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Alcohol support

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Can’t stop drinking

44 replies

Takemetothe90s · 02/11/2021 20:47

I’m drinking way too much and I’m worried for my health.
I’m putting more and more weight on because I’m eating shite too, I had a scan that shown fatty liver last summer and blood tests have shown high cholesterol even though liver function was fine.
I have a little girl who I adore, why can’t I do this?
I can stop drinking for around 5 days but lately it’s been every day. AA isn’t for me, any advice please?

OP posts:
dylanbroob · 02/11/2021 22:00

@Takemetothe90s no problem and I wish you the best of luck. One more thing is and I know this sounds like a cliche but take one day at a time.

  • So say you're sober Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday but on the Thursday you slip and have wine - don't throw it all in the fuck it bucket and give up - start again on the Friday. You will notice your stretches keep getting longer and longer. All you can do is try.
  • Also a great alcohol tracking app is dry days by alcochange. You'll find it on the App Store. It's a calendar and you can input each day whether you've drank or not - so the days you haven't it shows green on the calendar and the days you have it shows red. It's a good feeling seeing the calendar full of green with just the few reds in between. And it means if you slip up you don't have to see it say day 1 again on the screen. It's a marathon not a sprint and a slip up is just that - a slip and nothing to beat yourself up about. Be kind to yourself.
Rupertpenrysmistress · 02/11/2021 22:04

Ok so you want to change that's great. In my case I am going day by day or sometimes hour by hour. I highly rate quit lit, I love listening on audible as I find I can't concentrate on reading, I didn't get on with aa.

Annie grace is great, Craig Beck and Allen Carr. I am also taking liver detox vitamins.

I am so tired of this cycle. I hope it is forever for me but, I really don't know yet. You can do this, the alcohol threads are great, always someone on here to talk to.

TeeTotaller1 · 02/11/2021 22:06

Try Soberistas, I think its £49 for a years subscription
@dylanbroob excellent advice

1 year and 1 month AF for me, you CAN do it and you will do it
Literally one day at a time my lovely, have faith in yourself
Please attend all of your medical appointments
And remember alcohol is a depressant, it can make you feel so much worse about things

Takemetothe90s · 02/11/2021 22:09

@Rupertpenrysmistress

Ok so you want to change that's great. In my case I am going day by day or sometimes hour by hour. I highly rate quit lit, I love listening on audible as I find I can't concentrate on reading, I didn't get on with aa.

Annie grace is great, Craig Beck and Allen Carr. I am also taking liver detox vitamins.

I am so tired of this cycle. I hope it is forever for me but, I really don't know yet. You can do this, the alcohol threads are great, always someone on here to talk to.

Can I hear more about liver vitamins? Have you bought them yourself or are they prescribed?
OP posts:
NinDS · 02/11/2021 22:12

@dylanbroob
What an amazing and inspirational post. Thank you.

AnGofsMum · 02/11/2021 22:12

One of the best posts I’ve seen on here, @dylanbroob - really helpful and inspiring.

flyingtothemoon · 02/11/2021 22:20

@dylanbroob

Hi OP,

I am a long time lurker and created an account specifically to reply to you. I relate to your story so much. I was also drinking at least a bottle and a half of wine every night, sometimes two. I also have a daughter and a great life and couldn't understand why I just couldn't stop drinking. And I also had really bad anxiety.

I stopped drinking in October 2019. It took many tries and day 1s but October 2019 I was at my breaking point and I had a path to choose, I could continue down the path I was going, lose my daughter, ruin my mental health and my future or I could stop drinking. I knew that was my only two options so I had to stop.

Now that is easier said than done, I know that. Simple advice such as, save your money, don't buy the wine in the first place etc just don't cut it.

What worked for me (and may not work for you) -

  • I went to the doctor and got put on anti depressants and took them everyday without fail how I was meant to.
  • I bought loads of quit literature - how to kick the drink easily by Jason vale (life changing for me), the sober diaries by Claire pooley, the unexpected joy of being sober amongst many more. I read them any spare minute I had.
  • I joined 'club soda together' on Facebook. It is a private members page and no one on your friends list etc can see you are on it. It is full of over 15000 members all either trying to get sober or sober. On Instagram there are loads of sober pages - start with thissobergirl and go from there.
  • I created a bedtime routine - for me, cup of tea and a biscuit, skincare routine, floss and brush teeth, half hour scrolling phone, read some quit lit and sleep.
  • I got some counselling through a free addiction service they have in my area. Your area will have the same - ask your GP but I self referred.
  • I had to step back from certain friends that triggered me.
  • I started really really trying to enjoy and appreciate the small things of life, a good cup of coffee in the morning, a hot shower after a long day, the sunset etc.
  • I was so kind to myself, more than I ever have been in my life. I was soooo tired in the early days of being sober but I allowed myself to nap as, I'm not sure about you but I was used to waking up at 3 am with anxiety every night due to the alcohol so my body needed to catch up on all that uninterrupted sleep. I allowed myself to cry. I allowed myself to be lazy. I allowed myself to eat all the biscuits, the sugar cravings were out of this world in the early days.
  • whenever I had a craving I would eat - I promise you a lot of the time when you are craving alcohol it instantly disappears when you eat. Or I would go out a walk. Or go for a shower. Or go a drive. Or cry. Or scream in frustration. Anything to get through it.
  • I also for the first few months would have becks blue 0.5 percent beer, it got me through some cravings and it felt like a treat. They faded out naturally and now I'd much rather have a cup of tea.

