Christopher,
I think changing our environment (people, places & things) is something we have to do to make a lasting change. Sometimes those things are hard to do - like changing the people we hang out with but unless we make those changes there will be too much baggage and temptation for us to break the drinking pattern. I feel the respite TSM is starting to give me is my opportunity to reflect on my people, places & things and to layout a plan to make changes that will benefit me. I stopped hanging out with my neighbor drinking buddy - there was no way TSM was going to be successful for me if I continued to hang out with this guy. I talked to him about it and he understood so there was/is no hard feelings. Other simple changes like changing or interrupting your typical drinking patterns are pretty simple to implement. The hardest, most difficult, change I find is trying to win back and be a part of someones life that you were/are excluded from because of the drinking (like Wife and Kids). Years of Tough Love have taken their toll. But the "we see a change" comments (dolled out sparingly) tell me I'm moving in the right direction.
Honestly a huge portion of my life was/is built around my drinking. I choose friends that drink, I lie/hide my drinking behavior (well I least I thought I was getting away with this - Not!), I would plan vacations where I knew alcohol was right at hand, I would take the long way home from work so I could finish the bottle, take my kid to junior football practice then go back to my can and polish off a bottle - I could blow up this post with all this nonsense and bullshit. How can I expect to make a real lasting change while living in this environment? A pill ain't going to change this rat-hole I put myself into.
TSM/Nal is a huge jack hammer but we have to plan to rebuild the foundation of our lives and to treat alcohol as the poison it is to us in so many ways.
Say Hallelujah!
Rich