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    Pav, Thanks for the reminder about that gratitude thing :smile:! It has become such a constant part of my daily life to notice how 'things would be different (worse) if I were still drinking' that I haven't even thought to mention it in awhile. Like not drinking, being grateful is the new normal - and for that I am very grateful!!

    OK, you hit on something that made it almost impossible for me to accept I was in the mess I was in. In most aspects of life I'm very self-controlled, self-motivated, and disciplined. I have 2 exceptions, though, although it is only in retrospect that I see more clearly what was going on.

    I always preferred carbohydrates to other foods - especially breads, baked goods, starchy vegetables, ice cream, etc. I was pretty indifferent to protein or fat unless it came with the carbs or was in the form of cheese. Occasionally I overate foods like cookies until I was uncomfortable and could never understand why I did something so stupid. I never thought "addiction", however. I just thought I was a "pig" - and all the media messages pretty much supported that self-image. I wasn't as thin as I wanted to be (again, media messages) but I wasn't overweight so it never seemed like a huge problem. My taste for most of those foods decreased when I had to quit eating gluten because 30 years ago, the gluten-free substitutes were gross. But, I still ate ice cream, candy, and other sources of sugar UNTIL... some time in my mid to late 30s I started drinking wine.

    My interest in sweets and starches decreased over time as my wine intake increased and while I ate the newly available gluten free breads, pastas, etc. that became available, I never overate them. When I found out several years ago that I needed to really restrict sugar and carbs to get my blood sugar down, it really wasn't difficult. I used L-glutamine sometimes but the real reason was... Daily wine drinking. I think my problem with alcohol escalated as I got my blood sugar under control by eating very little sugar/starchy carbohydrate. Unlike what is often written, red wine contains very little sugar so it does not raise blood sugar and I (stupidly) used that to justify continuing to drink it. However, it crosses into the brain where it is metabolized for energy and it strongly activates the reward system - it is like sugar on steroids so no wonder it wasn't so hard to give up sugar and carbs - I had something that was even "better".

    So in retrospect, I think my eating behavior had similar addictive elements - it's just that it was at a lower level in terms of compulsion/reward and the consequences weren't as awful. It wasn't ruining my life and I didn't constantly hate myself (just if I ate a whole package of Milanos at a sitting or gained a few pounds). There is the thought that disordered carbohydrate metabolism is at the root of alcoholism, at least in some people. My experience certainly has been that they are connected. When I first gave up alcohol, on the occasions that I did eat sugary carbs, it set up an intense craving for alcohol the next day. Avoiding that trigger is an additional incentive to stay away from "treats". Interestingly, people who have gastric bypass are at increased risk of alcohol addiction post-surgery. They can't eat much at a time and are no longer getting the "hits" from the foods they used to eat that contributed to their obesity - but they can drink. And sadly, many do.

    Given that I have no interest in other addictive substances and those I do consume such as caffeine are easily moderated and I hate most activities that are considered behavioral addictions (e.g. gambling, pornography), I really don't think I have an "addictive personality". I think I have a brain that likes the "hit" that sugar and alcohol provides so if I have some, I want (and think I need) a lot. If I have very little (sugar) or none (alcohol), everything is fine.

    If anyone is reading this and recognizes themselves as a person who struggles with both food (carb/sugar) and alcohol intake problems, giving up both instead of substituting one for the other might be the way to go.

    NS

    PS: alcohol leads to insulin-resistance, which is at the root of diabetes and several other diseases so don't let the fact that it doesn't directly raise blood sugar fool you as I allowed to happen!
    Last edited by NoSugar; May 23, 2015, 03:51 PM.

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      Ok. Just ate an early dinner and craving is gone. However, self pity is not. Sitting alone at a table in a grocery store, eating food from their buffet, out of a cardboard to go box, on sat. Night of a holiday weekend feels...well...pathetic. Anyway, off to a meeting and then home. Trying to find something to be grateful for. I did NOT give in to the craving. Finally, a week down.

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        Originally posted by Hanna View Post
        Ok. Just ate an early dinner and craving is gone. I did NOT give in to the craving. Finally, a week down.
        THERE's something to be grateful for, right there. Keep it up, Hanna. I know it is a hard time, but drinking would only make it worse, I promise. You got this!

