dry drunk
English
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
dry drunk (plural dry drunks)
- A recovering alcoholic who is not drinking alcohol, but has relapsed mentally and emotionally;[1][2]
- 2013, Kate Maloy, Margaret Jones Patterson, Birth Or Abortion?: Private Struggles in a Political World[3], →ISBN:
- Denise called Frank a "dry drunk." He no longer drank but he continued to indulge in "the same wild, erratic behavior binges" without the "excuse of alcohol" in his system.
- 2020, M. D. Linville M. Meadows, A Spiritual Pathway to Recovery from Addiction, A Physician's Journey of Discovery[4], →ISBN:
- "I think Big Jed's dad may be a dry drunk. He seems to have all the problems of an alcoholic, just not the drinking. […] "
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:dry drunk.
- Such a relapse.
- 1991, Philip St. Romain, Freedom from Codependency[5], →ISBN, page 60:
- Family members frequently report that a dry drunk is as difficult to live with as a "wet drunk." After all, it is not the drinking and drugging that bothers family members but the abusive, unpredictable behavior that comes with it.
- 1995, Hamilton B., Getting Started in AA[6], →ISBN, page 186:
- One of the best ways out of a "dry drunk" is to work with another still-suffering alcoholic.
- (by analogy) Any substance addict who has quit using, but remains psychologically dependent.
- 1990, Ellen Walker, Smoker: Self-portrait of a Nicotine Addict[7], →ISBN:
- Abstinence leaves me without nicotine, but still living with the old beliefs and behaviors that cry for the drug—in short, living a "dry drunk."
Adjective
- Being a recovering alcoholic who has quit drinking alcohol, but remains psychologically dependent.
- 2017, The Best of The Lifted Brow: Volume Two[8], →ISBN:
- But more interestingly, they distinguish between being "dry drunk"—being on the wagon, but still wanting to drink—and being "sober," neither drinking nor wanting to.
References
- ^ “Dry Drunk”, in spiritualriver.com[1], 13 August 2010 (last accessed), archived from the original on 10 January 2010
- ^ “Understanding and Dealing With Dry Drunk Syndrome”, in alcoholism-and-drug-addiction-help.com[2], 30 October 2023 (last accessed), archived from the original on 30 October 2023