Jump to content

Listen to Pattaya FM105

View New Content  

How Do You Keep Your Resolve?


72 replies to this topic

#51 garro

garro

    Platinum Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 3,233 posts

Posted 2008-08-13 07:00:49

View Posttotlanh, on 2008-08-12 21:11:54, said:

Well,

Im afraid to say i well and truly fuc_ked up!!!I started drinking again in January once i arrived in Vietnam.It was a conscious decission and i thought i could handle it.Well,believe me,i deluded myself into thinking that i could for 4 months,but in reality i lost control off my drinking from my very first drink.The speed of which i spirralled out of control was alarming.Sure,i had a good time for a while but then the problems i had when i drunk all started to rear their ugly heads.Instead of living for my family i was once again living for alcohol.This obviously caused many problems and my wife nearly left me.I am now back home again since July but because of my drinking(i think)i am in a very depressed and anxious state.I have stopped again and have been sober for 6 weeks but am finding it difficult.I deeply regret starting again infact i would go as far as saying it probably was the biggest mistake of my life thus far.So tp conclude if anyone who has been dry for a period pf time and think they can handle it again i would advise you no to tread that path,Alcohol for many is the road to ruination.

Totlanh, what's done is done but please don't turn a wrong turn into a trip to the gutter.

I remember drinking after 2 years and how much it messed up my life. I had made new friends and they were amazed at the change in me, once drinking, and quickly moved out of my life. I didn't notice of course. I managed to go a few months thinking that this time my drinking was different. It wasn't but it took me years to stop again. Waisted years where I was miserable and worst of all I was the cause of my own misery.

It is great that you have stopped again. If you stay stopped then this can be a valuable lesson which can streghten your sobriety. I do not believe that relapse is 'a normal part of recovery' but I know that sometimes we can definitely learn from them. I wish you all the best mate.

#52 totlanh

totlanh

    Senior Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 403 posts

Posted 2008-08-13 16:49:27

Eek and Garro,
Thanks for your kind words.The problem i have now though is i really have lost my motivation and am struggling

#53 garro

garro

    Platinum Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 3,233 posts

Posted 2008-08-13 17:10:46

View Posttotlanh, on 2008-08-13 16:49:27, said:

Eek and Garro,
Thanks for your kind words.The problem i have now though is i really have lost my motivation and am struggling

I remember thinking that maybe if I wait the conditions will be right to stop again -my motivation will return. The problem is though that there is no guarantee that the right conditions will ever return. You have been sober a very long time and it is easy to lose sight of the benefits.

I personally don't care about 'isms' and just see myself as a reformed drunk, but I do know that over any period of time that I drink alcohol my life deteriorates. Addiction has never improved my life and if I take alcohol I quickly exhibit signs of addiction.

Sobriety can sometimes seem like I am just plodding along, but this is far better than the alternative. Sobriety for me is at its best when I am open to the magic in life. A sober life can be very magical, but it is easy to lose touch with that. I have found that when I'm sober anything can happen, but if I drink then I know what will happen - especially in regards to the long term.

I don't know what to say to you Tollah, I remember the urge to drink very well and what I call the 'fuc_k it' button. Addiction messes up my mind so much. I couldn't remember my two years sober after a few months back drinking. I couldn't remember what I did with my time sober. Wired. This led me to believe that it must have been boring as hel_l, but that was just denial. It can sometimes feel like relapse is inevitable and when there you can say to yourself 'I might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb'. This is poison to my mind.

I really wish you the best no matter what you decide to do.

Edited by garro, 2008-08-13 17:12:11.


