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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…..

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{ 1120 comments }

Mark December 7, 2009 at 8:19 pm

well, it has been 41 days of no drinking and i feel great and have money in my pocket at the end of the week. does not seem long to some people i know but it is a great achievement to me and im going to keep it up forever i hope. I really dont even think about the drink, i keep busy at my job and at home. The holidays are coming with parties etc that i have been invited to and i am going with my wife. this will be the true test, but i dont care, I WILL WATCH EVERYONE GET DRUNK and say i wont wake up with a hangover they will feel like crap not me. . Everyone, good luck to all of you, and all the best, Happy Sober Holidays!!! I have taken the first step , and Patrick has done GREAT!! so can you.!!!

Al December 7, 2009 at 8:38 pm

Hi everyone,

I have read a lot of your stories and can relate to everything written. My problem is I can not be a social drinker. When I drink, I drink to get wasted. I have somewhat control and can go days without a drink, but when I do on a weekend I have to get wasted. Is it possible to scale back this “binge” drinking to just social drinking or is my best bet to try and quit drinking alcohol period???

Mark December 7, 2009 at 10:46 pm

Hi Al,

Even though I don’t know you, nor anyone on this site, I feel that I do know all of you. Do to our same problem. I too can not be a social drinker, I can’t just have 1 or 2 beers , I need to keep drinking till they are gone and hopfully I had enough in the fridge. Regarding your question for me I had to go cold turkey, but i was worried about the dt’s etc. but not one bad thing happened to me. Not sick at all and i drank 7 days a week at least for the last 2 years after parents died. No hard stuff just beer. I finally sat down and added up the cost of the junk and i almost passed out. Between the beer and and lottery over $1500.00 month. S i said to myself I have finally hit rock bottom and the next day I started my journey to be sober and don’t miss it at all. Good luck to you. Keep busy and dont think about the drink

George December 10, 2009 at 11:23 pm

I came across your web page not quite by accident but because I want change in my life. I find it hard to give up drinking, And I cant seem to get over it on my own. I have tried every new year but even that doesn’t last. I know Im killing myself but I cant stop. I know my story doesn’t stand out from the rest but it’s me.

Smokey December 13, 2009 at 7:36 am

What I find frustrating is all the help and social acceptance of someone trying to stop smoking; but anyone who decides they need the same help and support to quit drinking feels like an outsider or a loser.

I quit smoking and no-one ever questioned it, but when i try to stop drinking people are always telling me ‘come one, one beer won’t kill you.” The reality is that it might.

Patrick December 13, 2009 at 9:41 am

@ Smokey – absolutely true. I would agree that addiction in general is stigmatized. And a lot of people who drink will want you to keep drinking in order to justify their own behavior….

Steven December 15, 2009 at 1:58 am

My name is Steven and I am an alcoholic. I quit drinking five years ago this December 27. I called and joined AA on that date and went to a meeting once a week for three months. I have not been to a meeting in a couple of years as I do not feel the need to. The year after I quit I actually made a u-turn to go through a RIDE spot check a second time to tell the officers I had quit ! I found it difficult at first as I was drinking a minimum of 12 beers per day. About six months after quitting I had lost weight to the point that I weighed the same as when I was a teenager. I sincerely believe that quitting gave me my life back and energized my outlook on life.

RWARD December 15, 2009 at 5:09 pm

Hmmm, let’s see… I am 36 year old female who has been drinking since i was about 13. I can honestly say that in all of those years, the longest i have gone with out a drink was 3 months and in the 3 months i had a drink hear and there. I have had 2 D.U.I and totaled a car in the process.. i have lost relationships as well… I have told my self at least a thousand times that i would quit (probobly because i was hung over or my girl friend was mad at me for somthing i did when i was drunk and didnt remember).. So i would not drink for about a day and a half or untill i was feeling better or i was forgiven because i would always say that i would not drink so much from now on and that always seemed to make things better for the moment untill i did it again.. (same pattern every time)… So i find my self today with a new career, a new woman that i love more than anything is this world and i am an alcoholic.. I heard the same familiar sound in her voice the other day (a conversation i have had many times) but this time it was different… It hurt my heart.. I need to change my life once in for all to keep the mos important thing that means the most to me.. with me.. I am doing this for me.. So as of today.. i have not had one drink in 4 days and this is tha hardest thing i have ever had to do… i am going cold turkey.. I think to my self.. well i usually drink liquore so why dont i just drink beer.. ?? or i know i can drink just one tonight because i have been 4 days!! that is the longest i have gone with out 1 drop in 10 years… So… any suggestions?

Patrick December 15, 2009 at 8:42 pm

@ RWARD – don’t drink no matter what. If you take a drink you will be off to the races again.

With a history like that, I would strongly suggest inpatient rehab. Just my 2 cents of course, I am sure some would disagree with that. But it worked for me when I was not able to stop on my own and I also see it working for others.