        Pav

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          Good evening Nesters,

          Hanna, one week is great - keep going & skip the pity party. The self-imposed pity party kept me in hell for years.....
          I quit drinking then quit smoking about 6 weeks or so later & I realized very quickly that if I was going to succeed I had to quit the self-pity thing too. NOW I'm grateful I did. You can do it too Hanna! Did I mention my husband lost the last of his mind & walked out more than a year after my quit? No excuse, no apology, just picked up & ran. I did not drink or try to smoke my way out of that, never even thought of doing that. Four years later (last May), with his mind mostly restored he walked back in, still no explanation. I still don't smoke or drink, ha ha!!

          Dutch, treat yourself with kindness & don't try to rush through the grieving process :hug:

          Hi there Pav & everyone!

          Stella & the gang seemed happy to see me today - no chicken bras found Lil, LOL!!!

          Wishing everyone a peaceful & safe night in the nest!

          Lav
          AF since 03/26/09
          NF since 05/19/09
          Success comes one day at a time :thumbs:

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            NS, Hanna and OK, I wish I had your non-addictive genes. You name it, and I crave it -- bad carbs and sugar (an unholy feast of Doritos and Oreos, anyone?), shoe shopping, bad boyfriends, Downton Abbey marathons and Kung Pao Chicken (sorry Stella). PC Solitaire shot my productivity for a full six months. And, don't even walk this way with a roll of bubble wrap. No, no, no. It's like crack to me.

            Luckily, I conquered the really harmful stuff like smoking cigarettes and deliberately picked up some healthy addictions like exercise. I am also grateful that I never adopted bizarre habits like those people on the Learning Channel who eat sofa cushions. I can see it now. "Where'd our sectional go?" "Oh, LilBit had the weekend off, so..."

            Yay Hannah on your week. Stay strong.
            "If you fell down yesterday, get up today." -- H.G. Wells

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              Good one LilBit! I think I saw one of those - it was a closet Windex drinker. Ay yi yi. If a handful of people told me that eating sofa cushions or drinking Windex felt good, I know my mind would go there. I guess that's the nature of the addictive brain.
              AF since January 7, 2014 *Never, never, never give up. ~ Winston Churchill*

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                Good morning Nesters,

                Happy Sunday to everyone! Starting off with a cool 54 degrees & plenty of sunshine today, yay!

                I honestly have never heard of the eating sofa cushions addiction - probably a good thing, yuck. People can really be bizarre. I guess I'll add that to my gratitude list
                The menfolk (husband & son) are heading north today for a fishing trip tomorrow on one of those boats you see on TV show Wicked Tuna. I am much happier on dry land

                Wishing everyone a wonderful AF day!

                Lav
                AF since 03/26/09
                NF since 05/19/09
                Success comes one day at a time :thumbs:

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                  OkOren, I think I fall in to the "all or nothing" bucket also. I cannot eat half a candy bar. I don't leave projects halfway done, I finish what I start. I like rules, and I dislike gray areas! I usually clean my plate. I don't waste things and I am punctual to a fault. Is this Nature or Nurture? My Dad would start a project and get 90% done and quit. Frustrating! We'd all be SO excited when he would begin and then disappointed when it was never finished. My brother and sister are ALWAYS late. I was late for school every day of my life. Frustrating! Rules were not consistently implemented or followed in my family....others would do/get things, but when it was MY turn, the rules changed. Frustrating! I guess when you add all this up, you get a person who was frustrated a LOT! I wonder if this contributes to the addictive personality? FRUSTRATION is a very powerful emotion. I am filled with it in my job currently. I was frustrated the most by AL. The classic love/hate relationship. Maybe thats why, when I finally stopped, I never looked back. I am done. I did every single thing I knew to do to live with it but I simply could not. I gave it every benefit of the doubt, but it kept lying to me. I COUNTED on AL, and it let me down repeatedly. Enough was enough. Thank you for the thought provoking question!

