to them.

Alvadeer said everything, and it's not much more I can add to this.

My mother was an alcoholic. I've been a member of Al-Anon for over forty years. Al-Anon was there for me when I was going through those storms of manipulations, verbal and physical abuse.
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Welcome to Forum.
I hope that you will fill out your profile.
I would like especially to know your age, your daughter's age?
Who lives with who? Are you and daughter living in mom's home with her?
Is she living in your home with you?

What is mom's overall condition mentally and physically? What activities and friends?
What limitations?

In knowing only what little you tell us here I will suggest first of all that you and daughter attend Al-Anon together. You will meet so many in like circumstances who are dealing with alcoholism. You will get guidance to help and suggestions, but most of all you will understand that the non-alcoholic is basically as helpless as the alcoholic in this situation, and has really only two options. One is to stay (in which case nagging and hounding someone is worthless and counter productive) and the other is to go (which means basically to tell the alcoholic they are on their own, and supply numbers for AA when they wish to get some help.

I will leave you with this. I once famously said to my partner, about his mom's alcoholism, "It's an option". She didn't live with us. She chose to keep herself pretty lubricated with a constant flow of vodka and OJ. He visited her in AZ once yearly and called every Sunday. He helped her in arranging a reverse mortgage and she kept her cleaning gal until her death. Even when almost bedbound she took joy in her cocktails and in the little running water from the hose that fed a pond frequented by her desert wildlife. It was her choice. She may have fallen? If she did we didn't know; we were 100s and 100s of miles away.

I wish you the best. I am so sorry. I think there is honestly little that you may be able to do.
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againx100 Sep 2024
I would like to know all these things as well.

Sounds like she's depressed and self medicating and maybe an alcoholic now. Does she have any interest in bettering her situation by getting off the booze? If not, you're going to have to set boundaries and extricate yourself as soon as she gets nasty to you or your daughter. She especially does not deserve this and should not be subjected to mistreatment.

Best of luck.
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