If you choose not to go to rehab, then really, the list of suggestions is like 2 miles long. And frankly it is just too overwhelming. Simplify the process and get professional help. Good luck….

jonny December 16, 2009 at 12:29 am

I can go for days or even months without a drink. If iget really angry, or yelled at work I never talk to anybody about it. I have been to rehab and went through it very well, that or aa has really helped me. I am going on 28 have two great kids a very pretty girlfriend. i love them very much. I really want my life back befor the drinking, any comments.

bob December 16, 2009 at 2:29 am

Hi. Heres my dilema… I’m a successful 35 yr. old male married with 2 kids and 1 on the way. I’ve been drinking mainly beer socially since I was 18. I had to have a total hip replacement last summer due to necrosis – a bone killing condition due to alchohol. I am fit, but who knew that sucking down beers could cause this!? Now I am realizing that I cannot live without the drink. I am in management and I blame the stress for my drinking. I am realizing that it is affecting my family life as well as my job so I want to quit. Lately, every time I get a day off all I can do is plan my way of sucking down a bunch of beers and thinking of ways to justify to my wife. I’m a jerk to my kids lately and just need some help to get my life back on track. I can’t go to a rehab center because I am needed too much at work and it took me way to long to land the position that I have. Someone confidentially told me that people have smelled the scent on me in the mornings – (from the night before) and I thought that was a serious wake-up-call. Help! What do you suggest?

Mark December 22, 2009 at 11:05 pm

Hi Bob, Im not Patrick ,Im Mark, and o boy your story is almost to the tee with mine, which is a few stories up from here. I too love my beer, and drank every night after work at home only, 7 days a week. I run a big cemetery and crematory and i drank to ease some of the things i go thru everyday.Then of chorse it became a bad habit.I started to think to myself my weight is going up and the bank is going down. behind on bills and wife and childred not happy with me at all. Everytime some one would come over i always had a beer in my hand. and tryed to justify it by my stress job. As Patrick said it was denial. I made my mind up to just quit Cold Turkey . It will be 60 days on Christmas Eve. I have not wanted it or thought about that demon at all. I feel great and lost 10 lbs already. If you ask what do you suggest I would say cold turkey, sounds hard but it can be done if you set your mind to it and stick to it. Life feels GREAT Sober!!. and try to keep yourself busy in the beginning to keep you mind off of beer. It worked for me. Best of luck to you and Merry Christmas

Harry December 23, 2009 at 1:16 am

My experience has been: alcohol has taken away a lot of the really good times I sought while drinking but could never hang onto because of my inability to control myself.

It has been frustrating to be able to acheive many things in my life; loved ones, family, career, artistic pursuits…but in the end, lose most of them because of my bizarre reaction to consuming alcohol, in short, it makes me a a..hole. People scratch their heads and avoid me eventually. As life passes on, I see that the pattern was consistent…now at age 53 I have to wonder if I have the ability to accept life sober. The pain is huge. AA is something I just cannot do here in this town, those whining crybabies make me want to put a shotgun in my cranium and keep pumpin …:) sorry so dramatic..:)

Anyhow, the fact is…drinking doesn’t make me happy. Its an illusion, albeit, a strong and effective one. Spiritual therapy seems to be the only solution.

Peace, ya’ll.

JPVD December 23, 2009 at 8:38 am

hello again;
i hope i’m not overwhelming readers by posting again… I just want to share my experience with quitting, like mark.
I guess maybe because there are alot of people WANTING to quit, I hope they can get some inspiration by my little struggle.

3-4 weeks so far. Life sober is amazing. I’m filling my free time and money by taking flying lessons.

I slipped and had a bottle of wine last week; but amazingly it was a good thing!
-the wine tasted pretty crap
-i didn’t like being ‘drunk’ and unable to think properly
- i woke up with a killer headache
-i got nothing done the next day

A good thing because thank god that experience was all negative; I can only imagine if it was a positive thing. Maybe I’ld be back on the booze again?

OK, take care everyone. I seriously hope Bob and mark all the best to do this difficult thing and reclaim their lives.

Mark December 23, 2009 at 11:30 pm

Hi everyone again,
I love going to this site and reading all the post. As I said a few post up that I wrote It seens like I know everyone in this site i guess because we all have the same problem. But if we write back and forth to each other maybe we can all get through this hard stuggle together, and maybe next Christmas we will saying that we all had a SOBER year. We can do it!!!! The Holidays will be hard for all of us, but, I say to myself, it is only a day of the week with a NAME IN FRONT OF IT. Like people have said earlier, if you are quiting drinking it is best for you to stay away from those parties on holidays that will expose you to alcohol. I know that will be hard but i did it a month ago when there was a big family party and i was not ready to be exposed to the drink as of then, so I stayed home and wife went with daughter. I then went to a Christmas party a week ago and everyone was drinking and I brought my Dunkin Coffee. That was my first test and i passed, It was no problem, woke up the next morning and felt great while other people were hung over. We every body have a Very Merry Christmas and a Safe and SOBER New Years. Best of Luck to all of you.

