I'm an alcoholic

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Shit, that'll teach me to post without proofreading for fear of not posting at all. Third paragraph should be:

being in a room full of people saying they weren't going to drive drink only made me want to run the hell out of there and go drink some more.

let me mansplain that to you (Masonic Boom), Saturday, 7 August 2010 09:31 (thirteen years ago) link

Best of luck with this, table. Realising that you have a drink problem is a big necessary step, well done.
My history: heavy drinker for 10 years, sober & teetotal for the past 8. I have to say that most of the time I still badly miss being able to have a drink, but...

"woooo! let's do this more! and more! and more! until we all fall down!"

^^^ realising that this wasn't fun or enjoyable any more really helped me stay off the booze during the first couple of years. Also, breaking contact with people who I used to hang out and get slaughtered with.

Les centimètres énigmatiques (snoball), Saturday, 7 August 2010 09:56 (thirteen years ago) link

hey table, I don't have any advice to give but I'm really impressed by your openness and your ability to face the problem. Alcoholism runs in my family, but so does stubborn pride and an inability to talk about things or ask for help (esp if it's something with guilt involved, like drinking when you shouldn't), and I've seen it cause a lot of sadness over the years. So kudos to you, and I wish you the best of luck.

the dialectic of specs (c sharp major), Saturday, 7 August 2010 10:19 (thirteen years ago) link

Superb post Kate, thanks. Um I think Dave Q said once (not to treat him as some Great Sage, but he's a smart guy) that if people who care abt you think you have a drinking problem, you have one. Haven't come across a better definition since. Alcoholism is v good friends w selfdeception.

The reverse TARDIS of pasta (Niles Caulder), Saturday, 7 August 2010 11:12 (thirteen years ago) link

<3s and good luck dude

underwater, please (bear, bear, bear), Saturday, 7 August 2010 12:42 (thirteen years ago) link

Good luck, beat the demon, you *can* do it. I have seen alcohol destroy people and it sucks big time.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Saturday, 7 August 2010 13:06 (thirteen years ago) link

I am not an alcoholic, but my family members ABC and CBS both spent time as RAGING out of control alcoholics. Counseling and medications or whatever just perpetuate the isolation that an alcoholic experiences ("no one understands me", "I can't identify my problems", "I hate my job / neighbors so-called 'friends'"). ABC used to berate me too for being carefree. I said what kind of future should be spent with a miserable no-life person like YOU. He said that my "spiritual" attitude was idiotic and had no place in today's society. Cutting him out of my life for a few years helped. He had abandoned or trash-talked all his old friends too. The "success" model had gotten to him. Then he got fired from his job at a really super prestigious corporation (now disgraced ha ha - no I'm not telling you which one) and was forced into a spiritual crisis. I am in favor of this "tough love" approach. He ended up being bailed out by his "dumb" old friends.

Just as ABC was recovering, CBS developed a life-threatening alcohol problem, I mean going out several times a week and coming home staggering drunk and blacking out, ending up in the hospital. So then CBS and ABC were fighting, oblivious to everyone they were affecting. It didn't help that she dropped out of school and couldn't keep a job. CBS ended up in jail and everything. Same thing, caught up in work and money only fighting things and people that weren't worth fighting. I said I am sick of you complaining, just cut the bitches out of your life. So what if you are poor and have a criminal record, if you stop being a miserable drunk someone who believes in you will eventually take you under their wing.

Like I said, tough love works. So do socialization and group activities like vacations, healthy projects, going outside instead of sitting in front of the television. The alcoholic needs to get out of the isolation and counseling and pills and even some "programs" that berate or guilt trip the individual don't necessarily do that. Anti-individual attitudes are BAD, they end up creating lonely unhappy frustrated people, and a lot of alcohol programs aren't positive in nature, they are all about what the alcoholic is doing wrong and how the leader is always right.

