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I'm starting a new weekly progress thread since my old one said perpetually Week 2 and I'm now at the end of Week 9. Plus, September has always signaled fresh starts and new beginnings, and I'm certainly due for both. So if anyone is compelled to read from Day 1, my prior posts are out there in this forum under "Medicated and Motivated -Week 2" and also "New? Introduce yourself!"
To sum up, my first couple of months doing TSM have been encouraging but not earth-shattering. My drinking is down about 1/3 from where it had gotten up to during my most recent relapse that began the latter part oj June '13. So the good news is that there are very few days when I'm pouring a glass of wine instead of a cup of coffee first thing in the morning; and I'm generally in the 5-7 daily unit range, but the past couple of weeks I've had a few double-digit days in there, which is troublesome to me, but not unexpected per Dr. Eskapa and my own Dr.
I'm dealing with a lot of insecurity about where my life is headed, so that is stressful. After my relapse, my SO of 5+ years abandoned me when I asked him to take me to the Dr., where I had fully expected to go into rehab, at worst, or a medically-supervised detox/withdrawal at best. But instead, my doctor suggested The Sinclair Method and wrote a script for Naltrexone.
I took a medical leave of absence from my work at the same time, because the combination of burn-out from working 70-80 hour weeks with ever-decreasing staff resources, an increasingly dysfunctional/toxic work environment, the demise of the relationship, and my own failure to seek out a more balanced lifestyle, led to what may have been called a nervous breakdown in the past - to me it was more like a mental/emotional/physical implosion, like everything just said, enough. Resulting in a Perfect Storm of acute depression, which I've dealt with for more than two decades, but never like this. This has been near-catatonic, no motivation, mind-numbing, can barely do the laundry or bother to take a shower kind of depression. With a few exceptions, the only times I've left my house the past two months have been to go to the doctor, the grocery, and a few bike rides. Of course, adding drinking only fueled the depression.
You'd have never imagined that was me, even a year ago. I was highly regarded at my job, managed a creative team, was the one who could always be counted on to smile and be positive, had the beautiful boyfriend, was out and about, enjoyed fly-fishing, traveling, hiking, kayaking. A far cry from the isolated person I've become.
But that's a characteristic common to alcholics, right? We become so used to functioning at a high level, and keeping up appearances at all costs. This time, I finally reached my breaking point.
I have no intention of returning to my previous job. And with the BF out of the picture, there's nothing really tying me to this community, which, beautiful as it is nestled among lakes and mountains here in the Northwest, is also styfling in that everyone knows everyone. And right now I neither want to see or be seen. My son is in college, my other family lives elsewhere. I'm renting a house, having lost mine in the recession. So it's just me and the two cats. At least The Jeep's paid off - woo hoo!
As pathetic as I have made myself sound, I'm confident my Phoenix will rise again, that a whole new me is just around the corner. The opportunities are wide open. I'm very talented in my field, and am not worried about finding work, just about finding the right work, in the right place. Before my savings/insurance runs out.
It's going to take me awhile to get back to where I want to be physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually - but I will. The first priority continues to be getting the alcohol numbers down. Getting a few AF days in there now and then. Upping the amount of physical activity to help with the depression. And yes, I'm on Wellbutrin, so we're adding Abilify to see if that jumpstarts the mood. Oh, I'll also be starting treatment for hypothyroidism; which could very well have been an organic cause of the depression, fatigue, and weight gain (let's hope so!). So other than that, just find a new job, or some steady freelance, figure out where to live, lose a couple of sizes, get a new BF, and voila - total life makeover, just like that.
I realize my trials and tribulations pale compared to the challenges others face; at least I have options within my grasp for changing myself and my situation. Now I just have to get out of my own damn way and into a whole new way of living. Come on, epiphany, you're welcome to strike at any time. The sooner the better!
This forum has been a great source of solace, support, and encouragement. Thank you for being here to witness my journey, and I wish you the best on yours.
To be continued.
_________________ Pre-TSM: 70-105/week. Back after a 4-year hiatus. Started back on TSM Feb. 2017.
Now...
May 2017: average 14-20 (per week)
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