#54 kolasaab

kolasaab

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 54 posts

Posted 2008-08-13 18:03:41

HI  i can see that some of you are struggling so i thought i would put my 2 pennies worth ln. 12 years ago my life was a complete mess due to many years of alcohol and drug abuse and if i didnt do somthing, i would either be dead or end up in prison for a very long time and i decided that i had HAD ENOUGH!!! I had been to few aa meetings in the past and instead of listening to the similarities, i listened to the differances and went away thinking , well, none of what some those aa people have said has happened to me,so i am not an alcoholic and anyway, those aa people are some kind of cult, so i carried on drinking for about another 5 years. Things got worse and worse. Eventually i thought, ive HAD ENOUGH of all this sh-t ,I NEED HELP, so i went into rehab and started to WORK THE TWELVE STEP PROGRAM.At first it was very painful and people were telling me, alcohol and drugs are just a symptom of this illness and i needed to address what was going on deepdown and i need to work this program so that it becomes part of me. They also said if i did what was suggested , i would very slowly get better. Guess wot!! they were right!!!and its the best thing i ever did. About a year after leaving rehab they offered me a job and for the last 11 years i have been giving back to others what was freely given to me. My life today is good, i have ups and downs like anyone else, but i use THE TWELVE STEPS to deal with any problems that come up. So i say to you HAVE YOU HAD ENOUGH AND ARE YOU WILLING TO GO TO ANY LENGTHS TO GET SOBER???? and when i say sober, i dont just mean stop drinking, i mean STOP DRINKING AND HAVE A HAPPY CONTENTED LIFE!!! also its not just meetings that keep you sober ITS WHAT YOU DO IN BETWEEN!!! I have not had an urge to drink for twelve years a day at time and if it can work for me, it will work for you. thanks

#55 philo

philo

    Senior Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 365 posts

Posted 2008-09-28 22:14:06

View Postbangkokrick, on 2008-08-12 22:32:28, said:

View Posteek, on 2008-08-12 22:18:03, said:

View Postbangkokrick, on 2008-08-12 22:08:08, said:

I would like to ask one question though what are/were you guys drinking.
Vodka mainIy.
Thanks for the answer Eek and good luck with your quest. I will stick with the beer from now on.

Cheers, Rick

I will guote myself from another thread (this one is much more relevant, but I didn't know when posting):

''
Today I managed to wait until 11.30 AM+ before taking the first beer (because my wife has forced me to get a health check up). For me, a record for may be two years.

At the ultrasound they said there was changes to the liver (but not permanent, unreversible ones). Two cysts 0.7 cm and 1.0 cm (but this was common (?)), and a general accumulation of fat (?) in the liver that could be the effect of drinking. Cholestorol was high, and I have a liver infection that makes me shiver and cold sweat (but no fewer) during the the night. Need to eat antibiotic pills (if I puke them out, have to get injections at the hospital).

I also have hepatitis, and as I understood the doctor: Hep b already antibodies (have had?), Hep c no antibodies (= no have); so the hepatitis is coming from drinking.

Today only drinking from 11.30 AM till 6PM, so araound 7 big beer Leo.
''

This is the result of around 10 years of binge partying and may be 15 years of drinking (alone) for the sake of drinking. But only BEER and REDWINE.

Stick to beer, but if you consume too much too often, it will get you ...

#56 Livinginexile

Livinginexile

    Diamond Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,721 posts

Posted 2009-05-07 19:18:27

View Postgarro, on 2007-11-14 12:06:58, said:

View Posttotlanh, on 2007-11-13 23:19:09, said:

I have,nt had a drink for 4 years 8 months.I stopped drinking myself and never have attended AA.Recently though i have really been thinking a lot about drink and missing it.This in turn has made me feel bitter as i feel like im being deprived and am beginning to wonder if i could drink again.I never did try to cut down and im wondering of i could drink now sensibly.I gave up once before for 9  months as well so i know i can stop......

Hi totlanh,
I congratulate you on your almost five years of sobriety.
You should be proud of your achievement.

I remember drinking again after two years in AA.
I was during my first year in university, and I felt really angry with being left out of the fun around me.
I started again and for a few months it felt like I had some control.
It took me nearly a decade to stop again, and during that time I did quite a bit of damage to my liver.


The problem, for me at least, is that if I pick up again I have no idea if or when I will stop.
I doubt very much that I could stop again to be honest.
I have been given two chances already and I doubt if there are many more for me in this life.

I didn't use AA or any other support group this time to stay sober.
It is coming up to eighteen months for me.
I got sober in a Thai temple and when I left it was my conviction that my former addiction had been removed.

