Naltrexone had an immediate and stunning effect on me when I first tried it. It's a sledgehammer, as I think Melissa said. I quickly migrated off alcohol save for the times I'd pop a keyfob pill when dating. (I do really dislike the 'audit' that seems to occur in social situations, and its doubly serious and intrusive when meeting a new woman.) My alcohol use has been inherently linked with my social life: when I was married, ours was the house everyone visited every Sunday, and I bought wine and booze and beer by the case; divorced, obviously, the default condition in the dating swirl is 'lets meet for drinks.'
So I used Nal, dawdled over 1.5 drinks when out for the evening, trained my girlfriends not to freak out if I didn't have anything to drink (none of them are teetotalers), drank some more at the holidays or when my father was having heart attacks. Then in December I met someone new, who induced a couple of changes in my behavior. This is where the homily begins.
I was running an errand for an old client, returning stateside, and our plane was held at the Heathrow gate past departure time. Very annoying, because I don't go in for "VIP" **** and I'd been traveling for a day and a half already. Then a small crew of people with diplomatic passports in dirty clothing jumped on and she was one of them. The next week, 30 minutes into our first date (at a bar!), she said: "I just want to get something out of the way. I was in ********. It interferes." Then she slammed another Manhattan. So anyway, two changes in my behavior:
First, I decided to see her exclusively. (I follow more of a catch-and-release relationship style, in the main, having weathered two 'opportunities' to rebuild my balance sheet and an ongoing parental kidnapping in the last 15 years.) I found myself suffused in the old, warm, euphoric glow: those feelings of care and desire; the impulse to protect; the desire to converse and express and explain. They were exaggerated with her, I suppose, as she has been damaged by work (combat trauma combined with Lord Jim-level guilt) and -- you want black humor? -- we were able to discuss EMDR therapy the way reformed addicts discuss their former highs, or football players compare notes on ACLs. We'll call her Mrs. Smith. I gently put down my other spinning plates and focused my emotional life on her.
Second, she drinks. She doesn't drink in an out-of-control or surreptitious manner; she just drinks the way, I imagine, most addicts wish they could drink. Like I would like to drink, I suppose. Casually, slowly, arbitrarily, and heavily — every night. Then, every night, I'd toss her around. Then she would take enough dope to kill a horse and sleep. In the morning, more tossing, very strong coffee, a psychotropic and off to the office. She asked me a few times in the beginning, "I don't know how people get over these things." I think what cemented our friendship was my laughter. "You don't get over them. Not unless you have a psychopathy score over 30. You're not supposed to get over them. You just learn to put them away someplace, and try to keep them there." We would sit in her living room reading, listening to music, she would sip rye as Hepburn did in the movies. (I gradually got with the program and slugged it back like Season 6 Don Draper.) I stopped taking Nal. At last I'd found someone who self-medicated more than I! I said. We would have a couple of glasses of wine with lunch, a cocktail before the movies or opera, I dug out my flask. And lots and lots of sex, which I concluded was part of our self-medication regime, so yay (more incentive).
Of course, this was the cop-out that led to weekly increases in my consumption. (Not hers. She's steady Betty.) While I was always a pretty good self-regulator — in 30 years of work no one suspected I drank abusively, and as Barry notes, if you want to do your woman right, you might not want to be hugging a bottle of Stoli first — a line was crossed a couple of years ago, and I'm really not so self-regulating as I once was. So my behavior becomes more guarded, more surreptitious, and more isolated: I can't be making mistakes in public. I *don't* make mistakes in public.
Anyway, y'all know how this story ends. Mrs. Smith, never previously married, had the freak-out that the career single woman has when she realizes she's becoming dependent. (Promiscuity and self-sabotage are learned behaviors too, and reside too in our hippocampus.) I shrugged and told myself, "Well, there's always the spinning plates regime, let's let this one calm down and see where we're at in a few months." Having restored alcoholic levels of consumption over the past several months, I decided it was a good opportunity, breaking up with the first woman I'd been infatuated with for years, for an outstanding bender, which bender I prosecuted effectively for three days. Wednesday I woke up, set the alarm for 11 a.m., ate a pill and drank my glass of hooch at noon. It went down, I got fuzzy but not high. (Good, I said to myself. Still works.) I had no interest that evening. Same Thursday. Yesterday I wanted to drink in the evening but had eaten 50 mg at 11 a.m., and I wondered about its effectiveness. I ate another 25, waited an hour, opened a bottle of wine. I didn't finish the first glass and slept.
Barry and I appear to have a similar relationship with alcohol, though mine is more advanced and deleterious. I'd say we both have the same skepticism about alcohol and sex, and it's a shame that booze is bad for us and good for our women, in that context. We both, de facto, have to choose between alcohol and athletic training. Naltrexone pounds us into submission immediately, if consumed properly; both of us really, really do not like a "Nal hangover." Both of us consider "dry for the rest of our lives" a very, very long time (though in my case much shorter); at the same time, it's probably the only *logical* conclusion to reach. Both should probably default to abstinence, though my plate-spinning, vs. his monogamous/married lifestyle indicates a keyfob lifestyle for me.
So I hope I've tied my story loosely to Barry's thread, the thread about success, complacency, disruption of control, and restoration of control. Grateful for the NAL. BV out.
_________________ Initiated TSM 11 August 2013
Grateful for Sinclair, Eskapa, this community, and the NAL.
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