Maggie1929 wrote:
Cheeto - I am so sorry that you are so down right now - you have a lot going on and I also think the Nal does pull us down a little - I have had a couple of AF days each week now - albeit with the AB, but I do think it helps me. As for the hot sweats - I have also found that the drinking makes them worse - the more I have the worse they are - on a heavy night I can have one long hot sweat all night - HORRIBLE ! So for me that has started to be a good deterrent - I know that yours are not just AL related but it doesn't help - yet another good reason to cut back - and I am having to make myself do that as the Nal is not going to do it for me. Have you ever considered trying Antabuse ? I know that for some it is not a good answer but it does help with those ASF days - and once we start having those and realise how good we can feel, it gets better !
I too tried everything under the sun for the hot flushes - and also 'cos of cancer, could not take any hormones to help - but trust me - it does eventually pass! I know that is of no consolation for you right now, but you will feel better - my doctor would not give me anything either so I know how you feel about that.
Snapdragon - so sorry that you too are in the same boat - I just keep thinking of what UKB says about that we have to push ourselves to make this work - that the Nal will not do it on it's own, that we have to make ourselves cut down on the intake and also have AF days - so I am trying that - I have to start taking control of the AL - it has controlled my life for way too long !!!
. BINGO !!! (Guapo)
Hang in there my friends, Hugs, Maggie xx
Here is a quote by Paul Staley of the moderation manifesto.
Habitual drinking
If the binge drinker needs to think smaller, then the habitual drinker needs to do just the opposite: she needs to stop thinking in terms of small increments, and think in bigger terms. As a former habitual drinker, I can attest to feeling that my daily allotment of alcohol was a form of reward. The enabling ingredient was that useful instrument of minimization, the word “just.” It’s just a drink, just another glass, just a bit more. In and of itself, no big deal, right? But added together, it’s quite a different matter.
The cumulative sum of all those “little” drinks can put some big things at risk: your relationships, your health, your career. The small reward, as daily entitlement, can become a big detour that keeps you from doing other things with your time. Until you break the cycle of daily drinking, you cannot appreciate the extent to which you have been dulling yourself with rituals that long ago lost the authenticity of true celebration. Until you start having zero days, you cannot understand how “just” a few drinks the night before meant just that much slower a start to the following day.
So, the questioning for the habitual drinker begins with examining this need for reward, and if that need proves insatiable, then the exploration of alternative ways of being nice to oneself. Beyond that, the habitual drinker needs to look at what the payoffs could be for exercising a modicum of delayed gratification. What big things can be saved and what else can be accomplished if you learn to defer “just” a few of those little glasses of reward? Have you been selling yourself too cheaply, trading other things you could do in exchange for a couple glasses?
That’s enough for now! Back at you sometime soon.
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Posted by Paul Staley