                  I think our lives are defined by certain traumas that take place.... For me, it was 911, the death of my brother and parents, and when I got sober. Its a big lifestyle change for sure. But I tell you, if you muscle your way thru those cravings you will build up an awesome immunity. I cannot tell how how peaceful it is now in my head. NO desire to drink, THAT is the dream of every Alkie. Stay with this and I promise you will have it. Going back, just to test the waters, will only drag you back in the rabbit hole. You feed it, and you own it. No amount of sober time cures addiction, it only goes into remission. Just like the peanut allergy people, we will always be addicted to Al. Protect your quit like a pot of gold!

                  Hope everyone is having a wonderful holiday! Byrdie
                  All you gotta do, is get thru this day. AF 1/20/2011
                  Tool Box
                  Newbie's Nest

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                    Hi, All:

                    OK - good question. Here's the thing that I understand about alcohol - it is ADDICTIVE! It is not an "overuse weakness," even though it feels like that, and the shaming of alcoholics has led to that feeling. It is not simple will power or change of habits that will get you through once you reach a certain point. The new literature on overuse of alcohol seems to indicate that if you are aware enough early EARLY on, you can thwart addiction with control, but that window seems pretty small, and many of us don't seem to see it at all. SO - I'll bet you get all sorts of answers about other addictions - there are "sister" addictions, OCD, anxiety, etc., all of which might make the numbing effects of alcohol more attractive at the start, but there are also people who just plain become addicted. I have found it a lot easier to stop looking back and asking WHY did this happen, and to start looking forward and asking what's next! You don't seem to be dwelling in the past or anything, but I know I spent my first few months asking "why me?" and that didn't feel very productive.

                    Byrdie - I, too, did every single thing I could to try to live with alcohol. We weren't meant to be. I was with a friend who brought over some good gin - a particular weakness of mine. He poured about an ounce in a cup and nursed it for an hour. NEVER, not once in my drinking career, did I nurse an ounce of booze for an hour. "I am a fast drinker!" I used to say. Not so fast with a glass of water... If one ounce made me feel so great, I spent the rest of the evening chasing that feeling and never finding it again.

                    Big family day in Pav land - one group for breakfast and one group for dinner. I LOVE my family, but every once in a while I wish we had more time for other friends... Grass is always greener...

                    Happy SOBER Sunday. So very happy to be typing this UN HUNG and feeling good. Stay close, nest. We got this.

                    Pav

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                      Hello friends!

                      Just checking in. Hope you are all enjoying a nice sunny Sunday!

                      Over the past week, I've continued to see signs that my whole thought process is changing. When I've tried to quit in the past, my resolve was not strong. I would have a bad day and use that as an excuse to have a drink - just one, of course. And ok another, and just one more before I go to bed.... and well.. no sense in leaving 2 glasses left in this 1.5L bottle. You know what, I've had a rough week in general - I'll just open one more small bottle and have a glass or two, I deserve it.

                      This time around, I can see clearly that if I'm having a bad day, or feeling irritable, or down in the dumps, having a drink is NOT GOING TO SOLVE THAT - and when I wake feeling shitty the next morning, I'll have a pile of guilt on top of it.

                      My thoughts now are - hey ok I'm feeling irritable today, or having a bad day at work, or feeling overwhelmed BUT AT LEAST I'M NOT DRUNK - AT LEAST I HAVE MENTAL CLARITY!!! I've somehow, and quite suddenly mentally toppled alcohol from the high position it once served down to the depths of evil shittiness where it belongs. And I'm really happy about that mind-shift, because it makes everything so much easier.

                      Anyway... have a GREAT AL-FREE WEEKEND EVERYONE. Hope it's a long and happy one!!

                      LostAndFound

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                        Howdy nesters! I seem to be getting a bit lazy, I do a post from my heart and mind in the Umpteenth Quit thread, and then I can’t seem to come up with anything else new to post here so I just rely on copy and paste haha. I’m old enough though to have earned the privilege of being lazy! I usually post once a week in the Nest, there are enough seasoned veterans here to help all of you get through day by day, but I read all the posts every day to watch the progress of everyone. So here is my contribution for the week, take what you like and leave the rest….

                        Isn`t it amazing that when you quit drinking, everyone has an opinion for you? These opinions can range from "It's about time, man. You were getting out of control." to "You didn't have a problem." After you've been sober for some time, these opinions change. Yesterday while cutting grass at the farm, the neighbour Tommy stopped by, he remarked when he saw me drinking a Coke in the middle of a hot afternoon, "Wow, are you still not drinking?" My response, "Yep, haven't had a drink in over 4 months, not one!" His response, "We'll have to cure you of that."

