I'd like this thread to keep going. 8 months, 1 week, 4 days of sobriety.
Congrats to all of you. I have seen a couple of people close to me drink themselves to death and decided I needed to back off myself.Mali said:
Had a long flight and watched Trainspotting 2. This line stuck with me: "You're an addict, so be addicted. Just to something else." That might be psychobabble crap or it might be meaningful. I've channeled my energy into running marathons and rock climbing, with great progress.
Preach! Jim, if you're anything like me, those urges don't end just at the bottle but are much more controllable and less destructive than alcohol. If I grab a handful of candy after dinner, just give me the freakin' bag.. it's part of who I am.aggiejim70 said:
My name is Jim and I am an alcoholic. My sobriety date is 2/26/91. I've been a practicing AA and sober all this time. My last meeting was 5:30 this afternoon. I agree with Rick that there are all kinds of definitions and parameters for the word alcoholic. Me, I'm a classic alcoholic as defined in the Big Book of AA. That is, if I take a drink, makes no difference if it's beer, wine, shots, mixed drinks etc. it sets the phenomenon of craving for more with the idea that this time it's going to be different. That was me from late high school, through my time at A&M and into my early forties. This phenomenon does not happen with the average drinker.
Please note this definition has very little, if anything, to do with how much one drinks or how often they drink. It's what happens when they do drink. I couldn't handle a drink today any better than I handled it on 2/25/91.
Let me make the same suggestion to you that I've made to others on this thread. Stop by your local used book store and for couple of bucks get a copy of the Big Book. Read the Roman numeral section, especially the doctors opinion through the bottom of page 63. See if you see your "friend" on the pages. It's tedious reading if you don't. Also, let me suggest the "Freedom From Bondage" story.
If you are indeed having trouble with someone else's drinking let me suggest you check out your local Al-Anon meeting.
All the best to you. Gig 'Em
Quote:
I don't think I could ever become a full blown alcoholic
hodgesco said:Quote:
I don't think I could ever become a full blown alcoholic
I appreciate the candor. And, just based on what you've said you may already be there. The fact that these problems are bothering you at 1:00 and 3:00 in the morning is a good thing.
RickSawyer said:
Appreciate your honest rambling. You sound like you could benefit from taking a break. I can picture your internal struggle with alcohol clearly. You don't really have a problem with alcohol but you do. You want to stop drinking but you don't. The real part of you is reaching out for some help while the alcohol piece of you is yelling "shut up!".
I have been there.
I started drinking at 17. Stopped at 33. All those things you mentioned that you enjoy with alcohol? Here is a secret, you can enjoy them without. 2 years ago I'd never think that I would enjoy standing around managing the smoker with some music on and topo chico. No way in hell. But I do love it! Same with fishing... in fact I fish more now. The alcohol tricks you. It doesn't make the experience better. Its a tricky ******* that convinces you that you need it to have fun, like the most manipulative person you've ever met.
Look, I see your justification in your post... it's only once or twice a week, you proactively went to medical specialists, it's only the hard stuff etc... I hope you can see past your perceptions and justifications to see the opportunity that lay before you. You don't have to think aboit quitting forever, just today. Then try to do that again tomorrow. Get into a group like AA, or get yourself a therapist and have some real honest reflection on yourself and learn who you are without the once or twice a week noise.
You might just like what you find? I've found it liberating. I love myself and who I am. I am a better husband, father, friend, coworker, etc... I lost 60 lbs... you want to see health benefits - oh you can when you quit!
Good luck with your journey. I am pulling for you.
Have you asked your wife what she thinks?Blahhead said:RickSawyer said:
Appreciate your honest rambling. You sound like you could benefit from taking a break. I can picture your internal struggle with alcohol clearly. You don't really have a problem with alcohol but you do. You want to stop drinking but you don't. The real part of you is reaching out for some help while the alcohol piece of you is yelling "shut up!".
I have been there.
I started drinking at 17. Stopped at 33. All those things you mentioned that you enjoy with alcohol? Here is a secret, you can enjoy them without. 2 years ago I'd never think that I would enjoy standing around managing the smoker with some music on and topo chico. No way in hell. But I do love it! Same with fishing... in fact I fish more now. The alcohol tricks you. It doesn't make the experience better. Its a tricky ******* that convinces you that you need it to have fun, like the most manipulative person you've ever met.
Look, I see your justification in your post... it's only once or twice a week, you proactively went to medical specialists, it's only the hard stuff etc... I hope you can see past your perceptions and justifications to see the opportunity that lay before you. You don't have to think aboit quitting forever, just today. Then try to do that again tomorrow. Get into a group like AA, or get yourself a therapist and have some real honest reflection on yourself and learn who you are without the once or twice a week noise.
You might just like what you find? I've found it liberating. I love myself and who I am. I am a better husband, father, friend, coworker, etc... I lost 60 lbs... you want to see health benefits - oh you can when you quit!
Good luck with your journey. I am pulling for you.
Thank you for the reply. I am going to take a break until Sept. 3rd and we'll go from there. I am not really seeing a reason or a want, to quit longterm, but you never know.
RickSawyer said:Have you asked your wife what she thinks?Blahhead said:RickSawyer said:
Appreciate your honest rambling. You sound like you could benefit from taking a break. I can picture your internal struggle with alcohol clearly. You don't really have a problem with alcohol but you do. You want to stop drinking but you don't. The real part of you is reaching out for some help while the alcohol piece of you is yelling "shut up!".
I have been there.
I started drinking at 17. Stopped at 33. All those things you mentioned that you enjoy with alcohol? Here is a secret, you can enjoy them without. 2 years ago I'd never think that I would enjoy standing around managing the smoker with some music on and topo chico. No way in hell. But I do love it! Same with fishing... in fact I fish more now. The alcohol tricks you. It doesn't make the experience better. Its a tricky ******* that convinces you that you need it to have fun, like the most manipulative person you've ever met.
Look, I see your justification in your post... it's only once or twice a week, you proactively went to medical specialists, it's only the hard stuff etc... I hope you can see past your perceptions and justifications to see the opportunity that lay before you. You don't have to think aboit quitting forever, just today. Then try to do that again tomorrow. Get into a group like AA, or get yourself a therapist and have some real honest reflection on yourself and learn who you are without the once or twice a week noise.
You might just like what you find? I've found it liberating. I love myself and who I am. I am a better husband, father, friend, coworker, etc... I lost 60 lbs... you want to see health benefits - oh you can when you quit!
Good luck with your journey. I am pulling for you.
Thank you for the reply. I am going to take a break until Sept. 3rd and we'll go from there. I am not really seeing a reason or a want, to quit longterm, but you never know.
Wow, awesome accomplishment man! Sunday is 2 years here.agman08 said:
JUST PICKED UP MY ONE YEAR CHIP
agman08 said:
Happy 2 years
Congratulations .......I hope you're further along in the program than I was at one year. I was still in don't drink and go to meetings mode. I was too much of a bad ass to ever do a 5th step. Just trying to see how miserable I could be and not drink. I don't recommend that to anyone.agman08 said:
JUST PICKED UP MY ONE YEAR CHIP