Doesn't a person drink because they feel bad about themselves? Maybe I am wrong, but I lived with two alcoholics and they stopped drinking when they stopped trying to be someone else. Cut the negative influence from your life and develop yourself.

i hate america (u s steel), Saturday, 7 August 2010 14:36 (thirteen years ago) link

webmailing you, but hang in there.

akm, Saturday, 7 August 2010 14:48 (thirteen years ago) link

Doesn't a person drink because they feel bad about themselves? Maybe I am wrong, but I lived with two alcoholics and they stopped drinking when they stopped trying to be someone else. Cut the negative influence from your life and develop yourself.

people drink and are alcoholics for all kinds of different reasons.

akm, Saturday, 7 August 2010 14:53 (thirteen years ago) link

Agreed, but u s steel's description accurately describes me back then.

Les centimètres énigmatiques (snoball), Saturday, 7 August 2010 14:59 (thirteen years ago) link

hey table, I don't have any advice to give but I'm really impressed by your openness and your ability to face the problem. Alcoholism runs in my family, but so does stubborn pride and an inability to talk about things or ask for help (esp if it's something with guilt involved, like drinking when you shouldn't), and I've seen it cause a lot of sadness over the years. So kudos to you, and I wish you the best of luck.

― the dialectic of specs (c sharp major),

^ can only echo this and repeat my honest admiration for your strength in attempting this in such an open way right off the bat.

and though kate and i have been butting heads lately, that was a fantastic post from her.

"It's far from 'loi' you were reared, boy" (darraghmac), Saturday, 7 August 2010 15:06 (thirteen years ago) link

And tough love only works in very specific circumstances and with certain types of people--it can backfire, horribly, if used indiscriminately. (Or for things other than addictions--I'm not going to get into how I think the whole tough love philosophy has been a corrosive influence on the US since it started in the early eighties. That really belongs in one of the US Politics threads.)

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Saturday, 7 August 2010 15:08 (thirteen years ago) link

Both parents are alcoholics and I know too well what it does to people, so I'm glad you've decided to stop it (relatively) early on.

Janet Privacy Control (corey), Saturday, 7 August 2010 15:21 (thirteen years ago) link

What worked for you to help you quit drinking last time? Seems to me that while whatever you did was good enough to work for a short while, there are deeper problems that maybe you didn't address.

Not knowing all of your circumstances (not that anyone needs to in a public forum), it is difficult to give advice. Sometimes people are in an intractable situation that isn't entirely their fault and probably won't quit drinking until they are free of it, as in my story about my relative CBS.

i hate america (u s steel), Saturday, 7 August 2010 16:52 (thirteen years ago) link

Going back to Kate's post upthread (which was good, Kate, you shouldn't worry about it) - the peer pressure stuff is largely internal. My social circle (which intersects with Ted's) revolves a lot around drinking and smoking pot. But there are people in that circle that don't drink and/or don't smoke pot that aren't not seen as "fun people". Obviously, if you don't feel like a fun person and are not having fun in a situation, then the other people are gonna pick up on that. But, for the most part, esp. if booze and weed are involved, the other people are not really gonna be focused on whether or not you're indulging yourself.

sarahel, Saturday, 7 August 2010 18:19 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah, OTM sarahel there. i know plenty of people who don't drink but smoke, who don't smoke but drink, etc.

anyway, i'm gonna answer some questions:

- in terms of how i came to this conclusion, i've known for a while. probably about a year. but only recently have i been coming 'clean' with myself about it, and not just laughing it off as if it was some sort of joke. bicycle accidents are scary. not remembering how i got home is scary. not being able to fall asleep without some alcohol in me is scary. so... yeah.

- ilxor akm: thanks, i got your webmail, and it's good to know that AA stuff is mostly secular out here. i'll hit you up with an email later today.

- kate, yeah, what you describe is what i fear. at the same time, i've spent months not drinking at all, and i've still been able to function both socially and creatively. it's just that it's been awhile. i refuse to go back on SSRIs or anything like that because they made me feel dead inside. nonetheless, thanks for your advice and support.