Dottie December 26, 2009 at 6:40 pm

Hello, I do not know if any of you can provide any insight on my problem., but I am going to give it try. Its my husband he admits he is an alohoic. I have not ask him to quit, I have ask that he not drink and drive and not drink and get so drunk he wets himself. I have begged him to get this under control , he is not willing to. So today I told him he needed to move out. Oh he agreed but he is still here. He is 66 yrs old has drank since he was about 14 yrs old. He says he needs help but!!!!I think he is to far gone. I told him if he sought help I would be supportive and stand by him, But really didn’t much of an answer. I am bet and do not know what to do any advise will be helpful at this point.

Nate and Peg December 26, 2009 at 11:57 pm

Hello everyone,

We are a couple and drink everyday. We are going to try and stop drinking and we are quite scared. It’s going on 8 years for me and ten for my wife. We have read most of this site and some others but haven’t come across any advice for couples. Drinking is much more fun when you have a partner in crime. We drink because it is fun and because there isn’t really much else to do. It seems everything we do involves a drink. Nobody begs us to stop but we feel it’s about time. The black outs are becoming quite annoying and it’s harder and harder to drink like we used too. We stopped smoking 4 months ago and now we just drink MORE! Help us…please. Thank you

chad dalton December 27, 2009 at 10:18 pm

..

Gary December 29, 2009 at 2:28 am

Tomorrow is day 1 for me. I’ve been drinking a pint of hard stuff a day for the last two years, usually after work on the way home. I’m tired of feeling crappy and being angry at everyone, especially at work. So, now, here it is, I’ve made the decision and am going for it cold turkey.

Nate and Peg December 29, 2009 at 12:02 pm

Congrats Gary! We too are going to go cold turkey not “wild turkey”…before the full moon and all. At 6 pm today it will be one day for us. Has anyone noticed it’s easier to stop when you don’t feel so good?? Today we feel like crap because we hung one on last night with a box of wine and a bunch of beer. Mark! You are the man how does a couple months feel?? Chad must’ve pasted out as soon as he started typing…or it’s his TWO CENTS! hehehe Good luck everyone!

Rick January 1, 2010 at 11:08 am

I just turned 41 and have been drinking sinse I was 14. I am married with 3 children. I have tried several times to stop, but I always fail.I am going to try again. Please pray for me and my family.

diontrenoel January 2, 2010 at 12:45 am

god is a great help in time of all of our needs.

Kerri January 2, 2010 at 9:12 pm

Hi, all. I first started to tackle this demon about two months ago. It was one of those subtle moments; I was trying to balance a glass of wine and my 10-yr old son came over to hug me and I couldn’t hug him back because my hand was full – of a wine glass, which lately has been permanently attached to my hand. He didn’t say anything, but gave the wine a dirty look. That night, I stumbled into bed drunk (when had 1-2 glasses become a bottle a night?) and I thought to myself… omg, my son is on his way to being the child of an alcoholic. I’ve been around alcoholism my whole life and even knowing better hasn’t been enough to get me to quit.

I’ve had short periods of abstinence… a few weeks here and there over the last five years or so. I think, “I don’t miss it.” when I quit, and then that cunning Ego convinces me I’m in control and what the hey… I haven’t had a drink in a week or three, I deserve it.

Well, I’m seeing a therapist now, tried AA, but really didn’t enjoy the meeting (and the permanent stench of smoke from the good old days…) and all the horror stories. I’M not one of those people (ha, ha). One or two social occasions and holidays and now I’ve graduated to binge drinking. Well, I’ve been home alone the last couple of nights and, after flushing a couple of bottles of wine down the drain, not missing the wine tonight. We’ll see where the next few weeks take me. I’m going for six weeks right now… that’s Valentine’s Day. (I read a fatty liver can heal itself in six weeks… I’d like to know my liver is getting better.)

Namaste, friends

Kirsty January 2, 2010 at 10:40 pm

Ive been in AA before and lasted almost a year but unfortunately the demon drink got a hold of me and took over. I grew up as a child of alcoholics and have always been terrified that I would become one. At first I thought because I was a social drinker I was ok, however the next day after remembering very little of the night before, drinkers guilt would set in and i’d feel terrible, wondering if i’d offended anyone or acted crazy. Then after a few days i’d feel its ok to have a drink now, it wasnt that bad and friends all tell me I had nothing to be worried about, but I always feel like I have. For the last year I’ve been drinking almost every night, Pinot Grigio my drink of choice, and every morning I wake up thinking thats it no more. As its the start of a new year Im desperately going to try quit, and find something else to fill this void, which I normally use alcohol for, so 2 days no drink so far, yay.

Good Luck everyone, stay strong

Mary January 3, 2010 at 5:19 am

Well , It’s the new year and i am tired of the hangovers and the headaches , I am in a wonderful relationship and love my partner. I am an entertainer and find it difficult not to drink at my gigs. Sometimes my gigs bore me , so i have a drink, people always bye the band a drink, i am always the life of the party, i have tried to say NO to shooters and drinks. All my friends and fans drink excessively and whenever we’re together it’s drink till we fall down. 3 of our friends have been locked up .
Anyway i am now gonna make a promise to myself and others . I am going cold turkey . It’s going to be hard . but i WILL do it .

Any suggestions on how NOT to drink, when my life is in pubs and clubs.

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