How to Stop Drinking
Far too often, the traditional wisdom for how to stop drinking is plagued with useless relapse prevention tactics that try to pinpoint our problems and triggers in helping us to prevent relapse. My experience has shown this to be ineffective.
Better than tactics for recovery are strategies. Strategy is more useful because it is more encompassing and can affect larger areas of our lives, in such a way that we can affect massive change. Using tactics is more short term and leads to smaller, more incremental changes. In addiction recovery, we need massive change. We need to change everything. Strategies are the way to do that, because they give a broader sense of guidance for all of our actions and decisions.
* Click here to see the visual guide *
Strategy #1: Take massive action. If nothing changes, nothing changes. The scope of what you are trying to do (quitting drinking) is truly massive. You are trying to change your whole life. This takes a huge effort. Do not underestimate it. Go big or go home.
Strategy #2: Blast through your denial. See your drinking for the crutch that it really is. Honestly see how it controls you and dominates you, even though you “enjoy” it. Measure your time spent being “happy” while drinking, and notice that you are almost always miserable, but hanging on to happy memories of drinking.
Strategy #3: Seek professional help. Alcohol detox can be dangerous. There are huge benefits to inpatient treatment. Seeing a counselor or therapist can be a turning a point. Getting any form of help is action, which is always good.
Strategy #4: Build real self esteem. This is the strongest form of relapse prevention: if you truly value your life, you will not throw it away on a relapse. Take care of yourself. Push yourself to grow. Help others.
Strategy #5: Pursue holistic health. Recovery is about living healthier. Extend this in new directions to enhance your recovery from addiction. Quit smoking, start exercising, make nutritional changes. Seek emotional balance. Etc.
Strategy #6: Create a new life. You have surplus time and energy now that you are in recovery. How will you use this surplus? Find outlets that match your talents and strengths, while allowing you to help others and create real value in life. Experience growth.
Strategy #7: Seek balance as you progress. Watch out for extremism. Recovery is about living, not about recovery. Balance growth and acceptance. Stay active in pursuing new things. Stay open to growth opportunities.
Strategy #8: Push yourself to grow. Do not get lazy in recovery. Do not justify laziness with self acceptance. Do not close the door on self examination. If you stop growing, you relapse.
Strategy #9: Get physical. Fitness is huge in recovery. Most people disregard fitness due to inherent laziness. Push yourself to exercise regularly and reap huge benefits. Some recovery programs are based on exercise alone–that is how powerful it is.
Strategy #10: Embrace gratitude. If you are truly grateful, relapse is impossible. Gratitude is the mindset for learning and growth experiences. Practicing gratitude enhances recovery and leads to more learning and thus more growth.
Strategy #11: Avoid complacency. Our natural state is to be drinking. Therefore, we have to keep pushing in order to avoid reverting to our natural state. We can only do this through the push for personal growth. Seeking holistic health gives us a broad platform for growth experiences.
Strategy #12: Explore a new vision. Take action first, then reflect on how it has helped your recovery. Seek growth based on your strengths. See how you can use this to help others. Start becoming the person you were always meant to be.
Strategy #13: Discover your purpose. Your vision made real. Helping others in a profound way based on the personal growth you have experienced. Achieving dreams that you once thought were blocked forever by your drinking. True contentment and joy.
Stop drinking today….how many reasons do you need?
As a recovering alcoholic, I know that this is a difficult decision. Even though there were a million reasons for me to stop drinking, I had a million reasons why I should continue. These reasons of mine to continue drinking were because of something called perceived benefits.
The tricky thing is that there are some real benefits to drinking alcohol for most of the adult population. But for the true alcoholic, those benefits are largely illusory, and become less and less valid as their disease progresses.
In other words, an alcoholic might cling to the “benefits” of drinking, rationalizing that these are important reasons for them to continue to self medicate, but in reality those reasons are no longer valid, and they are just fooling themselves. This is called denial.
