OtherGround Forum >> Alcoholics

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11/18/12 4:26 AM
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Pokanghoya 2 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 7/22/06
Posts: 1801
If you're drinking that much per day you should cut back gradually. People have had seizures trying to quit cold turkey. If you really want to stop you got to be at that point where you say that's enough and just stop. It may take having a really bad night.
11/18/12 4:32 AM
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btx35 84 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 10/20/12
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IDXtreme - 
btx35 - I'm an alcoholic myself. I will never attend AA because I don't believe it's a disease I take full responsibility for allowing myself to become like this. Even though I'm a drunk (i have no kids) I'm completly content with my lifestyle although it's very unhealthy.

I am sober 27 years. I attended thousands of AA meetings.
But I don't think it's a disease either. If you heard that it was in AA it was not part of the AA program. It is what those who profit off of addicts in recovery call it so they get insurance to cover treatment.

Congrats on your 27 years sober thats amazing. I wish you the best bro.
11/18/12 1:30 PM
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Stronghold 17 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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You are not an alchy. You are a chronic heavy drinker. There is a difference.
11/18/12 1:39 PM
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MyUnclesCreepy 683 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 5/4/12
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U need to make two choices

1. U need to quit for yourself and yourself only. Not for anyone else. You can't quit for anyone person or thing. U have to do it for you

2. U need to go to AA. My brother in law was a severe alcoholic and he went thru rehab and AA and it has changed his life. He hasn't drank on two years and has the willpower to not drink to this day

Once you truly decide you want to quit then you will do the 2 simple steps.

My mother died of alcoholism I wouldn't wish this slow painful death on my worst enemy

I wish u the best Phone Post
11/18/12 2:58 PM
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Nuckin Futs 87 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Feelz Good - 
Nuckin Futs -
Feelz Good - 
Nuckin Futs - I highly recommend a book called The Easy Way to Stop Drinking by Allen Carr.

I had my last drink when I finished the last chapter of the book and I have not had desire to have one since.
And that's been how long? I've known alcoholics who have not drank for 1-39 years, and as soon as they did it was game over. I myself have gone 18 months without it, then when I did, it was all over. Phone Post

I'm going on 4 months. What you wrote reads like why even stop when most will fail at some point.

Not a very healthy attitude to have. I have no plans on ever taking that first drink again so people that have stayed sober for 39 years and had that first drink has no bearing on me.

Why not just take a gun and blow your head off since we are all going to die one day anyhow. It's the same logic as don't bother trying to stay sober when 39 years from now you might slip up.
No, it's good to not drink as long ad you can. It's better for your overall health. I'd say go for it to anyone considering it. I've also had much more experience than you and seen much more than you. I can do four months sober standing on my head while laughing at the rest of the world. Fourt months? PM me 20 months from now.... Phone Post

I'm not sure how you can draw the conclusion that you have much more experience than me. I've been drinking for over 25 years and have stopped for extended long periods of time trying every method you can imagine.

My four months is no where near the longest I have ever been, but I can honestly say that this is the first time that I have no doubt that I'm through with it.

In the past I always had the thought in the back of my head that I would possibly fail at some point and sure enough I would.

I suggested a book that has helped change my over 25 years of drinking thinking and thought I would share with people that are having issues.
11/18/12 3:06 PM
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Stronghold 17 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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If you are not a chain smoker, AA can help you become one. Since you don't need rehab, there are alternatives.
11/18/12 3:44 PM
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falkofire 33 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 5/21/07
Posts: 276
I went through rehab twice - when something clicks it clicks - it's not easy and at first ur just keeping ur self too busy to avoid temptation but slowly and surely the temptation becomes weaker and life becomes what u make of it - 5.5 months clean for me :) Phone Post
11/19/12 11:42 AM
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SCRAPPER 2 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 1/1/01
Posts: 5602
Looks like my favorite aspect of drinking has kicked in on this thread.

The measuring competition.

While I was in rehab it went like this:

me: damn, I was putting down 2 bottles of tequila a day and it was getting worse
Other guy: Oh yea, I was doing that AND drinking a case of beer at work.
Other guy: I was doing that AND smoking meth.