I can't tell you what will happen to you if you drink again.
I do really hope you think very carefully about it.
I really hope you stay sober.
Best wishes
Paul

I started drinking again 3 years ago after 3 years sober.
Three years of hel_l, many many times I've tried to stop and going back to AA.
I can't seem to string more than a few days together.
It's got really bad, for the life of me I don't know how my wife can stay with her. It pains me so much knowing I am putting her and our son through this nightmare.
I can tell you with absolute certainty, if you start drinking again you will find yourself on a fast track to a living nightmare.

I am sober tonight. I am shaking like a leaf and my wife is trying her best to help. I feal an overwhelming fear creeping over me and I know it's going to get a lot worst. The only thing I want right now is another drink.
But I won't, besides the bottle shops are all closed now and I have nothing stashed away.

This disease is particulaly strong in me. I am off to a meeting tomorrow if I can last that long.

All the best guys. I have been inspired tonight reading through this forum, especially the "100 good things being sober" thread.

#57 StreetCowboy

StreetCowboy

    Titanium Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 6,327 posts

Posted 2009-05-08 20:04:32

....Snip....

I started drinking again 3 years ago after 3 years sober.
Three years of hel_l, many many times I've tried to stop and going back to AA.
I can't seem to string more than a few days together.
It's got really bad, for the life of me I don't know how my wife can stay with her. It pains me so much knowing I am putting her and our son through this nightmare.
I can tell you with absolute certainty, if you start drinking again you will find yourself on a fast track to a living nightmare.

I am sober tonight. I am shaking like a leaf and my wife is trying her best to help. I feal an overwhelming fear creeping over me and I know it's going to get a lot worst. The only thing I want right now is another drink.
But I won't, besides the bottle shops are all closed now and I have nothing stashed away.

This disease is particulaly strong in me. I am off to a meeting tomorrow if I can last that long.

All the best guys. I have been inspired tonight reading through this forum, especially the "100 good things being sober" thread.
[/quote]

I've been going to AA meetings for over a year now, and the longest I've managed to string together is 30 days without a drink.  But I reckon if I can make it six sober nights a week instead of three, that is a big improvement...if I can stop drinking on school nights...

WHat I have done is stop ALL sensible drinking; if I go to the pub with colleagues, I'll drink soft drinks.  I don;'t  buy beer in seven-eleven.  I'm trying to condition myself so that I don't drink as a matter of routine.  And keep trying to stretch the dry spells...

SC

#58 philo

philo

    Senior Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 365 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 05:06:32

Well guys,

This alkie has 30 days off the piss today. Who would have believed it!

Body improving rapidly - but brain seriously fuc#ked up. Have appointment with the psychiatrist today.

Two AA meetings pr. day.


Children gone, money gone, house gone (bless wife for unknowingly giving me this chance).  But I still have water, food, shelter, clothes, passport and pocketmoney.

Most important though, I have a chance to hang around for a while longer exploring life before I change my address to the graveyard.

And in the end - it must be better for them to have a father that is absent than one that is dead.

#59 moe666

moe666

    Platinum Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 3,527 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 05:42:45

Good luck to each of you it is a hard road. I was a heavy drinker, caused the loss of wife but I look at it as the best day of my life. It was a long hard struggle but I got to know myself with a lot of inner reflection and oberservation. I tried AA once but it wasn't for me.

  Each of us is different and what works for one will not work for another, but there is something for you and it will help.

   Godd luck.

#60 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 07:27:48

Best of luck to you all. philo, well done and keep strong. I think its a great idea that you are going for help..but i personally think psychology helps more than psychiatry. But thats just my take. If you dont gel well with the Psychiatrist, try another, or something else, but dont give up trying. I think its important to have someone to talk to and not be afraid to spill out any crap thats going on in your head. For some people AA is great for that (however, i tried AA a couple of times and it wasnt the right way for me). I thought alcohol was my miracle cure for underlying things i didnt want to deal with. Finding an alternative way to address and deal with those issues is what has given me strength enough to not want to use drink as a crutch. But, of course, everyone has different reasons and experiences. At one point i honestly thought i wouldnt miss a drink again..but to be honest at times the feeling has crept up on me. Usually if im feeling overwhelmed about something. I guess im still a bit of what is termed a "dry drunk"? Im not sure. But, the feeling rarely lasts more than a day, if that. Its less and less. The biggest factor is realising how far ive come, and how much i dont want to go back to where i was before.

