sideeffect2 wrote:
A few years ago, when i stopped drinking for about 30 days, each day was a struggle. The alcohol called out to me.
That does sound like addiction.
sideeffect2 wrote:
Here is possibly the missing piece. Im a puker. More than 5 drinks in a few hours and its coming back up, forcefully and with great sound. So, I stop before then. Would an addict continue anyway?
I did, for whatever it's worth.
sideeffect2 wrote:
I just read the chapter three you were refering to. No, thats not me.
Oh, I wasn't really referring to it. "Real Chapter Three alcoholic," or just "real alcoholic" for short, is something that Steppers say to discredit anyone who stops by any means other than Stepping. Either you're a so-called dry drunk or you were never a real alcoholic to begin with.
Basically they're defining contradictory data out of existence.
sideeffect2 wrote:
1. Perceived near death / hallucination / bad trip from nal
2. High cost to take nal. Bad side effects.
3. Supportive family. I told them i was quitting for a time possibly for good, and everyone has been great.
4. Sugar. Replaced alcohol with sugar. Half my craving was hunger.
5. Replaced drinking habit with diet soda.
BTW, not saying this would work for anyone else. Not even really certain anything but the nal worked for me. Im sure, like everything else, there is a bell curve for extinction. I got lucky.
Yeah, I can see that. I wonder if you just needed a kick to get out of a rut.
Well, you do have the naltrexone if you ever want to drink again. Accordingly, congratulations on the cure. Some people would have just ditched the nal to go back to drinking, but you didn't, so good for you.