The argument to be the biggest fucking loser in existence is amazing. I understand that it gives a bit of credibility to a statement regarding opinions on treatment or quitting, but it soon loses it's power as it becomes a dick-measuring competition.

If you drank for X years, that means you were unable to quit for those years. Maybe you wanted to quit, maybe not. To me, it means you didn't fuck up enough to WANT to quit.

I've talked to guys that have gone through DT's 20+ times and brag about it. I did it once and swore never to do it again.

I'm no shrink, but when someone asks for help, it's about THEM, not what a fucking loser I used to be.
11/19/12 11:52 AM
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Mencken 112 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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SCRAPPER - Thanks Mencken.

I know people say I'm harsh when it comes to my own issue with drinking, but that's just how I deal with it. I ran out of excuses to drink, self-pity parties, and emotional reasons why I forgave myself for acting like an asshole.

My own experience is that it is NOT a disease. Drinking isn't the problem, it's a person's inability to deal with life. There is something else that's wrong.

CANCER is a disease that you can't "not have" when the police are around, at work, or when it's really important not to have it, like a job interview or court date trying to convince the judge you've cleaned up.

If you can choose, even for 1 second not to drink, it's not a disease and a personal choice you make. I've run across a lot of people that talk about how it just HAS to be a disease because it destroyed someone they care about. Blaming it on a disease is easier than admitting that a loved one lost control and killed themselves, ruined their own life and, ultimately, hurt those that cared about them.

Here is a really simple exercise for some folks and it's one that's gotten a few alcoholics right up in my face:

Look back on your drinking and think of something you did that was the worst thing you can think of. You hurt someone, cheated on your spouse, hit your kids, abused your pet because it interrupted your drinking, drove drunk and hurt someone, you figure out whatever it is that makes you say "damn".

Of course, since it's "ME" that did it, I can justify it and wave it off.

Here's the fun part: Find a random stranger and look at them as if you just found out they did what you, yourself, have done.

Probably not in any hurry to run up and tell them it's ok to keep drinking, or tell them that all is forgiven, huh? And yet, as a drinker we excuse fucked up behavior every morning after.

Harsh, but effective. For me, at least.

I think this is a good plan, but what if you don't actually do stuff that is shitty?  I don't drive drunk.  I may have pushed the line a little once, but even then it was debatable.  I don't get in fights. I don't curse out friends.  I don't abuse animals.  I don't spend all my money.  I don't sleep with girls I wouldn't normally touch (though I push the line a little on that one too haha)

Perhaps it's odd, but I don't actually do stuff I'm ashamed of.  I just drink a lot and often.  I'm not putting down two bottles of tequila every day, but I do drink too much.  But without glaring negatives, it's hard to see a reason to stop, other than health.  And health is an abstract concept.  I eat pretty clean and exercise often.  Admittedly, I'm not as lean as I should be, but thus far, that's not enough of a reason to stop

11/19/12 12:07 PM
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SCRAPPER 2 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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You don't have to do something completely insane to want to quit, and if you don't want to quit, it's your decision.

If, however, you feel that you need to stop or slow down, there's obviously something giving you some hints.

Trust me, I'm no preacher or anything when it comes to drinking. If you can drink and function, more power to you. But it something is telling you to quit, look a little further into it and see what's up.
11/19/12 12:22 PM
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Mencken 112 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 8/14/02
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My main reason is just knowing what it does to the liver and the calories.  My grandpa basically drank himself to death, and two of my other grandparents were alcoholics as well...so there is definitely family history.  I don't have a significant physical dependency on it.  I was on antibiotics last spring, and had to go three weeks without, and I didn't crave it once in that time.  It's just I'm aware of what it does to the body. 

Also, I'm thinking of getting in the ring next summer, and I'm currently walking at 193 and would be fighitng at 155 haha, so stopping drinking would be key for that

11/19/12 12:30 PM
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BearsDownAzzUp 68 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 6/10/08
Posts: 14188
El Refe -  You need to find something else to do in those time slots.
Bjj, rock climbing, yoga, soccer, bingo, whatever, you're probably drinking out of boredom? Phone Post

this... the key to kicking a bad habit is finding a GOOD habit to replace it with.
11/19/12 12:45 PM
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Zed Wayne Zed 72 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 10/20/11
Posts: 842
New social circle.