- um, in terms of HOW i drink: i mostly drink beer and malt liquor, occasionally whiskey. when i say i need to drink in order to fall asleep at night, it's not that i drink all day. i need to drink about two beers right before i fall asleep in order to have any sort of fitful rest.

- the last time i cut back dramatically, i was aided by a few things: a good friend had just been checked into the first of many rehab stints, i had had a violent outburst towards a friend. for years, i didn't drink much at all. i did A LOT of LSD and smoked pot on the regs, which helped somewhat, as it made me find alcohol repulsive. it was really when i was unemployed and living in a college town a few years back that my drinking started in earnest again, and hasn't abated since, though i've moved and created a different life for myself out here.

- i don't feel bad about myself, and have no desire to be someone else. i wish i wasn't poor, but don't we all.

- in all honesty, neither myself nor my parents have resources to do an official rehab stint. i drank very little last night (about a 40 oz), slept pretty well, and woke up feeling great this morning. the BF and i talked last night and we're going to cut back DRAMATICALLY together. it'll be really hard, but i also think that we can do it.

to everyone: thanks so much for your support and advice. you people are truly wonderful, and i love you.

pounding beats of worship (the table is the table), Saturday, 7 August 2010 19:08 (thirteen years ago) link

If you need to talk, tabes, I'm here.

Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 7 August 2010 19:10 (thirteen years ago) link

xp - you know i'm around and you know i think you're an awesome guy

sarahel, Saturday, 7 August 2010 19:15 (thirteen years ago) link

But Kate - you're totally right about the "whoo! let's keep going until we fall down" rush - I had that Thurs night (and it had been quite a while) - but then while I was sitting away from my friends, discreetly puking into a trash can, the appeal of that quickly evaporated. And I resolved, "Never again!" but of course I question the meaning of "never" - but it was a good check.

sarahel, Saturday, 7 August 2010 19:27 (thirteen years ago) link

I can highly recommend this http://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/alcoholism/ which is also mentioned upthread. Quit drinking completely for 5 months last year just to see if i could, which was a big deal for someone who'd been hammering the booze pretty hard for the preceeding 5 years. Very frienly place it seemed while i was on it. Hope it works out.

piscesx, Saturday, 7 August 2010 19:42 (thirteen years ago) link

I went to a really good rehab for addiction several years ago, but you had to have insurance for it. I wish people without insurance or sufficient coverage could get rehab like that. Only thing is you have to sit through interesting but depressing sessions with recovering heroin and cocaine addicts and then you feel guilty like you are spying on them.

Alcohol, you need to change your lifestyle. I used to spend too much time with the above people and other unnamed alcoholics and it dragged me down. That means changing your lifestyle and possibly your social circle, joining clubs or a gym or outdoors activity, taking a class etc.

i hate america (u s steel), Saturday, 7 August 2010 21:04 (thirteen years ago) link

much love and support to you, t3ddy <3

just1n3, Saturday, 7 August 2010 23:43 (thirteen years ago) link

I've been to AA. It helped, I made it 9 mths and then...

chrisv2010, Sunday, 8 August 2010 00:17 (thirteen years ago) link

But again, much suppo

chrisv2010, Sunday, 8 August 2010 00:19 (thirteen years ago) link

one year passes...

So... yeah :'-(

In no way do I intend to hijack table's thread, or to frighten table once he sees this thread being bumped, hope he's doing great. But this thread seems most appropriate for something I just need to get off my chest. Emphasis on need, as opposed to want. I'm an ilx-regular but cannot bring myself to do this under my usual display name (please, no "guessing games" in here as to who I am, it's too serious an issue for that, I hope you will all respect that)

For nearly three years now, I have been drinking approximately two bottles of red wine a night. Sometimes it's a bit less, sometimes a bit more, but if I had to ballpark it, I'd say I average 1.5 bottles of red wine. Per night. Every single night.