#61 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 07:47:21

View PostAndiamo, on 2007-11-15 23:44:06, said:

-snip-
Whereas here in LOS, I find the attitude is far more refreshing, very rarely does anybody question me and because my partner also doesn't drink, it makes it easier for me as we do not frequent the bar/pub scene very often.
-snip-
I agree that I have rarely had any Thai be surprised or shocked if i say i dont drink and that feels good. In the UK it was a "go on have a drink!" type attitude. People make you feel like a party pooper for not having a drink with them. One time a girl that I worked with even became pretty nasty about it because she wanted a drinking buddy.

In Thailand i kind of holed myself up a bit initially. Well, actually, i still do, but less so. Part of the reason i came here is to have time for myself, without pressures from family and friends. I suppose i should tackle being able to hang out at night time socially without the heavy feeling i get. I actually feel quite ill at the thought of it. Ive been invited out many times, but the idea of hanging out in a bar is hard for me to handle. The smell of alcohol and the smell of it on peoples breath is hard for me also. The one time i went out with a group of westerners we ended up in a bar after dinner. I felt really uncomfortable. Its not the bar, because i didnt hang out drinking in bars, its the smell. I also feel less socially easy-going as i used to when i drank. Its weird but part of it is that i sometimes feel that im not quite sure who i am anymore..and im still finding that out. Hard to interact with others when im still finding my feet. Feel a bit vulnerable bearing this on the forum, but there you are. Might ring some bells for others, and if it helps then im glad.

#62 philo

philo

    Senior Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 365 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 08:03:13

Thanks to both of you.

The psychiatrist at RAM was the man who took me through detox and is a man as good as they come. I will trust him with my life and I am sure he will help me sort out possibilities for psychological counseling in CM. Also I will reread the old threads in the 'Health, Body and Medicine' forum.

One step at the time ...

#63 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-10-30 15:04:38

View Postphilo, on 2009-10-30 08:03:13, said:

One step at the time ...
Exactly. :)

#64 gerryBScot

gerryBScot

    Senior Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 215 posts

Posted 2009-10-31 23:18:38

Well done Eek and well done Philo, well done anyone who has not had a drink today. Eek I stopped and started for 30 years, no real significant period of abstinence, days, maybe a couple of weeks, and then for some silly reason i'd go out and have a few drinks. usually nothing too silly to begin with but eventually I would end up on a major bender, blitzkrieg drinking. I had been dry for 30 days or so when I went to my first AA meeting, over 5 years ago, haven't drunk since. Don't miss it, don't want it, don't need it. Better without it in every sense of the word. I didn't give anything up, rather I got back stuff. Life immeasurably better, married, a new born kid, working here. I still go to AA. It is the only thing that has kept me sober. There are some new meetings in Chiang Mai which might be worth checking out but I tell you if you feel like having a drink any AA meeting will be better for you than a saloon. Go in and tell them your story, it will be good for them to hear and as well as helping you it might help someone else. Good luck!

#65 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-11-07 13:47:20

View PostgerryBScot, on 2009-10-31 23:18:38, said:

Don't miss it, don't want it, don't need it. Better without it in every sense of the word. I didn't give anything up, rather I got back stuff.
Fantastic!

Actually, this was (and sometimes still is) part of the problem for me. I kept thinking i gave something good up. I conveniently left out all the negative aspects and focused on thinking that i was so much more confident and more likeable when i was drinking, or at least less likely to care if others thought negatively of me. I liked the numbness. Learning to deal with a real un-numbed reality has been the hardest part for me. Getting sober sort of felt like i woke up one day and i was a grown woman and wondered who the hel_l i was. Getting to know myself may sound cliched and lame, but thats what ive had to do..and yes, it is getting something back. Its getting back reality and living life ...as scary as that sometimes seems.

#66 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-11-08 05:57:19

..Last night I found myself going along to a nightclub with some friends for the first time in many years (and that last time i was still drinking). I drank an orange, but for some reason i got into my head that it had alcohol in it. I couldnt shake off that feeling and ended up leaving. Was a really odd sensation. As crazy as this sounds ive been unable to sleep all night because of different thoughts buzzing through my head. I just couldnt settle and felt nauseated. Has anyone had any kind of strange similar feeling when out like that???

