I gotta quit drinking.

No advice. Addiction sucks. Watched my dad try to stop smoking a dozen times before dying of lung cancer at 53. Sorry.
 
I have quite a few buddies that have quit alcohol whether it be rehab or AA. I can honestly say none of them are less happy.
 
6 years dry as of August 1st. You have support, and you can do this. Feel free to PM me if you need someone to talk with.

Alcohol was a huge part of my life from 16 until 47. My sign to quit was 5 days of hospitalization for alcohol induced pancreatitis. That pain was a fantastic motivator to get off the sauce. I'm lucky that I hadn't developed dependency issues given the genetics of my family.

It's hard, it sucks and if you feel like there's a physical problem with detox, have some liquor but recognize a bigger issue is there medically and seek attention from a doc. A good NP or Counselor can be helpful as well. I had a great NP that spent the time to help me understand what I was doing to myself. Not sure I'd still be around if I hadn't stopped drinking.

I will say this, the first year was the hardest. I couldn't hang with my circle of friends, work events were tough, etc. After that year, I re-learned how to have fun without it. After 5years, I can't imagine going back to how I was - drunk 4-5 nights a week on a bad week, 2-3 on a good week.

Finding something to do with yourself that isn't connected to booze is a big thing as well. I went back to pottery. I should have chosen something cheaper. Life is pretty danged good without the sauce.
 
You've already taken the first step in admitting you have a problem. Not just to yourself, but publicly. Keep reaching out and talking to us and anyone else that you know for help and support. I got a lot here in the past and I'm sure you will have a lot of people in your corner willing to help you through this. I've seen firsthand what it can do and I hope you can kick it while you can. Good luck!
 
You've made the first step, acknowledging the issue. Some self assessment of what you drink, when you drink, why you drink, how you drink might bring some more clarity. Finding an acceptable replacement to focus on certainly helps, like Jim said, something that isn't compatible with alcohol is best. Lots of NA varieties available these days might be a way to start.

My brother is severe, literally drunk all day every day, and totaled his car last year, got a DUI and they put a substance detection anklet on him that would notify the police if he had blood alcohol. Forced him to go cold turkey, best thing that's happened to him in years. Unfortunately they took it off him and decided he didn't need further treatment and within a couple months he slipped back to it. But seeing how he was able to quit for a time from such a severe point with some "motivation" gives hope, it can be done.

Strength to you, you can do it.
 
I quit drinking by popular demand. Use your will power. Tell yourself your going to quit and do it. Tell yourself that you can do it and don't lie to yourself.

About a decade ago I quit for a little over a year. I don't remember why I started up again except I figured I had a handle on it at that point, but this was pretty much the way I did it. Just decided to, no exceptions, learned to say "I don't drink." Now I'm sitting here in my office with my hands shaking and gut churning and thinking how stupid it is that I do this to myself. That tends to be my pattern - I'll go until I start actually having some physical symptoms and then back off before it gets too bad. I'm done. At least I hope I am. I've been "done" before just to walk into a liquor store the next day. Yeah, I think I'm done. Screw this.
 
I can’t help directly but I listen to this podcast and I’ve heard a few of his calls about alcohol and have always thought he gave great advice.

 
My sign to quit was 5 days of hospitalization for alcohol induced pancreatitis.
My dad had this happen twice to him. The first he was only in his thirties and my brother and I weren't even out of grade school. It was a wake up call for him and for awhile he had given it up. Drinking came back and after a crazy weekend of fishing (mostly drinking honestly) he was hospitalized again on Monday morning after returning for the same thing. This weekend I actually turned 21 and didn't feel great for a whole week.

That has always stuck with me and although I still drink regularly, I very rarely get drunk. I feel there is a big difference there and to each person I'm sure that limit and need to feel that drunk is where most of the problems lie.

Brian, I take it that is the case for you? Needing to be drunk or at least finding yourself there all the time? If so, great job on you to recognize it and seek some advice. There is so much help out there especially if you can find close buddies nearby to help. They can be with you to go on fishing and camping trips, spend the night hanging out, etc. Lots of things where there doesn't have to be alcohol present.
 
Is the root cause a physical need for alcohol or other factors leading to self-medication with alcohol?

I quit drinking when I contracted a kid and a mortgage because I couldn't afford the good stuff for several years. Then when I could afford it, I got acid reflux going. I pretty much just drink water now.

Point? If, after all these years you haven't figured out what the actual problem is, you're probably not going to do that alone. Talk to a specialist of some sort to get help figuring it out. It doesn't matter who at first, because you may have to try more than one.
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
117,810
Messages
2,170,004
Members
38,360
Latest member
Apodaca_
Back
Top