Nearly three years. Ridiculous as it may sound, realising the sheer magnitute of how long that actually is only very recently struck me. A 1000 fucking days. And counting. Deep down I have known for a long time already that this is not good, but I didn't want to hear it, I suppose. Didn't want to acknowledge I had a problem. But I do.

Some random thoughts:
1) The "problem" is that I don't really get drunk anymore. Big surprise after this steady intake for so long huh? But getting drunk, and enduring the hangover the next day, would mean the body screaming out NO! THIS NO GOOD!. I've not had that for a loooong time. Which kind of made it less of a pressing issue, made it easier to dismiss I have a problem.
2) I function perfectly okay during the day. I have a job that carries a lot of responsibility, it asks a lot of me, and I deliver. My responsibility doesn't end with dealing with the outside world, it also means dealing with staff, people you see every day, being a superior. I'm basically the sole person responsible for a company that has a $2.5 million turnover per annum and has seven or eight people employed. And yet this massive intake of alcohol doesn't hinder me to do my job properly. Many a times I wish that it had, earlier...
3) I am not plagued or warned by any physical hindrance or health problems because of all this drinking. I am not gaining weight as people usually do when drinking a lot, I'm a thirty-something and am not experiencing any health issues. Yet.

Ofcourse any fool can reason that drinking two bottles of wine every night, for three years now, can't be healthy. It just can't. Right? Please tell me I am right in assuming this. For in a twisted way I miss having warning signs or alarm bells going off with regards to my health. But surely it can't be right. I do think that the lack of physical inconveniences contributed to me sticking my head in the sand for a long time. I am inclined that way, a bit, and it runs in the family; but that's all knowledge I secretly gathered after the fact, after I found myself in this position.

But sticking my head in the sand, ignoring or making light of it; I feel I can't do that, not anymore. It is the reason I am writing this and sending these bytes into cyberspace. I thought about doing this for a long time, had many a doubt, but the urge to just get this out on here is too strong. I suppose that's a good thing, acknowledging something isn't quite right?

I am afraid that I am damaging my health (which I obviously am), and noone in my close proximity has any idea about this. My family doesn't know, at work they have no idea, even my loving girlfriend knows nothing about this...

I don't know anymore. AA is out of the question, I am allergic to religion. Also, for shame. And I know how idiotic this may sound (but it illustrates the habituality of my drinking), but I am afraid of not drinking. I don't even know what other people drink at night. How do they get by? Tea? Water? I honestly can't even imagine what that's like, which makes me infinitely sad all the same.

If you made it this far you are as patient as a saint, I am sorry for wasting your time on a "lol drunk on the internet". But I felt I had no choice but to write this down, to finally acknowledge that I have a problem, if only to myself. Sorry for this way tl;dr post. But I don't know what to do anymore.

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 00:59 (twelve years ago) link

have you tried to not drink? like, "tonight i'm just not going to"? do you get anxious/panicky if you run out of wine and can't get any for the evening? was there something that triggered the nightly drinking 3 yrs ago? how do you cope if you're away from home (travelling, staying at your gf's place, etc.) - is there anxiety in not being able to be at home, in privacy, drinking?

sorry for all the questions, and the lack of any helpful words - i'd just like to know a bit more about your situation.

just1n3, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:06 (twelve years ago) link

Hi there loggedoutdude. I don't have any good advices (1am, nothing good going on in my head at all), I just wanted to say well done for recognising this issue. I know quite a few people who drink more than you do and insist it's not a problem. It sounds like you're committed to finding a way through - good luck.

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:09 (twelve years ago) link

who do you drink with? who's even aware of how much you're drinking? in the same vein as just1ne's q's.

beware of greek bearer bonds (darraghmac), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:10 (twelve years ago) link

want to 2nd surfing's post--some folks I know wouldn't get as far as you have re: coming to this realization.

