[quote Mybestyear]@Hawaiiinthemorning - this is great that you have recognised you have an issue and are tackling it head on. I say this not to scare anyone or give anyone an excuse to drink more, but 100% of people who drink to excess will have a degree of fatty liver. Fatty liver is completely 'fixable' with abstinence/cutting down to 'safe' limits and dietary changes (if you are overweight). The NHS website says 2 weeks of not drinking will reverse a fatty liver (www.nhs.uk/conditions/alcohol-related-liver-disease-arld/) however in scientific journals, I have read it takes between a month and a year depending on how bad it is and your overall health. A word of warning - losing too much weight too quickly can make a fatty liver worse so aim for a sensible weight loss/dietary changes.
Drinking too much also changes your brain and its chemicals. Alcohol gives an artificial hit of dopamine, which your brain remembers, hence you go on to want more and more and feel you cannot relax/enjoy yourself without alcohol. But it is the alcohol which set up this dependency in the first place. The longer you are alcohol free, the more these associations will decrease and you will find your brain does not crave alcohol as much/at all - although a person's subconscious mind might crave alcohol, believing it to be a good thing. This is why even one drink is detrimental when you are trying to change your relationship with alcohol - just one drink will keep the (maladaptive) pleasure-reward system in your brain going and keep your brain wanting alcohol.
Before anyone thinks I am being evangelical about not drinking, I need to own up and say I have a terrible problem with alcohol and binge drinking. At my worst, I got through 40 (yes, forty) bottles of spirits in two months drinking alone/in secret PLUS 'normal' wine drinking in front of others most Thursdays - Sundays. I've been found sleeping in hedges, drunk at work and nearly sacked, lost my phone, purse, keys etc, fell over and got a black eye.......only thing I've not done is drive drunk (although probably have driven the next day under the influence). In my non-drinking life, I have a successful career (in health care ironically), lovely home and family, am very well travelled, have great friends etc. But I still ended up nearly losing it all - I still might if I don't sort myself out this time - it really is my last chance.
I've had many day 1s and today is only day 9 for me. Day 10 is when I usually cave and go on a bender but I am doing everything in my power to prevent that this time. I am doing the This Naked Mind Alcohol experiment (learn.thisnakedmind.com/the-alcohol-experiment-registration), listening to the audio book, posting on the support forum, attending a local sober support group, talking daily with my addictions nurse, being honest and open with friends and family and generally keeping myself occupied doing other things. I feel different this time and I really think this time I can do it.
So that's my story - alcohol is a drug - it is meant to get people addicted and trapped for their whole life, that's how they make money. Anyone can get addicted - there's no such thing as an 'addictive personality' or something that makes 'real alcoholic' different to other people. So please take heed of my story as problem drinking only gets worse without action. Good luck and keep posting. Maybe even join us over of the dry January thread for accountability.[/quote]
Really hope you don’t cave. So scary how many of us follow the exact same pattern.