Tanya........Give or take a year, you're about the same age as when I came in. Your views on outside issues are irrelevant. Let me ask you this.......When you sobered up, had your problem been resolved? I didn't think so.Tanya 93 said:
Well, I saw this. Must be fate.
I was sober and recently had a terrible relapse after huge problems coming to a head in my life.
I am now back on the sobriety wagon, but I am now trying AA just so I may have some emotional support.
For all of you that have done this and stayed on this, that is awesome. I hope and pray that the same will happen for me.
And I do know that most posters can't stand me, but please don't do this here. On this thread.
Haha! I agree! I quit drinking for a while (probably just January) so it's day 25 for me, but I suddenly have a sweet tooth again! I've never drank Coca Cola, but this month, it's been my go to!agman08 said:
Ha! It's strange what we substitute with. Coca Cola, while it's not the best for you is cheaper and won't get your ass thrown in jail. Keep it up
Day 127 for me
deadhead aggie said:
The last AA meeting I attended was on January 25th. I didn't really make a conscientious decision to quit, I just sort of stopped going.........no other way to put it. I felt myself "straying" a bit from the program at the end, not because I took up drinking again, but because I felt that I was a changed man.
Even though I've distanced myself from AA meetings, I honestly think the AA program was a success for me because it altered my entire view on drinking. Since January 25th, I've had 3 beers. Not too bad for someone that used to drink heavily 3 or 4 days a week.
Perhaps I wasn't an alcoholic and was just a heavy social drinker that needed something interjected into my life to reverse the direction I was headed. AA was that interjection.
I'm not advocating for anyone to leave AA by any means. I simply wanted to high-light my story. I'm hoping to never have to step foot in another AA meeting for the rest of my life, all the while keeping my drinking in check.
Good luck to all !!!
26 years. Hell yeah. Glad to hear AA worked and works for you!aggiejim70 said:
Army.....I made it, today's the 26th and I have 26 years. 2-26-91, I awoke to the melodic voice of one of my FTAB classmate's wife telling him "get that SOB out of my house and never let him in here again". This as a result of my
last attempt to control and enjoy my drinking. This is not a forum for public 5th steps, so I'll skip the details. I wound up at the Bellaire AA Club in Houston that night, and haven't had a drink since. My wife and I went to dinner with that same couple a few weeks ago.
In response to one of the previous posts. The Big Book states that it is the obsession of every abnormal drinker that somehow someday he will control and enjoy his drinking. I heard that repeated in a meeting a few weeks ago. I can tell you that in my illustrious 25 year drinking career, with few exceptions, that if I controlled it, I didn't enjoy it, and if I enjoyed it, I didn't control it.
It's taken me a couple tries but i have finally figured this out. I have gone dry 30 days here and there and gone back to trying to moderate but it just becomes too much of a chore and I fall back in to bad habits.aggiejim70 said:
if I controlled it, I didn't enjoy it, and if I enjoyed it, I didn't control it.
That is awesome man! Who is your support community?agman08 said:
6 Months Sober today!!!
This time 6 months ago I was unconscious and starting to wake up and drag myself to the closest store for my next drink before the BWW a mile down the road opened.
I walked because my wife had my keys! I had $50 that I had hidden in my toolbox because she had my wallet. I drank as much as I could after taking 3 xanax and I collapsed on the street. None of my neighbors or other bar patrons could wake me.
I spent the next several hours in jail before being sent to Millwood treatment facility in Arlington.
Best day of my life was hitting rock bottom.
Today, I am beyond happy and healthy, I work out 7 days a week. I've lost 60 pounds and the other day I ran 7 miles at a 7:44 pace! (Last year I ran a 5k in 36 minutes so you can see I've improved a bit)
You can say I'm now addicted to being the best athlete in my Church. Hahahaha. (That's kind of a joke)
Anyway. Congrats to everyone. Love you all and keep on fighting.
Yep, agree whole heartedly. You are whom you associate with. Similarly, I never tried AA so I can't speak to the positives or negatives nor do I wish to stir that can of worms but I have found that family, friends, a few online support groups and a therapist have been instruemental in my recovery... Not just recovery from alcohol but recovering the man I wanted to be when I was a 10 year old boy.agman08 said:
I go to Graves Street in Mansfield.
Other than that, my coworkers, family and friends are ALL on board. Even my "drinking buddies" are helping me.
Keep positive people around you is the main thing.