WARS OF ARMAGEDDON (Karaoke Version) (Sparkle Motion), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:11 (twelve years ago) link

in a twisted way I miss having warning signs or alarm bells going off with regards to my health

i am familiar with this in other things and it's a terrible trap! You already have a warning sign: the warning sign is that you're worried, and that you know you're not doing your body right. (yes, two bottles of wine a night can't be healthy) (also: yeah-- tea, water, juice)

So: good on you for noticing and for facing up to yourself, and taking it more public than your conversations with yourself even if only as far as ilx.

(my immediate thought - and apologies if this is horribly naive - is that if you drink in the evenings you should do something that leaves no time in the evenings for you to drink. maybe even take up running, so you're tired out and maybe won't feel like you have to drink before bed? idk, i am no doctor nor expert on addiction)

dove cale (c sharp major), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:18 (twelve years ago) link

Do you have physical withdrawal symptoms if you don't drink every night? Do you drink at all during the day to avoid having such symptoms? It's one thing to focus on strategies for not drinking but it's a whole other thing if you're actively physically addicted to alcohol.

wolf kabob (ENBB), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:21 (twelve years ago) link

The latter might necessitate medical intervention.

wolf kabob (ENBB), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:21 (twelve years ago) link

also, even though the shame of it might be terrifying, i think it'd be worth talking to your doctor to see if you can get a medical perspective on stopping drinking (e.g. what physical symptoms to expect, whether you should taper down or stop outright). if your doctor recommends aa that doesn't mean you have to go!

dove cale (c sharp major), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:22 (twelve years ago) link

uh, xpost with ENBB

dove cale (c sharp major), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:22 (twelve years ago) link

Thank you all for attending this thread, it means a lot...

To answer Justine's questions:
- Yes, I have tried not to drink (or rather, not to buy wine), but I indeed must admit I get anxious if I don't have any wine in. Very anxious. As I said, it feels so habitual, I cannot for the life of me think of "me" going without my wine anymore. I just cannot.
- There wasn't a big trigger that caused this, no. It slowly crept in. I've always been prone to addiction (marihuana, for one, I shook that off years ago) and this particular behaviour runs in the family, but there wasn't a huge "event" that lead me into drinking this much. It just... happened.
- If I am away from home I can cope relatively easily. I don't go on a binge when away from home, I adjust to other people's drinking behaviour and pace and am ok with that, although when in company I am the one who drinks the most. When with my girlfriend I don't drink as much either, but that is also because, y'know, sex takes up a lot of time.
- I don't feel anxiety about not being home so I can drink, no (relatively speaking, that is).

The drinking is a solitudinous thing, yes, very much. But it's the habituality of it that makes it so deceiving, covering up that it is a real problem, for me.

Thank you Zora, I appreciate that, a lot. And Darraghmac, I drink alone, nobody is aware of how much I drink.

xp's, catching up

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:22 (twelve years ago) link

you're either boozed up or getting laid and *you're asking us* for advice

beware of greek bearer bonds (darraghmac), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:28 (twelve years ago) link

OK, it does not sound like you're physically dependent on alcohol. My mother is an alcoholic who has been in detox/rehab several times and from what you've described it doesn't sound like you would go through physical withdrawal which is a good thing. Mental addiction is a very very real thing but at least you don't have to tackle both aspects tho unfortunately the physical part is often easier to actually kick.

wolf kabob (ENBB), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:31 (twelve years ago) link

do wish to echo the admiration that you're facing this without being driven to it, btw. that can only be positive.

beware of greek bearer bonds (darraghmac), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:31 (twelve years ago) link

Thank you all, so much. I am struggling to express how much all of your responses mean to me. Especially because I feel like a total wuss being logged out and all. But it was just one step too far to "confess" all this and do this under my real dn too. And yet you all aren't judging me for it, which is.. amazing <3

@C Sharp Major: thand you. That is sound advice, but I have tried starting to drink later and later in the evening, only to find myself drinking at a much higher pace. It's crazy to say I don't have any control over that, because I do, but most times it feels like I don't. And I end up staring at two empty bottles of wine and thinking: how the hell did I down that in three hours?

