The best thing you can do to protect yourself from the negative behaviors with which your deceased alcoholic parent left you is to go to counseling. If possible, find a counselor who specializes in the children of alcoholics.
yes
yes .... but i 4got what it is
12
it can be rare only
No
Yes and no. There is a genetic component to alcoholism that can be inherited by offspring. However, neither the parent nor the child will become an alcoholic if they never drink, and there is no certainty that the child will be more prone to alcoholism if they have an alcoholic parent -- although overall the odds are about 1 in 4. That said, parental example and conditions during upbringing may well influence a child of an alcoholic to drink. Being raised by an alcoholic parent guarantees that a child will have problematic emotional development, and many choose to ameliorate the symptoms in the same way the parent did. Others may become lifelong teetotalers, but if they eventually do drink have the same odds as any other child from an alcoholic family.
No. If both parents are Rh+, they can only pass on Rh+.
Yes, a child can be B negative if one parent is A negative and the other parent is AB negative. The child would inherit one negative Rh factor from each parent, resulting in a B negative blood type.
Yes, an AB negative parent can have a child with O negative blood type, but it requires the other parent to contribute specific alleles. The AB parent can pass either an A or a B allele, while the O negative parent can only pass an O allele. Therefore, for the child to be O blood type, the other parent must be either a genotype that includes O alleles (such as OO or AO). However, the child cannot inherit a negative Rh factor from an AB parent since they do not possess an O allele.
No.
Science is non-conclusive on the topic. We have seen many patterns in families in which alcoholics are prevalent. However, it is not guarantee that someone with an alcoholic parent will be an alcoholic.
putanginamo! gago ang makakabasa nito!