Only way.
11/19/12 12:47 PM
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Kublai khan style Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 12/16/11
Posts: 511
There always going to be losers like you in society. Just play your roll Phone Post
11/21/12 6:15 AM
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falkofire 33 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Kublai khan style - There always going to be losers like you in society. Just play your roll Phone Post
Glad to see the douchebag position has been filled Phone Post
11/22/12 4:33 PM
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SCRAPPER 2 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Mencken - 

My main reason is just knowing what it does to the liver and the calories.  My grandpa basically drank himself to death, and two of my other grandparents were alcoholics as well...so there is definitely family history.  I don't have a significant physical dependency on it.  I was on antibiotics last spring, and had to go three weeks without, and I didn't crave it once in that time.  It's just I'm aware of what it does to the body. 

Also, I'm thinking of getting in the ring next summer, and I'm currently walking at 193 and would be fighitng at 155 haha, so stopping drinking would be key for that


Yep, drinking and getting in the ring are not a good combination.

For me, there's really nothing but trouble that goes along with drinking. Fucking ugly women, getting into fights that I'm not getting paid for, having cops show me their latest handcuffing techniques, the list goes on. :)
11/22/12 4:51 PM
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derelict 56 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 2/22/10
Posts: 2379
I almost died 70 days ago from alcohol withdrawal. I went into a 30 program to "dry out" and am doing pretty well now (sobriety wise).

I've battled drugs and alcohol for over 10 years now...including painkillers and heroin.

PM if you ever want to chat. I'm no expert by any means, but I can relate to what you're going through. Phone Post
11/22/12 4:56 PM
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MisterFixit 2 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 12/18/07
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Smart recovery?

Best of luck. Phone Post
11/22/12 5:23 PM
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demandango 18 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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In Phone Post
11/22/12 5:32 PM
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Siboroni 1 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 1/26/12
Posts: 219
In for help. New hobbies don't last long or fill a void. But damn as far as addiction goes I am king.
I blame my Irish blood, bastards Phone Post
11/22/12 5:33 PM
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Polaris 3 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Its what it is, and I may be among those (unpopular) people who do believe that there is an underlying physiological component behind many addictions. I still struggle.

I personally believe that Alcoholism itself is a "disease" (some people are born with what will lead to the compulsion), but DRINKING is ultimately a choice.
11/22/12 5:55 PM
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Siboroni 1 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

Member Since: 1/26/12
Posts: 220
It's not a choice years down the line.
When it's a craving that your whole body and mind craves for.
Granted I don't have the strongest of wills or would just stop, but after a day of being screamed at work all I want to do is learn a new hobby or read a book on meditation not.
Release is what I need but sadly I don't have an on/off switch.
Hopefully I will find something Phone Post
11/22/12 6:00 PM
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Jay Haas 24 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Feel you bro ... My career is fucked because of it Phone Post
11/22/12 6:11 PM
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Siboroni 1 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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Shit sorry to hear, how so?
If you admit your drinking problem bigger companies are sort of obliged to help Phone Post
11/22/12 11:45 PM
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ThePundit 13 The total sum of your votes up and votes down Send Private Message Add Comment To Profile

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I would never let work know about my issues. That is the most career limiting move I could make, even worse than the drinking itself, in my mind.

I actually didn't have a drink since Saturday. Until tonight. The last few dasys/nights have sucked balls. I haven't slept for shit, I've been irritable, etc. nights particularly have sucked bad. Probably haven't had more than 4 hrs a night.

After a shitty day of work (yeah, I know, excuses excuses) I went for a drink when my team planned a bday party for one of my team. I ha one with them and left.

Unfortunately, even that one was enough to light the fire, and ended up going out for many more at my local.

I'm sure I'll sleep well tonight at least, but the battle continues. Phone Post

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