                        What an interesting way of looking at things. We have to cure people from drinking too much, yet we then need to also cure them from not drinking as a socially accepted norm. We all know you can drink too much, but apparently, as adults who participate in normal adult activities, we can also drink too little. Kind of like saying someone who quit smoking due to lung cancer needs to light one up more often. But this conversation leads me to another thing I've been reading on here a lot recently: moderation. See, normal people can drink in moderation, don't have to drink every day, and can have the occasional drink without it turning into 10. We also read a very few of the "success" stories on the boards - a few members here can relate tales of friends or acquaintances, or even themselves who stopped a problem drinking habit, only to successfully return to moderate drinking after a year or three of sobriety. I personally feel there is a lot of danger in these pervasive thoughts. Why? Well for situations exactly like the one I had yesterday. Whether society acknowledges it or not, we are encouraged to drink. Advertising for liquor and beer is everywhere. People on TV spend time in bars, or have wine with meals, or enjoy a beer at a ball game. We have a socially accepted moral that normal adults drink. Grownups have wine at dinner. Grownups chug a few beers at a ball game. So let's combine this subtle social pressure with an introverted personality type. Many people with these personality types use alcohol as a social lubricant, to make them feel more relaxed or to help them get over a general discomfort in groups (even if it is only two people). Alcohol encourages conversation (quantity of it anyways), and can make even the most ignorant of people somewhat tolerable. Plus it meets the subtle pressure that we can conform, just by having one or two. To me, this is where the recovering alcoholic needs to be super cautious, and avoid acts of self-delusion.

                        When I quit drinking this last time, I promised God, Bubba, and myself that I've stopped for good. I know exactly how much I'll be drinking in the future. Zero drinks. See, there are so many good reasons to engage in moderate drinking. Heck, with heart problems in my family, there's also health benefits to the odd glass of red wine. Why wouldn't someone want to prove that they are "over" their addiction, then go back to having wine with dinner, and the odd cold beer on a hot afternoon? All of these reasons make sense to me. They truly do.

                        But........(and here's where the self-honesty kicks in) can I say that with 110% certainty that one glass of wine, or a beer, will not have me back exactly where I was 4 months ago? Will I be depressed, alone, suicidal? Full of regret? Continuing to engage in riskier and riskier behaviour? Will I be dead? Unless I can 110% say to myself that NO, this one drink will not lead back down the path I was on before, then that one drink shall never touch my lips. Because deep down, I know I don't want to moderate. I want to get wrecked, trashed, pissing-down-my-leg drunk. Sure, I may be able to "moderate" at first, but soon enough, I'll be hiding beer cans in the basement, and getting lit up while driving. To fail to acknowledge this truth (yes, it is the truth) is simply another excuse to use for thinking I can actually be a normal drinker, and pretend something is other than what it actually is.

                        Will I ever have another drink in my lifetime? Who knows, what will tomorrow will bring? Right now all I’m worried about is today. But unless I can say with 110% certainty that moderation will not lead to a return to the downward spiral, then I shall never have that drink. So unless you guys have that 110% certainty that I don’t have, no quitting on your quit eh! And have a great rest of the weekend, an extra-long one for our American friends.
                        Quitting and staying quit isn't easy, its learning a whole new way of thinking. It's accepting a new way of life, and not just accepting it, embracing it...
                        Worry about tomorrow, tomorrow. Just get through today. Tomorrow will look after itself when it becomes today, because today is all we have to think about.
                        Friendship is not about how many friends you have or who you've known the longest. It's about who walked into your life, said "I'm here for you", and proved it.

