thanks stirly, glad to get you dancing jc
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
thanks stirly, glad to get you dancing jcI have faced it, a life wasted, and I am never going back there again
To ya'll my name is inchy. I am an alcoholic - and priority number one is making it to the end of this day AF. No excuses.
18.08.13
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
i know it's a shocker jc, freakishly healthy for me xDI have faced it, a life wasted, and I am never going back there again
To ya'll my name is inchy. I am an alcoholic - and priority number one is making it to the end of this day AF. No excuses.
18.08.13
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
ooh i think i coudl get used to this af thing xDI have faced it, a life wasted, and I am never going back there again
To ya'll my name is inchy. I am an alcoholic - and priority number one is making it to the end of this day AF. No excuses.
18.08.13
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
Ben n jerrys half baked ice cream
Better than vodka any day....I have a drink problem, I have been AF since 15 March 2011 and I am working hard to stay that way
They don't call me Pingu Purple Pants for nothing....
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
all this talk of sweet things is makign me hungryI have faced it, a life wasted, and I am never going back there again
To ya'll my name is inchy. I am an alcoholic - and priority number one is making it to the end of this day AF. No excuses.
18.08.13
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
stirly-girly;1279693 wrote: Hello Army!! I haven't read back over the posts since this morning so will do that after posting this so I can address the goings on of the day.
Warning ? this is a long post in answer to something Reccie posted yesterday. You don?t have to read it if you don?t want to. I?ll understand completely that you?ve got better things to do. :H
Reccie, this is only my point of view, my humble opinion on our past, our personalities and our experiences that helped form them and if there is a connection between that and us being alcoholics.
First of all, I have to say that I firmly believe that alcoholism is something we inherit. Well, the likelihood that we will become alcoholics. Just as they have discovered that the daughters of women with breast cancer have a much higher possibility of getting breast cancer, so the children and grandchildren of alcoholics have a much higher possibility of becoming victims of the disease. However, I have to agree that circumstances can lead to us actually becoming alcoholics.
Here's a bit of my family history to help make my point. My Grandfather on my Mother's side was an alcoholic although I never knew that until some years ago. I did know that he came home drunk once and my tee-totalling Grandmother was furious with him. It was only until a cousin of mine visited me in Greece about 15 years ago that I found out that he drank on a daily basis. Apparently his weakness was vodka and he started drinking when he got to work in the morning - around 7:30 a.m. - and by mid-morning was a very cheery man indeed. At least he wasn't a mean drunk. Actually, he was a very generous man who often gave food and money to families in need. I adored him and never knew that the nap he had after lunch every day was really him sleeping off his morning bouts with AL. One of my father's half-brothers was an alcoholic and his half-sister was very fond of whiskey as well. Apparently in her last few years she mixed her drink with pain killers due to health problems. I believe that I inherited the AL gene from both sides of my family. I don't blame my upbringing or my childhood/teen experiences on the fact that I am an alcoholic for these reasons. My sister, two years younger than I am, another seven years younger, and my brother 9 years younger than me were all raised in the same home, by the same parents. My sister who is 2 years younger than me has a glass of wine, maybe two with her evening meal, if she wants it. If she doesn't, she doesn?t have it. My brother enjoys a beer or two but I don?t think it goes over that and there may be days when he doesn?t even have one. My younger sister starts with her white wine just after noon and continues ?til bedtime. She doesn't think she has a problem. I think she does.
There was never, ever an alcoholic beverage in our home when I was young. It was forbidden by our church. I had my first drink when I went away to college in the big city. You had to be 21 to buy liquor and buy it from the special licensed government stores. I was 18 but could easily pass for older than that, especially when I dressed the part. I got drunk often when I was in college. Later, I got drunk after work with friends at a place in the mountains I worked at for two winters. It was part of our almost every evening celebration. I can remember drinking wine out of a soda can while riding my bike around the small city where I lived after college and before the winter job. I thought I was so cool. I was just stupid. A short while after the first winter, I came to Greece for the first time. I met Mr. Stirly and we?d go to the local disco almost every night and have one drink each. I don?t recall ever getting drunk when I was with him. At some point in my late teens I had introduced my family to a sparkling white wine called Baby Duck. I can still remember, it was Thanksgiving and I was determined to get my parents to try some wine. I finally convinced them that they wouldn?t go to hell over one small glass of wine. They tried it, they liked it and having wine with meals at family celebrations became a habit. No one ever got drunk - we only ever had one glass each, maybe two tops. Mr. Stirly and I got married a couple of years after I first visited Greece. We only ever drank when we were with my family or if friends came over or we were visiting friends. We didn?t have either wine or beer with our daily meals. A couple of times at parties I drank a bit too much but only once do I remember getting drunk. Note that AL was rather expensive in Canada and that was one of the reasons that we didn?t have much booze in the house besides a bottle of wine, a couple bottles of beer and perhaps a bottle of rum for Mr. Stirly to enjoy a drink once in a while.
Fast forward to us moving to Greece. It is common here for people to drink wine or beer with their meal and it is unheard of that you would go out for dinner with family and/or friends and no one would be drinking. It is also a favourite pastime, especially in the summer to enjoy ouzo and ?mezedakia? say on a Sunday morning. I loved ouzo from the time I first tried it and since it was cheap, there was always a bottle in the house, and a fully stocked bar as well in case friends stopped by and someone wanted a drink. I started to enjoy an ouzo on the front balcony underneath the summer sky at night. It was so lovely and peaceful where we lived and it was something I really enjoyed. I started out with just a shot with some ice and water added. At some point I imagine that the one shot turned to two. A few years later, Mr. Stirly decided to buy a small supermarket. We had it for three years. We sold wine from a barrel and we had bottles of cheap gin, vodka and whiskey as well. During the last year or so, I started having a drink or two at work in the evening when I was by myself to break the boredom as business had gone down and customers were few. And I?d have a few glasses of wine after I got home from work at night. I also enjoyed a couple of glasses of wine on the sly while working on Saturday with Mr. Stirly and our sons. We eventually sold the business and I went to work for a TV company. I was under a lot of pressure at work and so the drinking continues to help me chill out after I got home at night ? usually around 8 or 9pm ? while I was cooking a meal for the next day and tidying up the house a bit. Anyway, the drinking to excess had become a habit that I kept up for many years. I had become a full-blown alcoholic although it was a while before I would admit it. Now I?ve gone into detail about this so you can understand what led up to my getting to that stage. I don?t know if I would have gone that route if we had stayed in Canada. I worked nights at our store in Canada the last three years we were there. I never drank at night, never drank during the day except if it was a holiday or perhaps a glass of wine with Sunday dinner. Drinking wasn?t the way of life there and things didn?t revolve around drinking on the weekend. We had small children and they were the centre of our life. I think that access to cheap booze here in Greece had something to do with my getting into an every-evening habit of having a shot or two. And the fact that alcohol was sold in the supermarkets and the corner stores, etc. It was and is cheap and readily available. In the beginning, I was lonely here without my family and wanted something to make me ?feel better?. Then a few years later, there was the worry that the store we had wasn?t going well and then the stress of working at the TV company. I can?t say that I would have become a full-blown alcoholic if we?d stayed in Canada but I can?t say that I would have. My sister who drinks a glass of wine a day, if she does, has been through an incredible number of difficulties both financially and health-wise for both her husband and herself. Yet she never turned to the bottle. My other sister who drinks more or less sailed through life and even tho? there were financial difficulties for them too, her drinking had started long before the bank foreclosed on their house.
As far as bad things that happened in the past to us having something to do with us being alcoholics, I can?t really say. I had what I considered to be a very good childhood. We were raised by parents who were devoted to their family and to each other. Their life revolved around family times. We were a lower middle class family but they did their best to provide for us and I can honestly say that we lacked for nothing. Money may have been tight at times but there was always a good roof over our heads, food on the table and family times that made wonderful memories.
Conclusion ? what I said in the beginning ? I believe that we inherit the genes but that circumstances play a great role in whether or not we will suffer from this disease, or simple have dormant genes.
interesting read Stirly,and thanks for the post.My parents didnt drink when rising me,but my dad turned to whiskey is his 80s!!lol! I swear,he hit the bottle bad when he was bed ridden and guess who was his bootlegger??!!The last year of his life he pretty much stopped as he got a very bad kidney infection and it frightened him,hed been caining the whiskey before hand.I think im like him,very extreme,love to be in control but when I decide to let go,I let gooooooooooo!!!
I think ive always used alcohol to hide from myself,not facing up to life and lacking in confidence and using booze to 'put my plans' on hold. Knowing what I needed to do,but drinking and hiding instead. I cant actually believe im doing as well as I am......honestly,I bloody well cant. Instead of looking foreword to a few poxi cans,im looking foreword to reading my book in blissful peace and quiet. Dare I say it,im finding it this time so much bloody easier? The last day I drank it was a sunday, I had started this crack of drinking alot on sundays,NEVER done that before.Making plans to get my bro or someone drop kids to school or bring them in late,this had gone on id say 6 weeks or so and I just said,this is bullshit!!Bullshit!! If I ever feel the urge to drink I think back to those very recent, lonely sundays,cos it was a lonely,sad ,feeling. Wanting to have a buzz but not wanting to become drunk and trying to balance the two all the while worrying about having to get up in the morning or not been able too.Total and utter fookin bullscrap!!lol! Never,never again.I swear I never want to go back to that again.
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
Zenstyle;1279766 wrote: Honestly... I don't know what to say Jan. I really don't. I just wish you would deal with your own problems first... with the pills and AL... so you can be a good mother to him. Remember when you straightened your act out to get him back? How did you feel then?
only the ones I must take daily...from the doc
booze is still a fight and things like this don't help..
but have had none..and has never been liquer which was my downfall..vodka..3 years free now.....
this is just breakng my heart ......
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
Jan if you are not drinking and popping pills, then I will eat my hat. I don't care what kind of OTC shite you are taking, they affect your mood and your behaviour. I am sick of tip toeing round you and not mentioning the feckin HERD of elephants in the room.
How the hell do you expect to get Ollie back while you are off yer chomp?
Get honest with yourself and COP ON! I, for one am here for you if you are genuinely looking for help to stop the madness."It's not your job to like me, it's mine!"
AF 10th May 2010
NF 12th May 2010
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Army Thread Tuesday 13th March
sorry jan, but oney's right. there're people here who can help you, you need to let themI have faced it, a life wasted, and I am never going back there again
To ya'll my name is inchy. I am an alcoholic - and priority number one is making it to the end of this day AF. No excuses.
18.08.13
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