The perceived benefits of drinking
The perceived benefits of drinking will be a bit different for different people. Just to give you an idea, here is what I thought alcohol was doing for me:
1) Fixed my shyness – Before I started drinking, I was naturally shy and found it difficult to speak in groups larger than 2 or 3 people without any anxiety. Alcohol fixed this. The problem is that, even though alcohol fixed this, it was not a viable long-term solution to the anxiety problem. This is because my tolerance increased and I had to drink more and more in order to overcome my shyness. Eventually it stopped working altogether, and I would remain shy even in a complete blackout. But I stubbornly clung to the idea that I had to drink in order for this personality flaw to be corrected.
2) Celebration and passion for living - I believed that life was a party, and that you were not celebrating life unless you were living it up and getting wasted every day. Somehow I believed that the only way to live passionately was to drink heavily. These ideas were obviously from the “good old days” when drinking was still fun, and hanging onto this illusion was just another part of my denial.
3) Drinking = happy – I truly believed that the only way that I could be happy in this life was to be drunk. This was a twisted mindset. I really looked down on other people who didn’t drink and pitied them that they were not able to “get happy” like I was. The truth of the matter was that I was miserable for 99% of the time, and it was a rare moment when I could find the right level of toxicity where I could even claim to be “happy” in my drunken stupor.
So these were my main “benefits” of drinking. I call them perceived benefits because this is what I truly believed, but looking back we can see that I was in denial about my drinking and therefore I was only fooling myself. These benefits were illusions that I clung to; they were actually false 99 percent of the time.
The denial exists because alcohol used to work as described. At one time, these perceived benefits were real, and my life was not screwed up yet from excessive drinking. In other words, there were some good times that I had with drinking, and my mind stubbornly clung to those ideas. This is just one mechanism of denial. All of these perceived benefits became false as my alcoholism continued to progress, but my denial kept me from seeing the truth.
When you really analyze the perceived benefits of drinking, it almost looks like a belief system. I had established the idea firmly in my head that alcohol was wonderful and those who did not drink it were missing out in life in a big way. I really believed this. Not only that, but I believed it at a very deep level and it had become part of who I was.
So in spite of these perceived benefits, eventually we have to see the illusions for what they are and break through our denial. It is only then that we can have any hope at even caring about a reason to stop drinking in the first place.
But once we become the slightest bit open to the idea, the tide can turn, and we can start to get excited about a sober life again:
Reasons to stop drinking
We can separate the logical reasons to stop drinking into these broad categories:
1) Longevity of life
2) Quality of life
Pretty basic, right? Alcoholism can affect how long you live, and also the quality of your life. So let’s take them one at a time:
Quitting drinking and your lifespan
Obviously, if you are an alcoholic, then quitting drinking will greatly increase your potential lifespan. But by how much?
To answer that question, we have to look at some statistics. I’ll spare you the charts and data and summarize it for you: most alcoholics die about 15 to 20 years earlier than their peers.
Now the question is: “How much is 15 to 20 years of your life worth to you?” This question is actually fairly deep and complicated, because the answer can change so drastically depending on your state of mind.
For example, a miserable drunk will usually brush the question off entirely, waving his hand and saying “whatever. Take me right now if you want!” That is the miserable desperation of addiction talking. Now if we manage to sober this person up and get them involved with a creative new life in recovery, their answer will likely change quite a bit (I know mine did!). Life becomes precious in recovery.
And of course we are just talking about numbers and percentages here–you might be able to continue to drink and still live a very long time. But the odds are against you. It’s not just the direct effects of drinking that can kill you. For example, guess what the number one killer of recovering alcoholics is? Lung cancer. In other words, it’s not just the booze that will kill you….it’s the lifestyle that gets us in the end. Not to mention drunk drivings, accidents, slip-and-falls, alcohol poisoning, liver damage, and so on.
With alcoholic drinking, there are a million ways to die. Problems compound as the lifestyle becomes increasingly more dangerous. It’s a progressive disease, so the risks increase for both the direct effects of alcohol, as well as for “lifestyle deterioration.” In other words, as time goes on, our drinking takes us to new lows and to do things we said we would never do. All of this steadily increases the odds of our untimely demise. Luckily, there are a million ways to stop drinking as well.
Quitting drinking and the quality of your life
The discussion so far as focused on how long we will live if we drink alcoholically. But lets take a look at what it does to the quality of our life.