#67 eek

eek

    Meo00oow!

  • Honorary Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,490 posts

Posted 2009-11-08 08:08:50

im not sure if sharing this is of benefit to anyone (dont want to be taking over this thread either)..but at 6am after a night of not sleeping i went out on my bike to the local park and ran myself stupid. An hour later and physically worn out, i feel good. Actually,even though im worn out, i feel like running more. I recall becoming a overly addicted to exercise when i first stopped drinking, but i do know it helps. I read somewhere else on this forum about exercise and meditation, and i know that combination is what works for me.

Anyway..um..thats all really.

Oh ..and also a very nice pm from a member helped a lot when i got back in too.

#68 StreetCowboy

StreetCowboy

    Titanium Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 6,327 posts

Posted 2010-02-10 23:12:11

View Posteek, on 2009-11-08 08:08:50, said:

im not sure if sharing this is of benefit to anyone (dont want to be taking over this thread either)..but at 6am after a night of not sleeping i went out on my bike to the local park and ran myself stupid. An hour later and physically worn out, i feel good. Actually,even though im worn out, i feel like running more. I recall becoming a overly addicted to exercise when i first stopped drinking, but i do know it helps. I read somewhere else on this forum about exercise and meditation, and i know that combination is what works for me.

Anyway..um..thats all really.

Oh ..and also a very nice pm from a member helped a lot when i got back in too.

Having friends and aquaintances that don't drink makes a big difference; and seeing that you can be teetotal without being a Salvation Army stormtrooper...

Realising that I don't particularly want to drink sensibly anyway, even if I could...

SC

#69 Neeranam

Neeranam

    Titanium Member

  • Banned
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 8,133 posts

Posted 2010-02-14 23:40:51

View Postkolasaab, on 2008-08-13 18:03:41, said:

HI  i can see that some of you are struggling so i thought i would put my 2 pennies worth ln. 12 years ago my life was a complete mess due to many years of alcohol and drug abuse and if i didnt do somthing, i would either be dead or end up in prison for a very long time and i decided that i had HAD ENOUGH!!! I had been to few aa meetings in the past and instead of listening to the similarities, i listened to the differances and went away thinking , well, none of what some those aa people have said has happened to me,so i am not an alcoholic and anyway, those aa people are some kind of cult, so i carried on drinking for about another 5 years. Things got worse and worse. Eventually i thought, ive HAD ENOUGH of all this sh-t ,I NEED HELP, so i went into rehab and started to WORK THE TWELVE STEP PROGRAM.At first it was very painful and people were telling me, alcohol and drugs are just a symptom of this illness and i needed to address what was going on deepdown and i need to work this program so that it becomes part of me. They also said if i did what was suggested , i would very slowly get better. Guess wot!! they were right!!!and its the best thing i ever did. About a year after leaving rehab they offered me a job and for the last 11 years i have been giving back to others what was freely given to me. My life today is good, i have ups and downs like anyone else, but i use THE TWELVE STEPS to deal with any problems that come up. So i say to you HAVE YOU HAD ENOUGH AND ARE YOU WILLING TO GO TO ANY LENGTHS TO GET SOBER???? and when i say sober, i dont just mean stop drinking, i mean STOP DRINKING AND HAVE A HAPPY CONTENTED LIFE!!! also its not just meetings that keep you sober ITS WHAT YOU DO IN BETWEEN!!! I have not had an urge to drink for twelve years a day at time and if it can work for me, it will work for you. thanks
If I had replied to this thread, the above is almost exactly what I'd have written, except 9 years sober. :)

#70 ding

ding

    mondo vita

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,034 posts

Posted 2010-03-29 05:36:37

View PostNeeranam, on 2010-02-14 23:40:51, said:

View Postkolasaab, on 2008-08-13 18:03:41, said:

