barryb3 wrote:
I've read before about "real" Alcoholics, i.e. those with a bonafied genetic predisposition. It takes WAY MORE BOOZE for you to feel the high and the satisfaction than it does for others. I've seen this mainly in the Native Americans at the hospital. They have an incredible (and sad) ability to drink absurd amounts of booze and still function. This one guy claims to have drunk 96 beers, or 8 12-packs, a day for years -- he looked like a swollen, red corpse about ready to burst any second, though. If it wasn't against the law to take pictures of patients, I would have loved to take one of this guy and his disheveled, misfit wife. Hilarious.
It should come as no surprise that I have Indian roots just four generations back.
It is a source of amazement to me that I can and do drink so much. As noted, I have not personally encountered anyone who matches me, to my great shame. I could count the number of times I have vomited in the last five years or more on one hand. Other than astoundingly high blood pressure and liver enzyme counts, there really are no untoward physical effects to my drinking; this of course makes me very, very hopeful I can have a decent and longish life when I conquer this mess.
Once a big time runner before tearing up a knee in a work injury and a eat-my-veggies and take-my-vitamins guy for decades, I think I owe my continued reasonable health to earlier, better choices. I can only hope they were and are cumulatively enough to see me through the enormous damage I am doing to myself.
barryb3 wrote:
Besides hangovers, I'd be more worried about withdrawals and even seizures, although you seem to suggest you can survive during the day without alcohol. At what time of day do you really get jonesin' for a drink?
Needless to say, a drinker of my ... err ... caliber spends entirely too much time thinking about booze. Even so, I can say the majority of those thoughts are remorseful. As big and bad a drunk as I am, there are great swaths of the day when a drink is the farthest thing from my mind. Especially when sufficiently busy. I may be a vile drunken loser (* "may" being at best a term of mendacious art, let's face it), but I also have an active mind that is interested in a great many other things.
I have, though not too recently, taken as much as a full week off multiple times with no untoward effects like shakes, etc.
Indeed, reverting back to drinking just seems to owe itself to being my most lasting and devoted "marriage." When I am down - which is not all that often other than about being a boozehound - alcohol is always there to sooth me. And when I feel like a million bucks after a week off, it is there for me to "celebrate." Disgusting, but oh so true.
barryb3 wrote:
Also, I'm curious as to what your goal is. Are you aiming for total sobriety or just "moderate" drinking? For you, what seems moderate might still be god-awful amounts in terms of your health -- e.g. 10 units a day. And, what support system do you have? Have you burned all your bridges and killed the dog?
A bit of a foodie, I would like to think I could get to a point where - as in years past when this was not such a destroyer for me (though it actually was already a problem in honest retrospect, not least given where I've come to) - that I could devolve this habit to a non-habit that allows for enjoyment of a good food-pairing.
If though it becomes clear this remains a slippery slope, I'm entirely ready to call it a day where drinking is concerned. I want to live. And Fully. Perhaps "fully" may mean without alcohol. It does for many millions of folks. I don't find it absurd to imagine being one of them even as I also imagine, luck be with me, that "fully" could include some beer and wine along the way. And if it doesn't play out that way, I can always resurrect the coffee-snob I once was

As to the dogs, my two babies are quite well, thankee

Even though we don't go on enough walks at all, owing to my drinking taking priority. Thankfully, it is only rarely that their exuberance shames me in this regard. Just considering the matter shames me yet again.
As to further support, I do have a friend or three I have confided in, and most interestingly one of them is also an alcoholic though she would be loathe to admit that given her fairly high functioning and the denial we all know too well. Although we are the pair least in contact among said friends, I look so much forward to sharing with her this "secret" once I have something to show for it.
All that said, I appreciate your interest very much. It is not mere interest, but rather encouragement.
Second interview on the job I most want today and it went well even as I was rather shocked afterwards to look in the mirror at my bloodshot eyes

Thankfully, my brain and overall "feelings" seemed just fine, both to me and apparently the boss' son who did this go 'round. Nice and smart guys, the both of them.
barryb3 wrote:
Anyway, I'm going to be regularly checking in to see your experience. You're a good writer, so it should be a fun read if nothing else!
PLEASE DO. I can definitely use the accountability partner.
Again, your interest is so much appreciated.