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                          The addictive brain,I told the umpteenth quit thread about how on Friday I went to the doctor and I have a ear infection, so me and my youngest daughter went to a nearby casino for lunch while the antibiotic script was being filled, I threw 5 bux into a machine and won 60 oooh that fueled a fire!I wanted to stay and play all day long,use whatever money was in my purse and when that ran out,pull some off a credit card, thank goodness she was with me,cuz even though she just turned 21 she actually has a brain in her head haha,she said quit while your ahead, and I did,but its creepy how I still got that adrenaline rush and I don't care addict attitude, that's why I usually avoid casinos like the plague, I still do Doritos,pizza and coffee though
                          I have too much shit to do today and tomorrow to drink:sohappy:

                          I'm taking care of the "tomorrow me":thumbsup:
                          Drinkin won't help a damn thing! Will only make me sick for DAYS and that ugly, spacey dumb feeling-no thanks!

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                            Hi everyone, nobody showed up to the workout today, they all had an excuse, I think AL had something to do with it but I don't care, I am committed to the gym and if I have to work out by myself I don't care. I am just glad I got out of here and worked out. Oh well maybe they will all show up on Tuesday, but I don't care, I will go anyways. Talked to hubby and he said go for yourself and don't worry about anyone else. Last week I would have decided not to go because no one else was going but feeling great right now for going. Thanks, newbies, could not have done it without you.

                            Have a good AF night.
                            KAREN

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                              Good evening Nesters,

                              Hey good for you Karen going to the gym just for yourself! That's what I call excellent self-care

                              I have four sleeping dogs at my feet, one slightly grumpy cat staring at me from the top of the sofa. Thank God the Stellas are out in the coop - ha ha!!! I haven't actually talked to another human today except for a few text messages, geez!!
                              I've been called to duty at 9:30 tomorrow morning to watch my grandsons. Grateful there will be no hangover to worry about, right?

                              Pauly, stay out of those casinos....the devil lives there, ha ha!!!

                              Wishing everyone a safe night in the nest!

                              Lav
                              AF since 03/26/09
                              NF since 05/19/09
                              Success comes one day at a time :thumbs:

                              Comment


                                Hi Nesters - just a quick check in. I had a great day today spending time with mom and chilling out on the beach with a fabulous lady and new friend.

                                Like Cowboy (incredible post BTW Cowboy) I don't post often here but I follow daily. There have been some really thought-provoking threads lately. And, even though I've got more than a year AF, I'm sticking to the Nest. I've explored, and posted, on a few other threads but I feel safe here, like its home.

                                Dutch - I am so very sorry for your loss. Your strength is showing, along with your grace.

                                Hanna, I remember one night during a time we were going through divorce proceedings, I went out for dinner physically alone but with my self pity tagging along. I was thinking how pathetic I'd look sitting alone (in a fairly nice restaurant), not having wine or a cocktail, but felt like it was something I needed to do. By the time I got to the hostess stand, I had resolved that I wouldn't look pathetic, I'd fake it, pretend this was something that was typical rather than frightening. I'd be confident on the outside. There were two men had who had come in right behind me. The hostess says "Three for dinner?" "No, just one," I said in my most non-pathetic voice all the while thinking this was a bad idea. When the waitress came to the table for my drink order she asked if I was waiting for someone (no, but why don't we just call the media right now and tell them pathetic, lonely woman eating alone at nice restaurant.). But, I didn't say that. I told her I was taking myself out for a nice dinner, that no one would be joining me, and that I was going to savor the experience. I made it through and didn't inhale my food so I could leave ASAP. I can't say it was a great, fun evening. But as I was driving home, I felt a sense of accomplishment and, at least for the rest of that night, self pity stayed in the back seat. That event was pretty early in my quit, and, hard for me to even believe, but almost a year ago. To repeat what we hear so often from our senior members (Byrdie, Pav, Lav, NS, etc,) it really does get easier!!

                                For us in the US, tomorrow is Memorial Day - we honor those who have served our country. I'll take mom down to the National Cemetery for a commemoration service then to the casino (it's what she wants to do!). The head back home Tuesday am. We went to Vegas two weeks ago and it was not nearly as tough as I though it would be. Any time the free cocktails came around, I requested sparkling water and it was no problem. And I did significantly better at the poker table! Hmmm...could there be a connection? :happy2:

                                Have a safe and sober holiday (or normal Monday for our Int'l friends).

                                Hugs,
                                Mary
                                P.S. After rereading this, I realize it's not such a "quick check-in" and I need to work on my overuse of parentheses. (Oh,well...it's always something.)
                                Mary Lou

                                A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty. Winston Churchill

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