There are a number of ways that drinking impacts the quality of your life:
1) Overall health – Not only will heavy drinking reduce your lifespan, but it also has the potential to bring on any number of diseases, disorders, and ailments.
2) Alcoholics are more susceptible to other drugs – which can have devastating effects on your life as well. Many people pick up “new habits” while they are drunk.
3) Alcoholics are several times more likely to be cigarette smokers - which, combined with drinking, can really have devastating health consequences.
4) Risk of suicide – is determined by studies to be over 5,000 times greater in alcoholics than in that of the general public.
5) Social effects – Alcoholism negatively impacts divorce rates, domestic violence, job stability, and so on.
6) Mental effects – Alcoholism contributes to depression, anxiety, and in the long run can result in ever more serious mental conditions, some of which might eventually be permanent.
Is there a Stop drinking pill?
There is a medication called Campral that can help with cravings, but it is by no means a magic bullet. People who rely on the pill to “fix” their alcoholism are going to be very disappointed. There is no magic cure and you have to put forth a tremendous effort in order to get sober aside from simply taking a pill like this. But, it can be helpful, and so any alcoholic should consider talking with their doctor about medications like Campral that might be one piece of their recovery journey.
Stop drinking, lose weight?
Of course alcohol is empty calories, and those who get drunk every day tend to have other factors that contribute to heavy weight. Not only does the quality of nutrition drop, but most alcoholics are very inactive when it comes to exercise. Part of recovery, if you use a holistic approach (which is strongly advocated on this website!) is that you should be considering things such as nutrition and exercise as part of your recovery.
So simply quitting drinking is but one step in losing weight. The accompanying lifestyle changes are what will really kick your weight loss into high gear.
Stop drinking too much alcohol, or quit entirely?
Some people think that they might be able to regulate their drinking instead of quitting entirely. If this works for you, then that is great! Moderate your drinking. But an alcoholic is defined by their inability to do so. Eventually you may have to get honest with yourself and realize that you cannot control your drinking consistently.
Denial is the trap that you can control your drinking some of the time. If you hang on to those successes, but ignore the train wreck that is your life, then you are in denial.
If you can’t stop drinking now
If you try to stop drinking now but find that you cannot do it on your own, then ask for help. Call up a local treatment center and ask them what you need to do in order to get into treatment. They will lay out your options for you and help you to get funding so that you can get the help you need. Pretty much anyone who is persistent can find some resources to help them with their problem, it is just a matter of putting in the effort and the footwork that is necessary to get the ball rolling.
Stop binge drinking
If you are a binge drinker then you may be fooling yourself that you do not have a problem, when in reality you need to stop just as bad as anyone else. The binge drinker is a special kind of alcoholic, but they are still an alcoholic. They may go for long periods of time without drinking any alcohol at all, but when they do drink, they go on long binges and usually spin out of control completely. Just a different flavor of alcoholic, but one that still needs help in order to change their life.
Problem: an active alcoholic does not care about this stuff
So here is the real challenge: even when posed with a vast list such as this as to why a person should stop drinking, most active alcoholics could care less. The problem is that they are depressed, suffer low self esteem, and cannot bring themselves to care much about their own well being.
In other words, you could promise them the world if they would just quit drinking, and they will politely decline and go back to the bottle. They just don’t care.
Now I know this because I have been there before. And eventually I got to a place where I wanted to care, but I still could not bring myself to do it. I was stuck as a miserable drunk. I could not figure out how to stop drinking alcohol.
The breakthrough for me came when I decided to give sobriety a chance. Perhaps this was divine intervention. I had tried to achieve sobriety in the past but it had not worked, so I was extremely skeptical. But for some reason I was miserable and tired enough to give it another shot.
This is the balancing point. This is that tricky area of surrender that a drunk has to find their way to. It is a fine line. You are just miserable enough to want to stop drinking, but at the same time you are 2 seconds away from saying “screw it” and going to get another bottle.
This is why I think surrender to the disease of addiction might be divinely inspired. It almost seems impossible for an individual to find their way out of the alcoholic trap.
If you want to know how to stop drinking, here is my number one suggestion to you:
Ask for help.
