Melissa,Melissa,Melissa. I can't explain why Naltrexone has changed for me. Again, it could be a bad batch as it all started from the shipment I got back in June. Actually, the other night was a very helpful experience for me. It's about the 7th or so negative drinking experience in a row for me (all without Naltrexone), and was actually worse than all the others combined. Yes, it's not TSM. Yes, I said I was going to follow the golden rule, but didn't. What I'm moving towards is either 100% sobriety or near 100% (let's say a beer here and there without Naltrexone). That just seems like such a better way to live than moderate drinking with Naltrexone, if it's giving me up to 48 hours of side-effects. I've also learned that moderate drinking WITHOUT Naltrexone can easily lead me to addiction and really adds nothing to my life (and, in fact, makes it markedly worse).
January was just so amazing for me, though, when I went 33 or so days AF with no effort and while experiencing extreme happiness and well-being on my part. Then, you know, the whole Valentine's day thing, and mardi gras, and all that, and I have a couple here and there, and then, bam, have a terrible (for me, at least) binge episode which I drunkenly stopped with Naltrexone. It gave me a similar disgust in myself that I felt at the end of December after gaining weight (all of which I've lost and then some) and multiple drinking episodes (including before Mass on Christmas Eve

). Last night was yet another awesome experience of sobriety. We had about ten teenagers over for gumbo and homemade beignets, watched our best friends' kids, and then had nice, sober sex. I felt like a champ all day today, lots of smiling and happiness.
I have no doubt that I'll make it through Lent without alcohol -- that will be 56 AF days. What's worrisome for me is summertime, where I began to really enjoy alcohol again and started my subsequent backsliding. In this case, I do have some doubts that I will maintain my enthusiasm for being fully sober. But, I'll cross that bridge when I get there.
I guess part of my insight / realization that would make me more likely to call myself the "A" word, is that I realize that
for my whole life I'm going to have to be vigilant about alcohol, as will you, Melissa. Circumstances change, sometimes dramatically (e.g. death of spouse, job losses, death of child, etc...) and our minds will likely go straight to our old buddy, Sir Alcohol. Even after TSM extinction, with enough stress, alcohol will have the same allure it had "before you became addicted" as Sinclair would say. For some of us, that's still a pretty big allure. I will never crave a good joint or some pure cocaine, but alcohol will always be there in the closet of my brain...waiting...............