I?ve been reading the posts on this forum for a while now so I thought it was about time that I introduced myself. My name is Justin; I?m a 29 year old man and live in Hampshire, England. I?ve been drinking regularly and heavily since my mid-teens and alcohol has had a negative effect on my life ever since, devastatingly so for the last eight years. I am also a regular cocaine user.
My first foray into the world of recovery began about five years ago after a serious drink-driving incident and the threat of a custodial sentence finally forced me to confront my issues with alcohol. I freely admitted to being an alcoholic without having any idea what the word actually meant. I simply thought that I would be able to stop drinking and sort my life out. After all, I have a very strong will and when I decide to do something I do it. How wrong I was.
Whilst I tried and failed to maintain abstinence, I started to attend occasional AA meetings. As an archetypal Englishman I find expressing my emotions very difficult - even more so in a group setting. I am also an atheist and an individualist with a huge ego. Those of you who attend AA will no doubt see the problem with this combination!
After 18 months or so of continual relapse I reached a point of such despair that I was finally ready to accept some help. I checked myself into rehab for 28 days and came out feeling healthier, happier and ready to start rebuilding my wreckage of a life. They had even managed to sell me on the merits of AA!
For the next two years I managed to stay completely clean and sober, rebuild my relationships and set myself back up in business. To the outside world everything seemed to be going well but it was hell. I discovered that enforced abstinence can be just as debilitating as active addiction. As the months went by my craving for alcohol increased steadily until it pervaded my every waking moment until just over a year ago I started drinking again.
For the first six months or so everything seemed to be going well. I was drinking heavily but managed to stay in control to some extent. I was still managing to work and I had a fantastic social life ? something I had missed enormously during my two years of abstinence. However, this did not last. My drinking and cocaine use quickly started to take over again and for the last few months I have lived in a permanently alcohol and drug induced hell.
Having read Dr. Ameisen?s book and researched the use of Baclofen extensively online I decided to give it a try. Unfortunately neither my GP nor my psychiatrist was prepared to proscribe baclofen for me and so I ordered it online. I started today with 10mg three times a day and plan to titrate up following the model and advise given in Dr. Phillip Thomas? book ?The B4a Baclofen Handbook? although I realise that I will have to alter this to take into account how I react to the medication.
Anyway, that?s me! I hope I haven?t rambled on for too long. All advice and wisdom gratefully received.
Justin.
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