Really. That’s it. Start with that, and things should start falling into place. It is possible to learn how to stop drinking on your own, but it is pretty tough.
May God bless everyone that has a desire to get sober today…..
Recommended Reading
- Overcoming Addiction
- Stop Alcoholism and Start Creating a New Life
- 10 Ways to Embrace Creative Recovery and Take Your Sobriety to the Next Level
- The True Nature of Surrender in Quitting Booze
- When a Drinking Problem Turns into Full Blown Alcoholism
- Holistic Addiction Treatment Center
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Hang in there Rob, it sounds like you still need to make the leap to complete abstinence for a few weeks and get a grip on your problem. I think if you could do that, then you could really see a huge change in your life. Can you maybe ask for help, go to treatment, something like that? I think that would help you out immensely….
well this might help
when quitting drinking dont quit all at once
trust me that doesnt work
so pretend you have 3 drinks one night have 2 and half the next night
and less and less
and if you want more think to yourself
should i or no
and listen to you heart
the nights when you dont have a drink reward yourself
bring a girl over
or just have friends over to reward yourself
or even watch a movie
and if you are going to bring your friends over and a girl make sure they say there not gonna drink
tell them and maybe they will understand
if you do want a drink out only a little in the cup and add more water or juice so it seems like alot
and then drink yea you might not like it as much
oh and also dont go out as much and dont buy and alcohol
: )
@ Halaloo – Thanks for the suggestions, if those tricks work for people, that is great! By all means, learn to moderate.
Me, I got to a point where I had tried all the tricks, and I could not control my drinking. I had to face the problem head on and take a hard look at abstinence.
That proved to be the right path for me.
But hey, whatever works for you, go with it! This site is about solutions, so if that works for Halaloo, then go with it…..
Interesting things being said here. I have had a problem with drinking for a while, but fairly recently (about 9 months ago) I started to increase my drinking due to a stressful situation at my job. Then about 2 weeks ago I stepped back and took a look and said to myself “this is rediculous – I need to stop this” and I did. Great! However 2 days later I suffered the most severe seizures that I was taken by ambulance to the ER and almost died. I think I would have, if it wasn’t at the hospital. I was almost intubated (tube in the throat) but regained my breathing. I turned blue (like in death)!! Now I am stopping, but am doing so by lowering my intake by small amounts each day. My husband is helping me to monitor this – we are both scared silly about the seizures. I’m wondering if anyone has done this, and how it’s worked for them. I’m choosing not to go to a doctor because we cannot afford the medical cost. We’re facing bankruptcy and homelessness as it is. Thanks for your help.
@ Zoe – yes, seizures are a very real threat when coming off of alcohol (as you well know). I have not yet come across someone who has successfully weaned off of booze….I know many who went cold turkey (too dangerous) and many who have gone to a medical detox (too expensive for your situation), but never anyone who has managed to taper down successfully. Of course, most do not really try. I would be interested to hear your results.
I have heard it mentioned in the past somewhere that if you have someone else administer small amounts of booze to you it can be done. But even so it is still very dangerous, and you really should try to get a medical detox. Really that is the safest route to go.
Good luck….
