Hey, Chrissie, how great to hear from you!
I'm glad you're trying an AF week, I think you'll feel really good about yourself at the end of it. You'll have learned some things about yourself on the way and it will give you confidence in your ability to abstain and control your drinking.
I'd like to share a few things I learned during my period of abstinence;
1. Cravings pass. They really do. Some people say that when one hits, we should distract ourselves, but I found that when I had a craving I could handle it better if I just let myself feel it, I'd just sit down and think about how much I'd love a drink, I'd tell myself that it was ok to feel like that, it was just a feeling but I didn't have to act on it. You let the craving come to you and pass through you and away from you, sort of like a breeze (only not so fast, unfortunately) let it come and let it go.
As you know, on a more pragmatic level, of course, food is always your ally.
2. A craving is a message. That little voice that says 'I want a drink' is telling us something, sometimes it's easy to decipher the message: it's saying: I'm hungry, thirsty, tired and/or stressed, other times the message is more difficult to understand, and that's what you are trying to decode this AF week.
3. Like cravings, feelings pass too. They come and go. It might help you to just recognize them and acknowledge them and do nothing more for the moment. Accept the discomfort, let it wash over you. It is what it is. I think to truly understand these feelings, we have to truly feel them. Don't try to avoid your thoughts or feelings, don't try to talk yourself out of them or debate them internally, don't dialogue with your thoughts, just listen to them, hear them.
Because years of drinking and other avoidance tactics, I didn't really know what it was I was feeling, it's kind of hard to deal with something when you don't know what you're dealing with. For example, I could suggest to you that you find activities for your evenings: classes, reading, knitting, whatever, but as you know, that would be another avoidance tactic, doing that wouldn't help you understand why you're uneasy at night.
You're a brave gal, this is no easy task you've set yourself, but I'm confident that you are ready for it
When the going gets tough, remind yourself that whatever it is,
It Will Pass, it always does.
Curi.