Hello Everyone,
I am definitely in habitual drinking right now. I do feel difficulty sleeping on my few AF nights, and I feel my anxiety ramping up in the evening when I have not drank. Definitely, my daily drinking has caused some physical effects.
When this happened to me in the past without NAL, there were many nights that I tried not to drink, laid in bed for an hour or two but couldn't sleep, and I would go downstairs to drink and silence the craving. With NAL, I have so much more control than before. It is now time to exert some will power and taper off this crap.
I drank 8 units last night. Not too bad for me on vacation. Got up early and drove the family 1/2 way back to Canada from Florida. We drove 12 hours and are visiting some family for a few days. I will be starting up work again next week at about 1/2 speed and then the week after that, it will be back to a very busy schedule.
My plan right now is to get home and get really strict with the measuring of my drinks. I also plan to schedule Mondays as AF days and maybe work on one or two more AF days per week. Then maybe work for 3, 4, 5 AF days per week in progression. I feel like I should push some willpower into this recovery. I feel like I am in a position to actually assert my will onto this disease.
I remember about 4 or 5 years ago, when I garnered up enough courage to tell my doctor that I was drinking 8 drinks a night or so. I had learned that it might be dangerous to quit cold turkey. It scared the hell out of me. I knew I was on the verge of a bad problem, but was afraid to cut cold turkey. I mistakenly thought that I had the willpower to quit.
My Doctor told me to have 5 drinks a night for a couple of days, 4 for a couple, 3, etc. That seemed like a good idea when he said it, and I thought I could pull it off. However, any alcoholic will tell you that without NAL, once you have 1 or 2 drinks ... look out -- you will never be able to stop. A couple of years later, despite counselling, confiding in my family, admitting my problem, trying all the personal willpower that I could muster, I was in rehab.
Now, with NAL, after 20+ weeks, I feel like I am in a position to actually exert my willpower, taper off this crap. We shall see.
I am currently watching the A&E show "Intervention" about alcoholics and drug addicts. I can see so much of my own personal struggles in these stories of these drinking folks. It is so sad. They spend all this time trying to find psychological and emotional reasons for drinking. I was tormented by guilt, trying to find out what was so bad about my life that I was drinking the way that I was. I have a wonderful life, job, the wife of my absolute dreams, 4 perfect children, a supportive family. Everyone (including me) was looking for a psychological reason for my drinking
I also think my wife felt that there were things that she was or wasn't doing that was causing me to drink alcoholically. That couldn't have ever been further from the truth.
On the show just now, they said about this guy, "He knows right from wrong, he is choosing to drink!" I ruined my wife's 40th birthday party, my daughter's grade 8 graduation day, and other family days with my drinking.....I wish I had found NAL a few years ago. Those incidents would never have happened.
But I am grateful to God, Dr. Sinclair, Dr. Eskapa, and this site that I have found TSM and NAL. I have not once embarrassed myself or my wife since I have found NAL.
After my 20+ weeks of TSM, I am 100% convinced that my alcoholic drinking was totally caused by my opiate response to alcohol determined by my genetics. I still have stress, my wife and I argue from time to time, etc. etc. Each day I drink on NAL, I gain control on my lizard brain urge to drink alcohol.
That's where it stands for the Jdog tonight.
If and when I get fixed with this method, I am determined to figure out how to help other people using TSM. I think it is so sad that people are losing their families, killing themselves and others with DUI's, and ruining their lives because they have a brain/genetic disposition to alcoholism. It is sad that we have to feel a guilt for the weakness.
No-one feels guilty for getting diabetes, or cancer (outside of smokers getting lung cancer), but us genetically disposed alcoholics feel guilty for our choice to drink.
If I had found NAL, Dr. Eskapa's book, or this site many years ago, I would have saved myself, my family, and my self esteem a lot of stress and hurt.
But I am grateful now..... an so grateful to my friends on this site for this miracle of TSM and NAL....
All the best!
_________________ Owe my life to The Sinclair Method and NAL.
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