Hi
Ive been struggling with alcohol for the past 3 years. Im 27 and after i had my son i became a stay at home mother in a new state. I met a group of friends who loved drinking, so thats where it all started and my was it fun! But soon i found myself drinking every night .. waiting for 6pm to come around and id have a glass of wine. That then becomes up to 2 bottles worth and i then go to bed and pass out. My husband does also drink each night, but not to the extent i do. I can easilly go nights without drinking, but i always fall off the bandwagon by “treating myself” to some wine becuase ive been so good. I hate the feeling of being drunk, ive been in some bad situations like an accident and driving with my child in the car. I dont wake up and think of drinking, its become such a nightly habit and one that i was out of my life, alcohol has done nothing but hurt friendships, make me feel unwell all day, make me irresponsible for my young child, hurt my relationship and create so many lies to try and hide what i am doing … so many lies and letting so many people down by not keeping to plans becuase i have “a headache”. My mum and my grandfather suffer from excessive drinking so i believe it is genetic. Im planning on buying myself a diary and when 6pm comes around, instead of going to the fridge, im going to write down how im feeling and remind myself how bad drinking has been for me and what a terrible hold it takes on your life. Wish me luck .. and a doctor once said something to me “wanting to give up is stage 1 of your recovery .. your already better acknowledging you have a problem and you want to stop” Now to get the confidence to start stage 2 of my recovery .. and stop drinking before one day i wake up and need a wine, not just waiting til 6pm …
thank you so much. I appreciate you note
I get so mad at everyone else who can drink “controllably”. I feel like I have been given the crappy hand when it comes to that. I get mad at both of my brother’s who drink just as much as I do and are alcoholics too, but they aren’t being made to quit. There wives just accept it and move on. I know my drinking has gotten worse. I can’t pass by the gas station on my way home without getting some beer and I usually drink the first one on the way so that I have a headstart. I sometimes can drink just 1 or 2 beers, but most often, I drink til they are all gone. That usually means 12. I will get a 22 oz beer with a 12 pack sometimes just so that it doesn’t look like I have started before I get home. In my mind, I am not going to be able to have fun anymore if I quit drinking. And, like most of you have said, it’s not fun now when I am drinking. It’s not what it used to be. I haven’t had any kind of DT’s from not drinking for a day or two, but I do think about it all the time when I am not drinking. Every morning I decide I should quit, then I get close to the gas station. I can’t afford to just check into treatment. I have a son and lots of bills to pay. I don’t want to go to AA because I don’t think it will work for me. I feel like it is a “religious” thing and I am not a spiritual person.
@ Jen – Those are valid concerns. It is harder to turn your life around and commit to treatment when you have a son. It is also harder to do when you are not open to the idea of a spiritual program that can help you, because that is what the substance abuse community is really based on right now. Spiritual programs.
I pitch a different solution on this website, and that is holistic growth. You could also simplify that a bit and just call it personal growth. To me, that is a spiritual quest in itself. You don’t even have to necessarily pray and meditate in the traditional sense of the terms.
For example, when I run (usually 4 times a week), this has a meditative quality to it that is actually superior to “straight” meditation in some ways.
You can get sober without rehab, and without a support system (such as AA) but it is going to be a bit more challenging at first. Really, I think independent recovery is best when done in long term recovery, not in the early days. Just my 2 cents based on what I have experienced.
Anyway good luck, you have to find a way to motivate yourself to take the plunge and get sober somehow…..
Very interesting site. I am going through a lot of the same feelings. I drink to feel good and wake up the next day feeling horrible and then do it all again that day. It is a never ending cycle and I can’t seem to get out of it. It has been almost 4 years for me and now I am starting to feel physical effects and am afraid I am killing myself slowly. I have a great family and 3 kids and no one knows I have this problem. Help!
Hi Jenni
If no one knows that you have this problem, then maybe you should tell them in order to get some help.
It will be hard to get professional help without letting your friends and family know what you are doing.
Just a suggestion. If you can’t solve the problem on your own, then you are going to need to ask for help. And that means becoming vulnerable. This is a good thing! Try it.
Good luck….
I am a problem drinker, age 29, from Indiana. I never used to drink up until my last years at college. It started (as it does most college students) with the bars, parties, etc. During my mid 20s it was the early post college graduate bar scene…Since then it has been a downward spiral to drinking every night. However, I am able to stop drinking when I MUST. I am very well-versed in what alcohol does to the brain (I work in addictions medicine, how ironic). When I have to stop, it’s usually because I am flying the next day (have bad anxiety about flying and alcohol the night before only makes it worse), or I have a huge presentation to give as part of my job…I only drink in the evenings (9pm or later)….Every morning I wake up and swear not to drink that evening, but every night that urge comes back!!! I need some tips to stop that evening urge…Usually if I can get past 9-11pm I am ok and will just go to bed. Any thoughts? I don’t want to go to AA because I am not a fan of it (it’s a long story, but working in addictions I know it’s not for everyone, including me. I attended a few meetings and quickly decided that it was not my cup of tea.) What about SMART Recovery? Does that help? And no, I am not about to go to Passages, Promises, Cirque Lodge, or any other expensive rehab center. I don’t need that. I do not suffer shakes, DTs, etc. in the morning. I just want some alternatives to AA that might help me stop me drinking…Thanks!!!
