I suppose so. I guess I have always heard than a recovering alcoholic should not even have one drink. That the temptation is too much. So I would think to go on a wine tasting trip would be temptation (tasting wine again). But yes, she was the one who needed to control her drinking.
It was not a wine tasting trip..it was a trip, and they stopped at a winery...and he tasted some wine
for all we know the beer mug may have been his
it is a very hard thing to juggle, when you have a family member/loved one in "recovery"....
it is often harder for men, there are lots lots more women in al anon for hubbies/boyfriends...and there are more daughters in al anon I would guess, there for parents/family members....there are more mothers in al anon than dads there for their kids
and I've been there myself ....the one thing I eventually learned was that I had to be there for ME, not for the alcoholic
there are a lot less men who will go through al anon for their partner/etc
and I have attended many "open" meetings of AA, where sometimes women complain that they do NOT get the support (or maybe the enabling) that non alcoholic women lavish upon the male drunks
And there are many ideas and theories also....some abstain totally so as to not "tempt" the recovering alcoholic...however the Big Book tells the alcoholic that eventually they will be able to go where there is alcohol so long as they have a reason to be around it, they will not have to live confined to aa
in fact that is "old school" aa....that eventually an alcoholic should be able to go to a wedding and drink sodas, they should be able to go to family celebrations, their family members should not have to totally abstain...so it is a hard line to walk
and ...here is a sad truth..alcoholics are among the most clever and manipulative people around....a "good" drunk could tell you that their sponsor suggested you go ahead and drink if you choose....a "good drunk" could manipulate a NON aa-educated boyfriend into thinking that it is "ok" if they have a beer or a glass of wine....a drunk will tell you that it was "hard liquor" that was their problem...or pills...or other drugs...or the past "stress"
Al anon gives NON alcoholics the insight and wisdom to see through the various ploys and maneuvers a dry drunk will make on their way to their almost certain "slip"
.see people who love alcoholics become very helpful, very nurturing, caring, our lives become one of concern and tightrope walking, and full of hope we try to believe whatever they tell us.
We want to "fix" them....when we can't even fix ourselves
then we finally come to grips with the 3 C's..and start to work on on our program and develop our own confidence hopefully
I don't know what really happened here...I can only hope that her fiance and his kids get help, therapy....maybe join a family group and try to come to grasps with this tragedy