Within three months my anxiety was almost non existent. The feeling you get after the first few sips of wine - that content feeling in your stomach? I started getting that from doing things like spending time with my daughter, going a walk with my dad, watching a great film, cosied up in bed on a Friday with an incense stick going. This overwhelming feeling of contentment that I had never experienced or thought possible without alcohol in my life.

This is just my experience and perhaps you can take certain bits from it that you feel might help you. I am still on my anti depressants 2 years later - they have really helped. Drinking barely crosses my mind. I went to a concert sober last Monday and had a blast and I danced! Something that I never thought I would ever be able to do. However, it took me along time to get there, I was a recluse for the first 6 months of sobriety as I couldn't handle social situations. But you can't just resume normal life - you have a problematic relationship with alcohol, you need to relearn how to do life without it.

Trust me if I can do it, you certainly can.

Thank you so much for sharing that. It's so helpful for me
Talkwhilstyouwalk · 02/11/2021 22:53

Well, you've recognised that there is a problem and want to do something about it so that's a start!

I'd also start with your GP. There are some organisations that can help which they might be able to advise upon that are not AA. Worth a look on NHS website: www.nhs.uk/live-well/alcohol-support/

My brother is an alcoholic. He was in deeper than you and drinking 2L bottles (and bottles) of cheap strong cider a night whilst living in my parents spare room like a tramp. They gave him a second chance when he hit rock bottom and wanted to change his ways by paying for him to join a private (admittedly very expensive) detoxification and rehabilitation programme. He did one week of medical detox under 24 hour supervision. The programme he was on offered all sorts of health boosting and confidence building classes to help him to rebuild his life - yoga, personal trainer etc. And he also had to blow into a breathalyser linked to an iPhone app at random times each day to prove his sobriety. The thing he found most useful was finding an excellent psychotherapist. So whilst he was on a private programme these ideas might be of some use as I appreciate that not everyone can afford private treatment.

Anyway, he's been dry for well over a year and will never touch a drop ever again. His life is full and SO much better now! He's even managed to give up cigarettes which ultimately he found harder and misses! He doesn't miss alcohol as it ruined his life so much.

Good luck OP. This is a common problem and there is help out there. Own it and you'll get through it! He also found that being open about his issue helped as people know why he's not drinking and don't try to tempt him. In opening up he's come across many others who have struggled with this....I know that being open about it is not for everyone though.

Wishing you well. It will be hard work but if you put that work in, really want it and have support in place then you really can crack this!

thinkinggoodthings · 02/11/2021 23:09

Just wanted to pop in as saw this in active and say, I've been you and you can beat this. I had a terribly stressful job and I drank bottles every night which made my anxiety worse and made me late for work often. Heart palpitations, bad runny, bad teeth and breath. It was very common in my industry to be a functioning alcoholic as lots of travel / solo drinking in the evenings.

But I did it. I stopped and I have stayed stopped. I have had an occasional drink say glass of champagne at a wedding , but then I want more, so for me not drinking is the only .

I replaced my nightly drink with Shloer ( spelling ) or 7-up with lemon in a big wine glass and ice or made virgin Mohitos in a fancy glass. It had to feel like a treat. I ate lots chocolate, but it's bridge, your body is used to the carbs. It was hard for a few days, withdrawal, I was shaky but I did it over a weekend.

Haggisfish3 · 03/11/2021 00:00

Thanks for this thread op.

Adm1010 · 03/11/2021 06:53

Hi OP .

I second the freedom thread it really helps and the advice and experience in there is great

You need to get a full picture of the liver damage no matter how scared you are . The liver is very forgiving and at some stages of damage it’s reversible . You may be at a reversible stage . Knowledge is power ! Not knowing is going to eat you alive one day at a time

The next step is dealing with the voice that tells you to drink . It will never go away but you can control it . Take one day at a time in these early days and tell that voice who’s boss

Timetobuckup · 03/11/2021 08:11

@Fearnecuptea
Do you have any podcasts that you would recommend ? I have definitely got in the habit of drinking too regularly. Sometimes it is just 2 drinks and other times it is many more but I think I need a bit of a reset without having to stop forever.
TIA

Rupertpenrysmistress · 03/11/2021 08:16

I did lots of research and worked out what vitamins are depleted by alcohol and which work to repair. I got mine from Amazon in the end. I know B vitamins are essential, not sure if they are working yet but feel I owe my liver.

OldMagicTiger · 03/11/2021 08:56

@Timetobuckup try Annie Grace / the naked mind podcast

Timetobuckup · 03/11/2021 10:11

Thank you @OldMagicTiger

Takemetothe90s · 03/11/2021 10:48

Ok so I’ve made an appointment to see my gp.
Not had a great nights sleep as I’m struggling with a lingering cough but I’m determined not to drink tonight.
It’s hard though as I enjoy a drink, would love to do it in a controlled way but I don’t think that would work for me.

OP posts:
dylanbroob · 03/11/2021 11:03

@Takemetothe90s

Ok so I’ve made an appointment to see my gp. Not had a great nights sleep as I’m struggling with a lingering cough but I’m determined not to drink tonight. It’s hard though as I enjoy a drink, would love to do it in a controlled way but I don’t think that would work for me.
Well done on taking that step. Don't think about it in the long term, just for today you won't drink, then keep doing that until the days add up. You will overwhelm yourself thinking of this as forever.
audley · 18/11/2021 18:06

@Takemetothe90s how are you?

Verraten · 24/11/2021 16:03

A friend of mine used to over drink. Not an alcoholic but she found it hard to drink less. She had success with a coach from 90dayslater.co. I don't know exactly what was involved but she ended up stopping drinking entirely even though she only wanted to cut back. I miss her joining in the wine but we still have fun so it's all worked out. Hope this helps.

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