@ MH – I would go see a counselor or a therapist. That is your best bet. Things like SMART recovery are going to be somewhat similar to AA in structure and format, only much harder to find.
Most recovery solutions are intensive and extreme, because the problem is intense and extreme. If your problem is not that intense, then I would recommend seeing a counselor or a therapist one on one. That is the ideal solution for you at this time, in my opinion. Good luck!
Hello All!
My name is Ildar. I am 35 years old. I am an optimist, happy with my family, have a successful business and enjoy life in all aspects. But I have a serious problem – I am a heavy alcohol drinker. My drinking rate is average 2 liters of vodka per week for last 3 years. I drink only vodka since it is a pure spirit without strong smell, taste and color (which I dislike) and for me has less side effects. I enjoy my sobriety because that time I highly concentrated and can do on my peak performance but I also like alcohol drinking for the feelings of euphoria, relaxation and enhanced imagination power. But I am convinced that alcohol drinking is a bad road without happy end. Alcohol is a poison, neurotoxin and it will damage my brain slowly if I don’t solve this problem now by stopping drinking at all or cutting alcohol consumption to healthy limits. I hope that I am not an alcoholic yet since can easily quit drinking by myself without any withdrawal symptoms. Whole September I was absolutely dry without any drop of alcohol. During October I made five binge drinks (0.5 liters of vodka at night each) without drinking between them. At first week of November I was drinking everyday with rate of 0.5 liters of vodka per day and stopped drinking at Saturday night with plan to stay sober all next week to finish one of my business projects and restart drinking after this. So it was six days without alcohol at all when at Friday evening I have discovered the SpiritualRiver website by random search. All night until dawn I was reading carefully articles written by Patrick and comments to them. Thank you all! It was very knowledgeable for me and opened my eyes. I have understood that I am now in the very dangerous zone very close to the unreturning point and if I don’t change direction right now I will cross the red line and became an alcoholic very soon. It helped me to change my mind. I have made a decision to stop drinking alcohol at all for the six months period at least. I strongly believe that will achieve my goal with the help from God.
Again thank you Patrick very much for this blog and articles. Thank all others for their comments.
It’s Wednesday now and I have just finished my business project and I am not drinking (as I planed earlier), but writing this post.
I know that major challenge during my abstinence will be termination of cravings for alcohol drinking. So I have developed my own method to deal with them. I will describe it here. The method stands on powerful psychotechnology. I am sure this method will work for me and maybe for you if YOU WILL TAKE ACTIONS applying it. Only YOU CAN do it for YOU, can’t YOU? And YOU CAN because YOU BELIEVE. Ask for medical help as soon as possible. Quit drinking safely with this help for detox and stay sober applying the recommended method.
So the method itself.
1. Right now download from the Internet and make orders for hard copies of the books written by Napoleon Hill, Zig Ziglar, Brian Tracy, Norman Vincent Peale. Hard copies will be needed since you will read them actively with marking sentences and paragraphs in the text. But don’t waste time waiting for hard copies. Put a small notebook and a pen on your table near you and start reading any e-book of the recommended authors right now. It will increase your motivation for success. MOTIVATION is a key factor. You are in the combat where motivation is a weapon. Remember that your subconscious mind strongly motivated to make you drinking alcohol since was programmed to it by all of your previous years of heavy drinking.
2. During this reading you will start discover new interesting and exciting opportunities and will be surprised why you didn’t see them earlier because they always were there just before your eyes. But you didn’t see them because you didn’t look at them. For example, there are a lot of things all around the room in which you are sitting now. But you can see only few of them at any moment of time, those on which you are focusing your eyes. So reading the right books will create the right focused mind vision.
