Hi drock,
Cloughs' question is the first of many we will have.
I am a recovering alcoholic with other depressive disorders also.
Often times the drinker will go to extremes(drinking, getting in car wrecks, falling off the medications when prescribed... etc) thinking they are not doing anything out of the ordinary,the disease of alcoholism is a powerful force and will make all around it frustrated and ore than ready to abandon their friends.Sadly, sometimes, this is the only answer,lest we become enablers(
Enabling - Enabling and Alcoholism in the Family)
If you really want to do something, do it for yourself first, attend AL-ANON meetings, this is not AA, it is for the friends and family(supporters) of alcoholics(you might be surprised what you can learn at these meetings,even without being an alcoholic yourself)
While attending these meetings you'll get advice as to how
you will deal with your friends addiction,coping skills, boundries,finding peace in your life beyond helping your friends.This, I think, you have in you,other wise you wouldn't have written in here, Right?
He has been in rehab, he knows(the seed has been planted) about AA,NA or whatever program they suggested after treatment, if you want to not be so sad, let him deal with his side of the street, its his mess,you, on the other hand, need to see things clearly from your side, and properly deal with him on YOUR terms, not his delusional, drinking ways.
Find a boundary you will not pass beyond, set that goal, and do not compromise this set boundary.Accomplish this simple task and begin the road to your own recovery from being a shoulder for a still suffering alcoholic to rest his head on.
Your worth it, I can see this from your writing,don't doubt what you can accomplish, with or without him in your life.
Hope this helps,
Ken