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What to do when a colleague is abusing alcohol

7 Comments

The lovely dinner meeting with my colleague turned out to be a bad dream. Sure, we had wine with the meal. I loved every moment, morsel, and drop of it.

Yet I was poorly prepared when she not only had wine, but slugged down cognac afterward, and commented that she had preceded our meeting with "a couple of scotches."

I ended up taking her car keys and checking her into the hotel that housed the restaurant where we dined. It all seemed like a dramatic hassle - and then I realized it wasn't over. I had to face this woman again. And what would I say when I did?

It can be a painful experience to watch an associate or friend behave badly after having one too many at a business function or the local watering hole.

So I turned to Todd Whitmer, senior executive officer of the Caron Foundation, a nationally recognized U.S. non-profit addiction treatment center, for advice on how to help my colleague avoid alcohol-related career suicide - or worse.

Talk About How Their Actions Made You Feel

Work is one of the last places a drinking problem will surface, Whitmer says.

But friends and colleagues are likely to know someone is having a problem with alcohol before the boss does, and can help steer him or her away from danger.

Whitmer suggests these steps: If your friend could endanger herself, intervene. Take the car keys, call a cab, or look her in the eye and ask her to leave with you.

Otherwise, wait until she is sober before you try talking to her.

Be specific about what you observed, without accusing.

For example, instead of saying: "You were really drunk last night," try: "I felt embarrassed about the joke you told last night. You don't ordinarily talk like that. Maybe you had too much to drink."

Use "I" language as much as possible. Express your feelings such as alarm, fear, and sadness, not what you think is happening to the other person.

"Although he may argue, he can't deny your feelings," Whitmer says.

Express your concern for your colleague and offer to provide feedback when you see the problem surfacing. Talk to her before the next company gathering, and let her know you will signal when you sense inappropriate behavior coming on.

Offer Help, Not Counseling__For example: "The last time all the managers went out for a drink after the strategic planning meeting, I was afraid, after the third drink, that your remarks about the boss were going to get you into trouble.

I'm feeling some anxiety about tonight's business dinner. If I sense you're getting into dangerous territory, I'm going to give you that feedback. Does that make sense to you? When I say 'Remember what we talked about yesterday?' that's the red flag."

You can certainly show compassion and express your concern, but don't hesitate to say: "I'm not in a position to counsel you about what's going on."

If your company has an employee assistance program, steer him/her in that direction. If that resource is unavailable, suggest contacting an alcoholism information and treatment center.

Don't Just Look The Other Way

Sometimes being kind means being tough when you protect fellow workers. It's not easy to speak up to someone who is self-destructing with alcohol - or any other substance.

Still, it's the right thing to do.

Don't ever turn your eyes from a difficult situation like this. We need to take care of each other.

We are, after all, in this life together. Thus, we all deserve respect, both in the giving and the getting.__

© (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013.

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

7 Comments
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The article does not mention any inappropriate behaviour by the female colleague. It simply says she drank more than the author. So? What was wrong exactly?

1 ( +2 / -1 )

Whitmer suggests these steps: If your friend could endanger herself, intervene. Take the car keys, call a cab, or look her in the eye and ask her to leave with you.

That sounds like it could lead to some other "trouble"...

0 ( +1 / -1 )

or just get drunk yourself.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

In any case, it's a short article and doesn't speak of a LOT of the problems or potential solutions, and problems that could arise from the attempts, but the gist of the message is good. The author is correct in that we should not let this kind of thing slide and need to help each other. Some people will definitely not react well -- like they are backed into a corner -- but it's a whole lot worse when something bad happens to the person in question and you have to ask yourself if you could have done more.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

In the land of salarymen passed out in their own barf on the train platform at 8pm on a Monday, this article is like reading about people living in an alternate universe.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Try telling a REAL alcoholic they have a problem and see what happens. I slowly watched my Dad drink himself to death over the best part of 20 years and despite a loving supportive family, plenty of counselling and in the latter years psychiatric help there wasnt a damned thing we could do about it. Do your best to help, but dont spend years beating yourself up when you cant. Its a waste of your life on top of theirs.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

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