3. Keep on reading and sometimes you will feel flashes of unexpected ideas, thoughts and insights. Don’t lose them! Take your notebook and make notes immediately! If you will not catch the flash at that time you will forget it. This flashes are not ordinary things, they are unique and inspired by God directly for you. Maybe you are skeptical now and don’t believe but you will understand it later when you will begin experience the flashes by yourself. This flashes will help you to set your own goals and develop plans for actions to achieve them. When you have the plan take actions. Don’t procrastinate! Any delay decreases your excitement and enthusiasm. Force yourself to start. This starting impulse creates the momentum which will help you to keep moving. The progress will strengthen your motivation for success.
4. When craving for alcohol attacks you don’t waste time in this unstable situation, allowing your subconscious mind to increase its power for making you drinking. You must terminate the craving immediately getting your mind away from this fixation. As soon as possible start reading the book (always bring it with yourself) especially the chapters most important for you tuning up your conscious mind on successful life full with achievements of your goals where is no place for alcohol drinking at all.
5. Doing so you will be also reprogramming your subconscious mind slowly line by line replacing wrong code containing drinking commands with correct one. Your subconscious mind functions like digital computer executing installed program. But YOU are the programmer and it’s YOU have programmed it for alcohol drinking before and only YOU CAN change this program now. Remember YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE! Create your own strong short imperative sentences for yourself. Example: DON’T TOUCH THE BOTTLE! Print this commands on a card. Reread, repeat and remember them. Stick them into your mind! Stick them into your heart! Energize them by heart! Fuel them! Flash! Flame! Blast! WOW! JUST DO IT! COOD LUCK!
I started drinking heavily 5 years ago. I maintain my job and go to work every morning feeling terrible. By 2:00 or so, I am feeling better and the itch that started in the morning to quit drinking…is no longer there. My husband and I drink together, every night, every weekend. We have 2 beautiful children and have overcome very hard times and achieved much success. I am 28 and I feel my body aching from the alcohol. My kidneys feel sore and today, the first time I called in sick in years due to late night drinking. my heart is beating irregular. This Summer, I went on a 3 day drinking binge, (wine is my drink of choice, bottle after bottle or if I know people will be over, box after box ) On the 3rd day I woke up and my heart would beat hard (as it normally does when I am hungover) then really soft, 2 beats here then nothing all to follow with 5 hard beats. My heart was going haywire with irregular beats. My husband and I panicked and so he drove me to the hospital. They did an ekg and the dr told me I had “holiday heart” from drinking so much over the last 3 days. He asked if I had a problem drinking, and I shook my head no, feeling embarrassed and guilt, feeling like a loser. I have found that my life is lost in the bottle. It is such a habit that I will tell my husband not to mention alcohol to me tonight that I am going to try to quit and although we throw out our pinkies and promise to one another that alcohol will not mentioned, instinctively when we are off work…. celebration mode kicks in and I or my husband say we will pick up wine to go with our dinner. I am tired of hangovers, of not exercising, of wasting my weekends hanging out on the couch watching tv because of my massive drinking binge the night prior… I miss my kids, I miss playing with them at the park. I miss showing them I am a fun mommy and that they are more important then my wine. I want to have stories to share with my co-workers about my weekends, instead I am ashamed to tell them the truth, I just got drunk again… So instead every weekend is the same to them…. “Oh I just cleaned house, lots of laundry.” My husband and I are so ready to quit…. I need to be there for my kids again. I need to feel healthy again. I need to feel happy again. I need to feel proud again. This site is such a relief.. I think with all that you have shared , I will now have a better chance in my efforts to quit. I know I am not alone and it feels like I can breathe. Thank you
Dear Patrick,
First and foremost let me thank you for this website and the trouble you take going thru each and every post and offering some very practical and sencible advise.
I would like to keep mine short, i started drinking at the age of 24 and have decided to stop now at 39, it has been three days since i have had any alchohol at all. My support has been my loving wife and our Local church group. I feel fine as of now but i know a time would come when i would get that ” feeling ” again. I have asked the Lord for help and i am sure he want let me down.