@Erica, thank you so much, you are talking a lot of sense, as usual. No, I do not drink during the day. I don't have the slightest desire. "During the day" equals working, being out there. And I am not constantly thinking about drinking at night during the day either. But I will make damn sure that after work I buy enough wine to "see me through" (ugh).

I suppose you, ENBB and C# are right, I should discuss this with my MD. I hadn't the courage before, this is only blowing up in my face right now because of completely trivial reasons. But all the better, I suppose, finally trying to face it...

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:33 (twelve years ago) link

"I cannot for the life of me think of "me" going without my wine anymore"

This is a huge thing and is a big thing for me wrt smoking (something wich I've sort of but not entirely recently given up). It was very hard to see myself as a non-smoker because being a smoker was an enormous part of my identity, my daily ritual and just such a habit. I made myself focus on the benefits of not smoking namely health and money an started buying myself stuff with the money I saved from not buying cigarettes. It sounds silly but it's been really helpful. Maybe you could do similarly with wine?

wolf kabob (ENBB), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:35 (twelve years ago) link

when i was in my early 20s i had a similar problem, and at the point where i decided that it was a problem, i made a rule for myself that i couldn't drink alone, and stuck to it. i also went about a year not drinking at all, then slowly phased back in over the course of several years.

good luck!

sarahell, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:36 (twelve years ago) link

I don't have any advice, but best of luck, YLO

"renegade" gnome (remy bean), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:40 (twelve years ago) link

@ENBB, I am sorry to hear about your mother. I have given the psycological/physical addiction question quite some thought recently: which one applies to me? But to be honest, I am too afraid to even try to go without it and see if I have physical withdrawal symptoms... if that makes sense? The thought of not having booze in the house is too scary. And the odd thing is: I never think of that as "scary", don't feel it that way at all, I cruise through the day with a demanding job and all, until the moment comes when I know the shops will be closing soon and I don't have any alcohol in the house. Which is when I have to go out and buy some...

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:40 (twelve years ago) link

This is a huge thing and is a big thing for me wrt smoking (something wich I've sort of but not entirely recently given up). It was very hard to see myself as a non-smoker because being a smoker was an enormous part of my identity, my daily ritual and just such a habit. I made myself focus on the benefits of not smoking namely health and money an started buying myself stuff with the money I saved from not buying cigarettes. It sounds silly but it's been really helpful. Maybe you could do similarly with wine?

Erica, omg yes I know what you mean. I actually quit smoking four months ago, after having smoked for 15 years. I -never- thought I could do it, at first, it was my third try, but I did, I persevered and yes it saves a shitload of money and it's the healthy way to go and I feel really good about it.
Yet meanwhile, and this is something I didn't realise before or didn't want to know, - no matter how hard it seemed to me to quit smoking - quitting drinking seems way way worse to me, right now. Otherworldy. Which is why it is such a huge problem for me. I can't envision myself, my nights, without alcohol. I'd curse at tea or juice or water if they could hear me, I honestly have *no* idea how people just have an easy night in, drink some tea or water and go to sleep. I am so far removed from that notion. Which is exactly why it scares me so much right now.

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:47 (twelve years ago) link

fwiw (and bear in mind that while i am wearing my medical hat here I AM NOT A DOCTOR) the physical signs of addiction to alcohol do include anxiety when going without. also the dangerous physical signs of withdrawal don't generally make themselves known until just outside the window that many people give themselves for a 'night off' or what have you. or, more anecdotally, i know of someone who decided to quit drinking cold turkey after years of excess and they died from it. which isn't me trying to be scary, but rather: if you're on two bottles of wine a night (basically a 12pack), i would strongly urge you to consult a physician about how to approach your situation. even if only for the therapeutic benefit of talking to someone about it.

i love pinfold cricket (gbx), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:47 (twelve years ago) link

(that was heavily xposted, but hopefully of some use)

i love pinfold cricket (gbx), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:47 (twelve years ago) link

Again, thank you all for all your kind and helpful words. I truly feel like I am "misleading" you all not showing my real display name here and I do apologise for that, but I just couldn't bring myself to do that, for shame...

