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In reply to the discussion: Alcoholics Anonymous has a terrible success rate, addiction expert finds [View all]enough
(13,569 posts)all forms of treatment for various reasons. So he never got better. He did keep a good job as a teacher until he retired, and was successful in the stock market. But he drank every day of his life and it was a problem to his wife, his child (me), and his grandchildren.
The strangest thing in this entire life history was this. At the age of 83, he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease. A year after that he had become so difficult that it was going to be impossible for him to continue living at home. At that point he was prescribed Seroquel, an anti-psychotic medicine sometimes prescribed for Alzheimer's.
The day he took his first dose of Seroquel, he stopped drinking forever, without even noticing. This is a person who had drunk himself into oblivion every night for about 65 years. He never had another drink and never even thought about it again. This was sudden, immediate, and total cessation of drinking. I have no idea why this happened, what was the combination of factors.
But it did tell me there must be a lot more complexity to alcoholism than I thought.
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