Abstract
How parents manage potential tensions between normative discourses of ‘competent parenting’ and their desires to consume alcohol has received little attention. In this article, we explore the elements that encourage or constrain parents’ drinking and investigate how parents consider and manage their alcohol use in the context of multiple social roles with sometimes conflicting demands and expectations around ‘competent parenting’. Our analysis draws on 30 semi-structured interviews with Australian parents, conducted as part of a broader project which aimed to explore how home drinking is integrated into everyday life. While parents’ accounts of drinking alcohol highlighted effects such as embodied experiences of relaxation and facilitating shared adult moments, many participants described drinking less than they otherwise would if their children were not present. Participants discussed various social roles and routines which constrained consumption, with drinking bounded by responsibility. As such, drinking emerged as something needing to be actively negotiated, particularly in light of discourses that frame expectations of what constitutes ‘competent parenting’. When considering parents’ alcohol consumption in the future, we argue that it is important to destigmatise their consumption by acknowledging the importance of adults’ pleasure and wellbeing, alongside children’s needs for safety and modelling of safer alcohol consumption.