But thanks. Thank you all so much. It means a lot to see you all caring and giving a damn and responding in a constructive way.

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:48 (twelve years ago) link

x-posts Aw, thanks.

I drink roughly once a week (and have my own issues with that so I get how tough this can be) but the other six nights I have water, diet soda, coffee - anything. I think Sarah's suggestion of just setting a rule of not drinking alone an sticking to it is actually a very good one but know that sort of thing can be very hard to stick to especially if you get panicky without alcohol which iirc can actually be a sign of physical addiction so I would still probably consult a doc.

I wonder what you're so worried about wrt not having alcohol at night. Is that you will be restless, won't know what to do with yourself, bored . . . ? Maybe answering that will help you tackle the problem?

wolf kabob (ENBB), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:51 (twelve years ago) link

and (sorry for going in with tough talk), just to elucidate why quitting alcohol is scarier than cigarettes: in a very simplistic sense, alcohol basically unemploys certain neurotransmitters in your brain (GABA) whose job it is to counteract more excitatory transmitters. GABA says fuck it i don't have a job, and the excitatory transmitters amp up production because there's this alcohol sitting right there making life tough for them. if you withdraw the alcohol suddenly, you find that there's a surfeit of excitatory transmitters, and this is what leads to stuff like anxiety and, if it's a really bad job market for GABA, heart attacks and the like.

it's kind of an old saw in medicine that withdrawing from opiates and cigarettes is ~harder~ than alcohol, but alcohol withdrawal is the only kind that can kill you.

cf another anecdote from a friend who skipped a single night of drinking (he drinks...a lot) and called me the next day, panicked, asking if alcohol withdrawal was why he couldn't sleep and why his heart had been pounding all day. a: y.

i love pinfold cricket (gbx), Friday, 17 February 2012 01:54 (twelve years ago) link

@Dr. GBX ;-)

Thank you. I fear yet also believe you are right. I don't have the strength to simply go without drinks even a single night, I admit ashamedly. It is weird and very confrontational, as I never thought I would be this person, but writing this now, tonight, is my cry for help, however pathetic that may sound. And yes, I will take up your advice to speak to my physician about this - it is the shame I have to try and set aside that has kept me from doing so the last couple of days. Thank you.

yeahloggedout, Friday, 17 February 2012 01:56 (twelve years ago) link

i agree that everyone (including non addicts!) should do some kind of (quality) rehab

global tetrahedron, Wednesday, 28 October 2020 13:03 (three years ago) link

the one i was at seemed to be fueled by union types. i guess they have the good insurance and the construction industry is rife with substance problems. but this often made sessions feel like one was out at the job site

global tetrahedron, Wednesday, 28 October 2020 13:06 (three years ago) link

naltrexone (and its injectable, vivitrol) is great, i recommend it (and the sinclair method) all the time

gbx, Wednesday, 28 October 2020 18:59 (three years ago) link

good for you, global, and good luck

just another 3-pinnochio post by (Karl Malone), Thursday, 29 October 2020 01:54 (three years ago) link

glad to hear things are going well, global

brimstead, Thursday, 29 October 2020 02:21 (three years ago) link

yes, loved reading your post

Dan S, Thursday, 29 October 2020 02:32 (three years ago) link

agree that everyone (including non addicts!) should do some kind of (quality) rehab

if only there were some kind of effective rehab program for addiction to wealth in excess of one's basic needs.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Thursday, 29 October 2020 03:52 (three years ago) link

two months pass...

my favourite uncle died yesterday at 60 years old. of my mum's 3 brothers, all younger than her, he lived the longest. the oldest died at 50 of a heart attack 12 years ago. the youngest died at 56 of a stroke 2 years ago, he had been suffering from throat cancer and an aggressive prostate cancer, both of which were terminal and inoperable. all 3 of them were drinkers. the youngest was a classic alcoholic archetype and chain-smoker. the other two were respectable, successful men, never drank to the stage of foolishness, didn't drink at home, and didn't drink spirits, just pints, but were in the pub every day of their lives that it was at all possible. you might also call them alcoholics. we have no familial predisposition towards heart disease.

