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Six long months

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    Six long months

    Back in October, I woke up one morning and decided - with no uncertainty - that I would never drink again. I had had enough. Enough of being a slave to alcohol. Enough of not being available to my family. Enough of looking like a bloated, scarlet-faced loser. Enough of planning my liquor-store trips to not arouse suspicion that I might have a "problem". Enough of hiding the empties. Enough of waking up every morning feeling ashamed and terrified at what I might have done the night before.

    Enough of being the person no one could count on.
    Enough of being the person no one could talk to for fear of being criticized or yelled at.
    Enough of being the person I would never, ever tolerate as my own friend.

    Enough of wasting my god damn life.

    It was like a switch had been flipped. I had temporarily quit before, but never did I have the resolve I felt when I awoke on October 8, 2016. The day before was just an ordinary day for me. Went to work feeling like shit as usual, hoping no one could smell the alcohol that surely must be effusing from my pores. Friday nights were always the best anyway - nothing going on the next day and it had been another tough week at work so heck I deserved it anyway.

    I remember exactly what I drank that night. My usual double-bottle of cheap wine - which just a few years ago had been enough to get me through the night now only served to give me enough of a buzz to begin to loosen my lips. With the full magnum under my belt, it was time to finish off that emergency remaining liter of vodka hidden in the back of a seldom-used drawer in my office. Midnight came and went and I was only just starting to get a good buzz on. Still "thirsty" and horrifyingly out of alcohol, I turned to the pantry. A half hour later, four single serving bottles of Chardonnay and just enough cooking sherry to make me puke and I was ready to collapse on the couch.

    I awoke around noon in my usual sorry state. No one else appeared to be home. Checking my phone, I saw a characteristically cheery message from my wife informing me she had taken our son to the local library for music time, then to the park, then grocery shopping and she would be back by noon - oh and did I need anything while she was out? I struggled to get up, checked my surroundings, achy and parched I headed to the kitchen to grab a glass of water.

    "Look, Daddy's awake!!!" my wife exclaimed as she burst through the front door with more vim and vigor than I had anticipated for that hour of the day. A toddler in one hand, 4 or 5 bags of groceries in the other.

    And as I stood there - still in my pajamas, still disheveled and still certainly not presentable to even a casual observer - I looked at my wife in the doorway with our smiling son and our bags of groceries. It was at this seemingly innocuous moment that the switch flipped. In that terrifying instant I clearly saw MYSELF. Not through the eyes of my wife, as I often had before, but through the eyes of our precious, sweet son.

    I went upstairs to shower and I wept. As I showered, it was like the residue from decades of drinking was being cleansed from my skin, and from my soul. I promised myself I WILL be a better person. I WILL be the best version of me I can be. I am not perfect and I will make mistakes, but I will NOT EVER drink again. Life is too short, too precious and too damn hard to be doing it drunk.

    Six months have passed since that day, and I can unhesitatingly say that this was the best decision I have ever made. In many ways it feels like the longest six months of my life. I have done and learned so much in that time - more than I had done in the entire two decades prior. I am proud of the person I am becoming, proud of the way I am living my life and I look forward to the growth in my future.

    Stay sober, friends.

    ThirdTimesACharm

    #2
    Re: Six long months

    Great stuff 3T. Congratulations on turning your life around. Long may it continue and looks like it will.

    Legend!

    'I am part of all that I have met, yet all experience is an arch wherethro', gleams that untravelled world whose margins fade, forever and forever when I move'

    Zen soul Warrior. Freedom today-

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Six long months

      Congratulations ThirdTimes!! 6 months is awesome I absolutely loved your post-thank you
      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!

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Six long months

        Great stuff, I love the sound of strength and resolve in your post TTAC, congrats on 6 months of your new life. When 'we know' we just know, onwards and upwards we go.
        Ethanol is a toxic chemical, why would I drink it?

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Six long months

          Great work Thirdtime, great inspiring read & may you keep on your journey to a much better life, well done.:thumbsup:
          Last edited by mario; April 12, 2017, 01:58 AM.


          :congratulatory: Clean & Sober since 13/01/2009 :congratulatory:

          Until one is committed there is always hesitant thoughts.
          I know enough to know that I don't know enough.

          This signature has been typed in front of a live studio audience.

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Six long months

            Thanks for an amazing story. Your AF journey is well on its way. Inspiring!

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Six long months

              Awesome story. I am so happy for you and your family that you found your way out! Rock on.

              Pav

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Six long months

                :welldone::thumbsup::congratulatory:
                “If we are facing in the right direction, all we have to do is keep on walking.” – Zen proverb

                "See it as it is, not worse than it is just so you have a reason not to try." - Tony Robbins.

                Newbies Nest
                Newbies Nest Roll Call
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                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Six long months

                  Great work 3T! I feel like I had a kind of metamorphosis too.
                  I'm so happy for you and your family!
                  Day 1 again 11/5/19
                  Goal 1: 7 days :heartbeat:
                  Goal 2: 14 days :happy2:
                  Goal 3: 21 days :happy2:
                  11/27/19: messed up but back on track
                  12/14/19: bad doozy but back on track

                  One day at a time.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Six long months

                    Thank you everyone!

                    ThirdTimesACharm

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: Six long months

                      This is amazing, thank you for sharing and congratulations!

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: Six long months

                        Good for you for taking your life back!!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: Six long months

                          Fantastic work on your six months 3TAC !

                          I LOVED reading your story. It sings to me of how the mind can, in a moment, see the world differently and you are changed.......INSTANTLY!

                          You changed your mind and THEN you quit the drug.....not the other way round. This is what happened to me also.....a sort of epiphany. I think there is a distinct difference between choosing to quit and feeling forced to.

                          I am sure (like me) the actual quitting was still hard work but there is a certainty that carries you along.

                          Of course you must REMAIN sober and not think you are 'cured'.

                          The changes alcohol made biochemically to your brain are permanent, but I find I have a comfort that the change in mindset is, also, a one way switch.

                          I wish you a long sober life with your wife who clearly loves you dearly and your son, whose face 'flipped' your switch
                          Last edited by kuya; April 14, 2017, 05:45 PM.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: Six long months

                            Great job, 3TAC!
                            and thank you so much for sharing your story.. very inspiring.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Re: Six long months

                              What a powerful post!

                              I am so happy for you xxx

                              October was a good month 😉 I'm two days off six months myself xxx
                              AF since Halloween 2016

                              Trying to kill my Wine Witch! :smileyb:

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