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Hi
I am new here and would like to share my experience with alcohol and my new journey towards a cure. I really hope Naltrexone works and that it is successful and then pass the hope on to others.
Alcohol has been my best friend ever since my alcoholic Husband died, leaving me with 2 young children. I started drinking then, and I have been drinking at least 1 bottle a day of sherry or port ( fortified wine) for the past 15 years. I can function just fine and even drive the car every day way above the legal level. I have never had an accident and never been caught. I've managed to raise two kids on my own. I flew under the radar. However, since my mother tried to commit suicide in front of me on christmas morning, 2 years ago, something inside seems to have snapped. I am a terrible out of control alcoholic. It started off once a month but now its as frequent as each fortnight I end up loosing myself. It is like a demon takes over. The smallest thing can set me off. I go into this really dark despairing world and I shout, scream, harm myself and smash stuff. My bender can last 2-3 days. I easily drink 4-5 litres and stay awake ranting at the world. I do not pass out, but eventually sleep has to occur. I see dark shadows moving and I whimper like a child. In the morning I wake with such terrible guilt, almost too hard for me to face. I shamefully clean up the smashed glass and wear long sleeves to cover up the cuts and wonder to myself how I will face my family and if they can forgive me again.
I have a wonderful new partner in my life. However he is an enabler. He will drive to buy me more alcohol as he doesnt want to see me caught by the police. He hasnt read any books on the matter and just listens to what I have to say instead. A year ago I looked into rehabs, AA and went to the doctor. The rehabs were too expensive. AA was depressing and, suffering social anxiety, I need a drink just to attend! The doctor prescribed me valium and said "far better you are addicted to valium than alcohol" . Suffice to say I ripped up that prescription and threw it away and carried on drinking. Heck at least with alcohol I function. I dont want to be a zombie mum.
Openingly admitting my drinking problem was a big mistake. I stupidly thought that my mother and the few friends I had would be supportive and understanding. However in their eyes I am now weak and pathetic. In fact pathetic was the word my 20 year old daughter used against me 3 weeks ago when I had taken some "dutch courage" to kick her jobless boyfriend out of my house. ( I have been financially covering her and 3 seperate live-in boyfriends for the past 4 years). I also shamefully ranted at all these people recently whilst drunk, telling them how hypocritical they were to drink around me, even buying me alcohol as gifts when they know I have a problem. I am not upset about finally having the guts to tell these people a few things, however I am mad at myself for doing it under the influence. There is a stronger, more dignified and calmer way to go about it.
Losing the respect of my daughter is a line too far that I have crossed. Subjecting the kids to hearing me late at night smashing stuff and crying is definitely not healthy. Nagging at my partner whilst drunk cause I am actually mad at other people is totally stupid. Alcohol has helped me to lose some unhealthy people from my life. But its like a wild animal let lose that I cant cage again. The benders, demon, blackouts wont stop. I dont want to lose my kids nor my partner. In fact my wrist was broken 4 months ago when my partner pushed me out of frustration with my drinking. The only solution is to give up alcohol. I cant go on like this.
Fortunately I came across The Sinclair Method whilst browsing books on alcoholism on my new kindle. Everything in it seems to make a lot of sense. I knew I was going to have a fight on my hands to get my doctor on board. I honestly dont feel like they take me seriously as to the amount I can and do drink. My liver tests all came back clear, my health is amazingly good. The only sign I show is a vitamin B lack. I had the courage though to go into his office determined to walk away with Naltrexone or rehab. I refused to leave his office until he either prescribed me Naltrexone or signed me up that day to rehab. I showed him my cut arms, cried and told him that if he sent me home with no solution then I would drown my frustration in drink that very evening, make damn sure I hit rock bottom and finally get the help I need. He had never heard of Naltrexone. He got confused thinking I was talking about Antabuse and then he thought I was talking about Naloxone. I had him ringing around everywhere. The poor dear he didnt know what to do with me! He couldnt get a single rehab to take me in as I am not addicted to other drugs, not in trouble with the law and, obviously they have, what they deem, more urgent cases than mine on their hands. Fortunately though he did take me very seriously. He was exasperated himself that he could not get a rehab to take me in. An expert from Sydney finally called him back and told him that he could prescribe me this medication. Whew! I was actually walking out of the office when he got that call and he came running after me. ( I had no idea I could order this online and actually I am happier knowing I have my doctor on board. Mind you the next time I saw him it seemed he couldnt get me out of his office fast enough. He didnt even tell me when he wanted to see me next. I handed him 50 printed out sheets on the sinclair method but i guess he might be feeling embarrassed as a patient knew more than him? Or maybe his colleague who apparently told him not to give me Naltrexone has had a severe word with him, I really dont know)
So thats my story with alcohol so far.
I have been on Naltrexone since July 10th. I started on 25mg for 3 days then upped it to 50mg. The first 3 days I felt slightly nauseous and tired. This prevented me from drinking as much as I usually do.I nibbled on ginger cookies to help with the nausea. I went up to 50mg and had no side effects. Its only been 3 weeks and I can already tell that this is working for me. I still drink, yes. I still start around 2-3pm. However I just dont seem to be able to or want to drink as much as I use to. I find I am taking it slower. Instead of a bottle a day, I am now drinking around 1/2 to 3/4s. Not terribly amazing but I understand this process takes many months to work fully. As long I take Naltrexone an hour before drinking I feel that this will work for me.
The amazing moment so far for me was last week. I got upset about my daughter moving out and I was angry how it had all been blamed on my new label in life, instead of the balance of the bigger picture. I did down a whole bottle of sherry, muttering and crying and feeling sorry for myself and worrying about my relationship with her. Usually this would have led into a bender, especially as I had some anger towards my partner who had nagged me to kick her boyfriend out. He had even promised to help me confront him and support me in doing so but he chickened out and left it to me to do it alone and in my own stupid alcohol induced way. However I suddenly realised I had had enough to drink, that in fact I was feeling woozy and the world was actually spinning a little. Not surprising I suppose but for an alcoholic this was amazing! I remember saying " wow this is how a normal person feels and should feel after drinking a whole bottle" I did have another backup bottle hidden away but I chose to go to bed instead. At 2am I honestly didnt want to open that other bottle..I wanted a nice cup of tea and just go to sleep. A first for me in so so soo many years.
Its still early days but I truly hope this works, not just for myself but so I can pass the hope onto other people struggling with alcohol.
I think I will try to go to AA next Tuesday. Its a womens meeting. I am hesitant though as I am not sure how to blend the two "cures" together and do not wish to be seen as a trouble maker to their system. I have promised myself that Tuesday will be my first Alcohol Free day. Its only a day.. I can do that. So in that respect I will be abiding by their rule. I guess I want to go as I am very isolated in life and very fearful of social situations. Logically, I am also thinking about the success rate of each method.. One is around 15%, the other around 70-80%, so why not try both? If the Sinclair Method does fail for me, then at least I have the other to fall back on? I wont find myself at square one again.. I will already be accustomed to the other method aswell. Yes I am wary of AA. I know the history of it, the story of the founder. I am very alert or maybe just paranoid that its a god brain washing trap. I dont exactly agree with taking on a label for the rest of my life. So far taking on that label has caused me more harm than good. Not only in the way people have viewed and treated me since I said I am an alcoholic, but also in the way I treated myself. It was almost like opening a flood gate of an excuse for really shitty behaviour. The night my mother was slicing her wrists infront of me was the night I realised she actually had a drinking problem, and the night I admitted to myself that my own drinking was further beyond my control than I was fooling myself with. That was the time my own benders started. When I finally said " hi my name is jo and I am an alcoholic" and fully gave into the helplessness of it all.
Ok I am closing this intro now as I am waffling. I guess I needed to share a bit. ( something I find hard to do in public) For those who did, thanks for reading. For those who have been to AA, I would be so grateful to also hear your opinions and experiences. I do think that the Sinclair Method will work. I have definitely made a commitment to myself that I will always take Naltrexone before drinking. But I would like to know I have a backup plan aswell as I am completely committed to beating this. I know I am addicted as I have gone 3 months without alcohol. It was just before I met my current partner. I tortured myself with getting up at 5am every day and walking for 2 hours before getting the kids ready for school... then for the rest of the day I would punish myself with another hour of exercise ( swimming, walking) if I thought i was going to drink. At 8pm I would collapse into bed and think "wow this is life.. but damn its bloody boring" Those 3 months were hell and I never lost the urge. I even did a water fast for 2 weeks.. No food, no alcohol.. just water.. I didnt crave food.. It was easy for me to cook wonderful meals each night and not eat any of it. But gosh the craving for alcohol.. just for a drink.. was constant.
I would love to reach out and share with another I really hope this method works for me and for others. I did start keeping a diary but alas.. I let it slip.. However I am definitely not going to slip up on that pill before a drink.
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