Please keep me in your prayers
God bless you all
Love
RL
I am so glad i found this site I have not read all of them. The beginning was great! I too, drank for many years and stopped cold turkey 31 days ago. I feel great, lost 10 lbs already, and will never look back. I quit 2 times ,one time for 3 years and one for 2 years. But went back again , due to stress and deaths in family, Mom and dad. I relized a month ago when i added up the money i spent and i felt like crap in am, I said to myself i have finnally hit rock bottom. Got behind on bills etc. I said this is it for you demons your out of here forever and i truly mean it this time they wont get the best of me any more. I WAS IN DENIAL as stated in the beginning of this page. So for ever one, i wish you all the best in your new life. mine has changed already
God bless, Mark. Sounds like you are ready for real change in your life. Way to go!
Hi Patrick, Yes, Im ready and have already started. This site makes me feel good. and I feel that I know all of the people that write on it, I guess because we all have the same problem and all are trying so hard to do what you have done. Congrats on you 8th year Patrick of sobreity. Thanks for writing to me
i am 40 years old an have been drinking heavily for 3 years. Off and on. I can go for days/weeks without it but once i get it in my head that im gonna do it, im doing it morning noon and night for 3 days straight. I have drank at work and have been caught many times and almost fired. Thank god they love me and the job I do, but I dont have anymore chances with them > If i ever got fired for this, I would be devastated, as I love my job. I am seeing a councellor, but I still get the urge and I cannot talk myself out of it, so as a result, I dont trust myself at all that it wont happen again.
What used to happen after a full 2 weeks of heavy drinking, now happens after 1 or 2 nights of drinking: my eyelids become dry and the skin starts to flake, I get a rash on my arms and neck, one eye gets smaller than the other, my stomach gets bloated, and I can tell Im bleeding internally (I can taste it and see my nose is red)…. which makes me sneeze all day. My tongue doesnt work as well so Im slurring words even when Im sober. I must have something that can be diagnosed by the Doctor but I dont even want to hear what he’ll say.
ALSO:
I drink and drive alot, even tho I fell asleep drunk and crashed in to the side of a bridge and almost fell off a few years ago. Being a notable musician, Ive created a culture of drinking for my business partners and family and friends. Also for 90% of any social place I go, I “pre-drink” — about half a 750ml bottle. Even at my music shows I promote– rendering me not able to network and run my business. Its not even fun any more…
Am I alone on this one:?
ps . Ive been getting hammered for 13 years now every weekend which gradually reached almost everyday in the last one year…. and because of these visible signs of ugliness I get hammed 2 – 3 times a week..
Can I ask for some feedback here?
Hi Robby;
I don’t know if this is the same, but I started to get ‘Rosacia’ really bad. Although they say that alcohol does not CAUSE the condition, alcohol certainly contributes to it.
I found out about rosacia dueto the conditions you described, and when i started to get ‘ocular rosacia’ did i truly freak out and quit drinking.
In some ways you are lucky Robby fake-name; you have noticeable negative physical attributes caused by alcohol consumption. Lucky because once you stop, the conditions will lessen, and probably go away after a while.
Some people on here have purely psychological conditions; very difficult to assess any positive attributes from not-drinking.
Good luck mate, you are not alone here.
Many musicians have pulled it together after a career of drink and drugs, haven’t they? AC/DC, the Stones!, and wasn’t Frank Zappa sober as a judge?
Hang in there April.
There is no denial in you, or your husband.
Nothing better than coming back from the sidelines of life to be with your kids, your family, your work even!
Everything is clear, and decisions seem far easier.
My two cents on quitting drinking:
-be preared for the ‘boredom’.
drinking was a hobby, take it away and it seems like you have nothing to do… but now you have time (and money!) to finally do those things you wanted to do but were drunk. Before you decide to fully quit, think of something to occupy your ‘drinking’ time.
-be honest with your partner
if you don’t tell them you want to stop drinking, then you really don’t want to stop
- break ‘drinking’ habits.
If you drank wine while cooking dinner: eat take-out for a few weeks. If you feel compelled to buy beer at a gas station on the way home, change your route. If you find yourself wanting to drink at social functions, don’t go.
Alcohol is not your friend. It wants to destroy you, your career, your relationships, your family and then take your life. It has thousands of years of experience in doing so and if you need to pull out the big guns to fight it; then do so!
Good luck!
Thanks so much for your comments, JPVD. Very helpful stuff, love all of your suggestions and thoughts.
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