HI  i can see that some of you are struggling so i thought i would put my 2 pennies worth ln. 12 years ago my life was a complete mess due to many years of alcohol and drug abuse and if i didnt do somthing, i would either be dead or end up in prison for a very long time and i decided that i had HAD ENOUGH!!! I had been to few aa meetings in the past and instead of listening to the similarities, i listened to the differances and went away thinking , well, none of what some those aa people have said has happened to me,so i am not an alcoholic and anyway, those aa people are some kind of cult, so i carried on drinking for about another 5 years. Things got worse and worse. Eventually i thought, ive HAD ENOUGH of all this sh-t ,I NEED HELP, so i went into rehab and started to WORK THE TWELVE STEP PROGRAM.At first it was very painful and people were telling me, alcohol and drugs are just a symptom of this illness and i needed to address what was going on deepdown and i need to work this program so that it becomes part of me. They also said if i did what was suggested , i would very slowly get better. Guess wot!! they were right!!!and its the best thing i ever did. About a year after leaving rehab they offered me a job and for the last 11 years i have been giving back to others what was freely given to me. My life today is good, i have ups and downs like anyone else, but i use THE TWELVE STEPS to deal with any problems that come up. So i say to you HAVE YOU HAD ENOUGH AND ARE YOU WILLING TO GO TO ANY LENGTHS TO GET SOBER???? and when i say sober, i dont just mean stop drinking, i mean STOP DRINKING AND HAVE A HAPPY CONTENTED LIFE!!! also its not just meetings that keep you sober ITS WHAT YOU DO IN BETWEEN!!! I have not had an urge to drink for twelve years a day at time and if it can work for me, it will work for you. thanks
If I had replied to this thread, the above is almost exactly what I'd have written, except 9 years sober. :)
May I pile on as well? Maybe without the caps, tho. 25 years this month and still need you guys and gals as much today as I did in 1985! Thanks folks.

#71 whiterussian

whiterussian

    Half Cocked Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,523 posts

Posted 2010-03-29 06:03:27

One month and counting.
One month of jogging, dieting, vitamins.
One month of sleepless nights and unproductive days. mulling over all the things I blotted out with a bottle.
It will be worth it! - It has to be!

Never drank much in the UK.

4 years here and I've hardly had a dry day, it just crept up on me, until my tolerance built up, and up... I put it down to my Russian genes and 6'2" build. Poor excuse.
When my liver started to ache after a drinking session, it was a rude reminder.

I really hope that I have it under control now, I gave up 5 years of Ganga abuse at the age of 21 in about a month, my body just rejects it ever since. I've never missed it in 15 years. I hope this addiction will end the same way.

Good luck guys n gals.

Edited by whiterussian, 2010-03-29 06:30:36.


#72 StreetCowboy

StreetCowboy

    Titanium Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 6,327 posts

Posted 2010-03-29 10:59:01

View Postwhiterussian, on 2010-03-29 06:03:27, said:

One month and counting.
One month of jogging, dieting, vitamins.
One month of sleepless nights and unproductive days. mulling over all the things I blotted out with a bottle.
It will be worth it! - It has to be!

Never drank much in the UK.

4 years here and I've hardly had a dry day, it just crept up on me, until my tolerance built up, and up... I put it down to my Russian genes and 6'2" build. Poor excuse.
When my liver started to ache after a drinking session, it was a rude reminder.

I really hope that I have it under control now, I gave up 5 years of Ganga abuse at the age of 21 in about a month, my body just rejects it ever since. I've never missed it in 15 years. I hope this addiction will end the same way.

Good luck guys n gals.

Well done!

My days are never more productive when I have a hang-over, and I'm not really sure that I ever slept that well when I was unconscious either

SC

#73 cognos

cognos

    Super Member

  • Advanced Members
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,163 posts

Posted 2010-03-29 11:32:40

I'm 6 months on April 2 without beer and pot..I thought it would be hard, but there have been no urges. My wife told me on the last day that if she could get a plane back to Thailand she would leave that night. That was the stimulus for me to do what I had wanted to do for years. It scared me straight, and I won't look back. I have partied a couple times in my dreams, and I did not like the feeling even in the dream.. however I usually stay straight even in the dreams, knowing I have quit by choice.

straight and sober is the best



 


Sponsored by:

Quick Navigation   View New Content Site search: