Thanks to Bac I have been largely sober for over a year now. I guess it has been sometimes moderating, with a gradual slope towards complete sobriety. Several blocks of four months at a time of sobriety, peppered with a few "weekends only" here and there. And no more drinking-related problems, happy to report.
But what bugs me now is the nagging memories of people that I either embarrassed myself in front of, or was just a plain full-on weird jerk to. Mostly this happened in friendly-professional settings. A couple times to people who were trying to do the right thing and help me out. I'm gay and strangely these were almost exclusively with older gay men, never sexually related, but I feel like I felt comfortable enough around them to disappoint them, if that makes sense.
Anyway, because it was narrowly more professional and they haven't seemed to try to contact me should I just move on with my life and call it a loss? I feel like explaining myself could largely be received as a selfish move (relieving myself of guilt), and one awkwardly out-of-the-blue. Honestly, I would have to track them down to explain myself in the first place. Which alone makes me think I should just move on.
I also feel like it was something I didn't mean to do. It was something out of my control, I was "going through some shit," and I mean even beyond the drinking. Strangely I feel like if they cared so much they could have tried harder to reach out to me, too. I didn't, after all, do anything TO them, other than alienate them. I didn't steal, hit, manipulate, etc. for the record. Just disappointed. Nevertheless, the memories still haunt me. And so does the thought of opening all that up again.
I probably wont ever contact them, but I was just wondering what other people in similar situations may have done, or what they think they might do. I know AA is all about contacting people and apologizing. But I also know how most of us feel about AA, and its guilt-based approach.
Thanks!
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