Understanding teens begins with connection. A community for parents who care.

Dialogues · Crisis

“I think Dad / Mom drinks too much.”

The child observing the parent. Often after a years-long pattern they've finally named. The temptation to defend; the work is to honor the observation.

Line art of a teen and parent on a porch at dusk, two empty mugs between them
For ages
13–1516–18
Topics
Family ConflictMental HealthDrugs & AlcoholCommunication & Connection
Family context
High Conflict Home
I.
The scene

What's happening.

Your 15-year-old, on the porch after dinner: “I think Dad drinks too much.” You've thought it too, for years.

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

Dad has a stressful job. He just unwinds.

Teen

Mom. Six beers every night is not unwinding.

Parent

It's not your business to count.

Teen

(learns adult addiction is a thing we don't talk about in this house)

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

(pause) You're not wrong. I've been worried too, for a while.

Teen

Really?

Parent

Yes. I haven't known the right time or way to bring it up with him, and I should have, sooner. What you're noticing is real and I'm sorry it's been your weight to carry too. This is mine and Dad's to handle, and I'm going to. Not tonight — but soon. The promise I'll make you: I won't pretend this isn't happening anymore.

Teen

Thank you.

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

If your teen is in crisis

If the drinking pattern includes driving impaired, violence, or escalating volume: SAMHSA Helpline 1-800-662-HELP, Al-Anon for family members (al-anon.org), and an honest conversation with the drinking parent that you may want help structuring (couples counselor, family therapist). If the teen is in immediate danger from impaired-parent behavior, the safety plan is the priority before the recovery conversation.

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