i quit drinking in september. i sort of hate sobriety. i think about drink a lot. when i think about my uncle who passed away yesterday and the way he drank - for fun, socially, having a good laugh, with a pleasant meal, really enjoying life, knowing everyone who drank in the local pub and being part of a community, i find it hard to say it would be better if he had lived a sober life and not died yesterday. it would've been an utterly different life, devoid of many of its chief pleasures. but i know my own propensity for drinking like my other uncle, the alcoholic, who would drink mainly in the pub, but until absolutely obliterated, and would drink at home alone when the pub closed, and was asking my grandmother for money as a middle-aged man, because he'd spent all his perfectly respectable wage packet from working as a joiner on booze.

i wish i hadn't grown up somewhere where the pub was the agora. if id been viennese instead of glasgwegian would this even by an issue?

Fenners' Pen (jim in vancouver), Monday, 18 January 2021 23:34 (three years ago) link

Tell me about it, jim.

Waterloo Subset (Tom D.), Monday, 18 January 2021 23:42 (three years ago) link

One of my uncle's died last year of prostate cancer. He was one of the few ones who'd stopped drinking and wasn't an alcoholic. The NHS couldn't help him because his kidneys were gone and he had left his condition untreated until it got terminal. I had to explain to mum that although he'd been teetotal for years, he was still chain-smoking rollups and also often buying speed off old dodgy smackhead friends of mine, it's amazing he lived as long as he did taking that shit.

calzino, Monday, 18 January 2021 23:43 (three years ago) link

Good exploration of the cultural continuum of alcohol dependency jim

The mother's side have/had it bad (two from six nonfunctional, one functional, one married a fuckin *worldie*) but culturally it's very notable how it has seriously dwindled into the next generation. Quick mental survey of the forty cousins i know of on that side we have only one who would compare and he got it from his father rather than my aunt

Materfamilias herself was, and i forget the exact multiplier, four or five times over the old driving limit the night she burned the house down, and had been out of her mind riddled for at least the decade before that but likelier closer to twice that tbh (my memories of extreme parental drunkenness and the ensuing mess rank among my earliest)

The aul fellas side are very respectable, would drink more like the "better" version you describe- especially the men, fishermen/businessmen who've progressed to a bottle of chardonnay a night (every night) rather than brawling twice a week after vodka binges. The aulfella himself the worst of them tbh.

Of us four boys one cannot/shouldnt drink and took twenty years to know it, one took almost as long to learn how he could and couldnt, one doesnt socialise at all and one never drank, very pointedly so.

Im the one who has learned how i can drink, but thats in the irish context tbf- its not like im the one holding back at a fap or anything.

So yeah, its complicated

spaghetti connemara (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 January 2021 00:57 (three years ago) link

And sympathies on yr uncle and luck with the drinking yrself

spaghetti connemara (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 January 2021 01:03 (three years ago) link

thanks, deems

Fenners' Pen (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 19 January 2021 01:09 (three years ago) link

Wow.

I'm as steady as she goes (every night), fairly high functioning as things go, and unlikely to make changes. I wish jim and others in this thread the best with their decisions and say that they are probably the correct ones.

Jimi Buffett (PBKR), Tuesday, 19 January 2021 02:30 (three years ago) link

Jim fwiw just about everyone I've ever known says that the not drinking thing gets easier and less suckish over time, which has been my experience as well. I no longer think about drinking very much, and when I do it is more a wistful thing, nothing like an actual craving. I sometimes have FOMO but then I remember that because I am only one person living my one life I am going to miss out on most things anyway, so why get too worked up about it.

It's pretty nuts how incredibly drinky western culture is. To be outside of that takes getting used to, for sure.

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Tuesday, 19 January 2021 03:04 (three years ago) link


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