Yesterday I celebrated 30 days AF - it's the longest I've gone AF since 2009.
When I was sober for 8 months before I kept a tally in my diary so it was easy enough to known what day I was on, even when I was past day 200.
However realistically once I got passed the first month I tended to think of it in terms of number of months rather than exact days, a bit like a new parent initially defines their baby in days / weeks old, but then starts referring to months / years as they got older. You don't hear anyone saying " my son is 1000 days old today"
I think counting days has a great advantage and acts as a huge incentive in the early days / weeks, it's great to see those AF days stack up like a string of pearls.
But what if someone does start drinking? I found when I was counting days and everything depended on it, it was as if " well I've broken my AF run of days, so back to square one" ive seen so many people on here totally demoralised by this, whereas realistically another way of looking at it is "I'm making huge progress, I'm no longer a daily drinker, I've been AF for 98.9% of the year" and so keep going AF. Rather than feeling they'd failed and going back to daily drinking, which is what I did because I'd broken my run of 257 AF days.
Although now I'm past day 30 I shall still continue to keep a tally of the exact number in my diary, however despite doing this I'm going to try and look at in terms of months from now on not days.
"Why" I hear you ask? "Haven't you just contradicted yourself? If the aim is to live an AF life, why does the number of days matter?"
Well the reason is, for some reason I want to know when I've got passed that day 257, I seem obsessed with this, once I'm passed I shall stop counting and just concentrate on the 1 year anniversary, and others to follow! Do you think this is the right thing to do?
Would love to know what other people think?
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