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Journeyman

(15,145 posts)
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 02:04 AM Sep 2023

Thirty-six years ago today I was a raging alcoholic . . .

and the next day I was on my way to sobriety: I had taken my last drink. I was hungover, still drunk, but I had stopped drinking. That’s how quickly it can happen.

My drunken years are like a disjointed “daymare,” a faded blur punctured by vivid memories of shocking detail. I still cringe in fear of myself. But I’ll provide no drunkalog. I’m pretty much the same as everyone else, distinguished only in that I was a rummy: I loved to drink rum. And while I’m asked often what happened to cause me to stop, I find it easiest to sum it up this simply: I couldn’t drink anymore because I couldn’t drink any less.

Towards the end, I’d lost all control. This was not just the inability to stop or moderate, but also the ability to gauge what even a single drink would do. And there was no “lots” or “little,” there simply “was.” I was going to drink. I may drink more or less depending on circumstances, I may drink because I was angry or sad, or I may drink to celebrate, but I was going to drink . . . and I had no control over how much or how it would affect me. Drinking had become a form of Russian roulette: I could drink all night and show little outward effects or one drink would send me into a blackout.

My sobriety has been a group project. Without the example of all the others I’ve known through the years, I’d never have learned how to live sober. And without a sober life, I’d never have found how much I care for the people around me. With each passing year, all I hope is that I’ll measure up to the gift so freely given me by so many others, and in the measuring find the means to pay it forward.

Famously, alkies want control, and the Big Book says we can never have it. But paradoxically, we gain a measure of control over our lives when we stop drinking.

Without the tragedy I have suffered, I would not have been motivated to get to know myself as well as I have. I might have died a stranger unto myself. I might have died before I lived. How ironic — that partly because I felt so bad in the past I feel so good today.

I know now, nothing is so bad that alcohol won’t make it worse — conversely, nothing is so good that alcohol won’t destroy it. And I realize that while in some ways things are no better than they were before, in no way are they worse.

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Thirty-six years ago today I was a raging alcoholic . . . (Original Post) Journeyman Sep 2023 OP
I have great admiration for those that can tell the tale so objectively DFW Sep 2023 #1
Your account touched my heart. 💗 sprinkleeninow Sep 2023 #2
36 years! Permanut Sep 2023 #3
I heartily congratulate you!!! fierywoman Sep 2023 #4
Coming up on 29 years personally BubbaJoe Sep 2023 #5
Thank you for sharing your inspiring words - and congratulations Rhiannon12866 Sep 2023 #6
What an amazing post. But especially that first paragraph. Scrivener7 Sep 2023 #7
Cold turkey --- the only person I know who did that, was the guy I worked for. 3Hotdogs Sep 2023 #8
Actually I quit cold turkey bif Sep 2023 #15
Well said. Chainfire Sep 2023 #9
You are one of only two cold turkey quitters I know. One day at 50 my dad came down to breakfast ... marble falls Sep 2023 #10
Good for you RainCaster Sep 2023 #11
31 years here! Wifes husband Sep 2023 #12
Almost Timewas Sep 2023 #13
WOW!!! YOU'RE A HERO !!l Karadeniz Sep 2023 #14
congratulations! mike_c Sep 2023 #16

DFW

(56,540 posts)
1. I have great admiration for those that can tell the tale so objectively
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 02:10 AM
Sep 2023

Due to an apparent genetic quirk, I’ll never know what an addiction to alcohol is, but I’ve seen enough of it to see the destruction it wreaks.

BubbaJoe

(20 posts)
5. Coming up on 29 years personally
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 04:42 AM
Sep 2023

It's funny though, an odd twist of fate that now where I am living I can count 8 or more bars within staggering distance. Been here 5 years and only go to one of them because they make a really good bacon blue cheese burger. Bad thing is they only have Pepsi products (I'm a coca cola man).

3Hotdogs

(13,401 posts)
8. Cold turkey --- the only person I know who did that, was the guy I worked for.
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 06:59 AM
Sep 2023

Pre-sober, he would go drinking with employees. They would drive back to the parking lot and he would began cursing them out. Then he would throw rocks at them. Tommy recalls laughing at him because he was do drunk that he couldn't throw the rocks straight. The next morning, they would show up at work as if nothing happened the night before. Then, rinse and repeat.

His kids described life as a living hell.

One Friday after work, he told the guys that he wasn't going to the barS. Yes, barS. He didn't say why. He had just decided to stop drinking. At the same time, he stopped cursing. For 10 years, I never heard so much as a "hell" or "damn." out of the man's mouth. He also went to 6 o"clock mass every day until the day he died.

For some reason, Tommy also gave up drinking.


Congratulations on your journey.


bif

(24,002 posts)
15. Actually I quit cold turkey
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 10:16 AM
Sep 2023

Although I wasn't an all day drinker. I was an evening, wine while cooking, and at dinner drinker. My family did an intervention and sent me off to rehab. Never got the shakes or anything. Been sober for just over 5 years now.

marble falls

(62,063 posts)
10. You are one of only two cold turkey quitters I know. One day at 50 my dad came down to breakfast ...
Sun Sep 24, 2023, 09:09 AM
Sep 2023

... and said, "it just occurred to me that every bad moment of my life came from drinking," My mom said, "What took so long?"

And he stopped. He could hold a scotch or glass of wine all night and never take a sip. Turned into a pretty decent person right after he quit.

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