jaba wrote:
NDF,
Your progress is looking great, and you will get there with time because you are adhering to that golden rule (which is awesome). TSM is a rollercoaster ride just strap yourself in and go with the flow. You will enjoy the ride somedays and other days you won't, but the out come is always the same. You will get there.
I do agree with Maggie with not forcing AF days; if you can do them, you can do them, but if you cannot there is no harm, and no failure, your brain just is not ready.
I would not have been able to abstain for anything (not even fasting blood work, or meds), so be proud at the fact that you can, for it is something that is very admirable. You are putting your health first and not the alcohol! Amazing!
Keep doing what you are doing and keep us posted,
Jaba
I appreciate your feedback. But I have to say that AF or abstinence days do not feel all that forced to me. I must say that although I am having some minor cravings for a beer today (**** weather and arctic cold do that to me

), it is something I have been doing at least once or twice a week (for the most part) for about three years now, even in my heaviest, darkest drinking periods. I had to because of liver screenings, which sometimes came back high. So it feels rather normal and even during bouts of heavy drinking I liked the refresh I felt after a day off or two. Perhaps the silver lining of having a disease like Rheumatoid Arthritis is that it forced my drinking down in that aspect, once I received the proper treatment with the right meds.
Although, I believe the final straw of me going over to the dark side of addiction and developing a true addiction pathway was the heavy drinking and the steady and constant flow of beer I used as my only means to deal with almost crippling pain for five months. Now, I don't even take the meds such as Humira because I feel like I am in partial if not total remission. Don't get me wrong, it was difficult not to drink for a day at first, but once I got used to it it was no big deal. I think addiction is perhaps more than just physical dependence and the brain enforcing cravings to head off ADE. There is perhaps a psychosomatic "crutch" aspect of using booze as part of a daily routine that can be changed with less difficulty than imagined by someone who has been drinking daily and heavily for years. I went through a pattern of binging in my 20's followed by a period of semi-moderation where I was fairly disciplined and only drank two or three beers on a weeknight. But even as I was not physically dependant, I NEEDED to have at least two every day or I didn't feel right.
In fact, I suspect more people would do AF days a bit faster and more frequently if they knew the benefits once they get past that mental barrier of living without alcohol for 24-48 hours. I've seen one young woman (can't recall her username) here cut down to just one or two drinks on some days, but not be able to let go to zero for fear of insomnia. I think that is purely psychosomatic and there are other options such as melatonin and Benedryl to help with sleep. I also felt rather good after taking the 39-day break from alcohol and felt profound changes in how I felt after about two weeks. I contemplated becoming fully teetotaler, but there are real benefits to "moderate drinking", which I've read around should actually be more like 20 per week for men in their 30's-60's. I also noted the downside of being a bit socially anxious and feeling very sensitive to everything when I quit. And perhaps the biggest feeling of periodic boredom that drove me back into the bars. But the sleep was great and I definitely had more energy and am contemplating a period of abstinence of about a month once I feel 'cured', which will be months from now I think...