Half a glass of wine wrote:
Spacious - Just one more thing. Perhaps TSM did help you afterall. Maybe it was the thing that allowed you to move on the Campral and then abstinence. I'm sure you don't believe that, but so far my experience has been that it does lessen my desire for wine slowly (very, very slowly for me) day by day. So, again, we all need to be open to whatever works! Although I agree with you that it works for some and doesn't work for others, let's celebrate those it does work for.
Half Glass.
Hi Half Glass, in a way you are right, I knew that I HAD to try everything before quitting. I have tried every intervention that I know of: I'll list some of them somewhat chronologically and add my experience with them:
- Various moderation techniques, including MM. Found it useful in the short term but ultimately I ended up pissed eventually.
- Disulfiram orally. Convinced my doctor many years ago to prescribe this. Helps some people, but I succumbed to the temptation and either stopped taking it or drank on top of it.
- AA. Usual experience with AA, if you buy into the program it probably works but its too high a cost. I still go to the odd meeting when I'm bored though, however it contributes 0% to me being abstinent and would have a negative impact if I let it.
- Rational recovery: First time round it hit me hard and quit immediately for several months. A moment of temptation at Xmas sent me tumbling back into the world of addiction.
- TSM. Useful in curtailing the extent of binges, but I ultimately found that it was not as described. It also had several negative psychological effects- (i) I began to see drinking as acceptable because it was part of the cure (ii) I began to see myself as powerless over my addiction; that the endorphins and brain chemistry were in the driver's seat rather myself- a fact I now believe to be bogus.
- Started taking Campral around October last year; didn't really notice any effect on my drinking frequency or intensity. Still unsure as to its benefit, but I am happy to take it for the time being.
- Baclofen. Read Dr Ameison's book on this drug. Very interesting book and well worth a read. Baclofen may well work, but the book understates the side effects and while they may be "benevolent" they were for me intolerable (extreme sadness and altered global cognition). I gladly stopped taking baclofen after about a fortnight or so.
- Disulfiram implanted: had to travel far at great expense to have this done and it didn't make a bit of difference. I drank on top of it and it had no effect- makes sense though because they implant a relatively small amount of the drug. The wound site got infected too, and the implant eventually begun to extrude.
-After Disulfiram implant failed I was determined to quit, because in my mind I tried everything and had realised that there was
no help for me anywhere, and that it was simply up to me. I could no longer make the excuse for drinking that goes like "its ok for me to drink today, because I'm going to get help for it on Monday, or I'm going to try this book or that technique" or whatever.
-I announced this to my alcohol doctor, who does nothing except support me while I figure out what the best path for me is and make sure that I'm not going to die. He also prescribed Campral, which again I'm not sure if it does anything or not, but I take because I was taking it when I quit and I don't want to change anything. I still get cravings for alcohol, but they're pretty pathetic compared with what I got when I first quit. The first month was pretty tentative but that feeling has faded. That's another excuse I had used: "I have to drink because of the abstinence deprivation effect", complete bullshit, it gets much easier with time, not harder.
So in summary I suppose I
had to try all these things in order to finally quit. I'm not a person who can learn from other people's experience easily; I'd prefer to see for myself. Maybe that's the glaring contradiction I've missed here: I've been critical of other's people's attempt to have their own experience with TSM etc. I'm torn though, because it is distressing to know that people could lose a lot through drinking, and for the greatest beneficence its best for me to give my honest appraisal without suppression of detail. This is only a medical treatment if all the available information is disclosed because only then can informed consent exist.
Anyway, enough blethering from me,
Cheers for your replies,
AAA