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My Personal Way Out

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    My Personal Way Out

    I spent many years drinking, heavily since I was about 23 and for most of that time I didn't want to stop. I got married when I was 20 to a lovely girl and we decided early on to have two kids so that we'd still be young enough to enjoy life when they had grown up and left home. I never likes pubs or clubbing - far too many people and I hated having to stand at a bar waiting to get served - so I spent most of my drinking time in the house. I considered this my right as I'd been working all day and deserved my treat. The weekends were a particular pleasure as I'd go to the booze shop on a Friday night and drink myself silly while my wife went out with her friends. We often got invited out on Saturdays and I'd stay sober until a couple of hours before the event so as not to be an embarressment. This courtesy eventually stopped, as I preferred to get drunk during the day and would often go out roaring drunk and not remember a thing, or just not go. I didn't care one way or the other. I just wanted peace to do what I wanted.
    Meanwhile the children were growing up. I'd make time every Sunday to spend the day with my family and we'd have a lot of fun but I never realised until much later that they had come to dread the weekends; particularly Saturdays. I was just a drunk and they hated coming in on Saturdays and seeing me drinking or out cold on the couch at 5 o'clock in the evening. Usually I'd wake up and go get some more and that would be as far as my memories went. Some Sundays I'd wake with burst knuckles - on occasion the odd broken finger and find that I'd punched another hole in one of the doors. I'd vow, every time, that that would be the last...and mean it, but come Tuesday or Wednesday, I'd be back round the shop, salivating profusely and dying to get as much vodka down my neck as quickly as I could. To this day I cannot understand why. I knew drink was ruining, or more accurately, had ruined my life and that of those around me, but I just kept going. I think I thought that that was who I am and that was all there is to it.
    Four years ago my first grandchild was born and I made a decision, yet again to quit, but not before I'd wet the baby's head and made an arse of myself for the thousanth time. That's when I found MWO.
    To cut a very long story a little shorter, about two years ago I hit rock bottom. I can still feel the crash. I was battered and bruised, begging a bed from my then ex-wife - who never gave up no me - unemployed and drunk. I had nothing and nobody and I just wanted gone.
    That was the turning point....
    I had an appointment to see my doctor after getting beat up by my very angry son. I decided then and there that I couldn't do this on my own and if there was any help available, I was going to take it. My doctor was brilliant. She set me up with some medication and a counsellor who helped me get a place to live. I applied for every job going and eventually found one; nothing special, but I make enough to pay my way and a little left over - 'Fun Money' I call it - and spent many months working out a way to live as simply and contentedly as possible. Drink had taken up all of my leisure time for twenty years and finding something to fill that time was going to be hard, or so I thought. There have always been things that I wanted to do; learning and finding ways to keep myself healthy and also delving into my spiritual nature, which I must say has been a revelation. It's just a matter of getting up off my arse and making things happen. I have never blamed anyone for my problems and I knew that I was responsible for Me and I was disgusted at how weak I had become.
    It's been 23 months or thereabouts since I took control of myself and though I miss a nice cool pint some days, I'm not daft enough to want to get myself in any more trouble.
    Everything has changed. My relationships with people, and myself and I'm glad they have. I live at a much more gentle pace. I don't live in fantasy-land any more. I know what's real and what matters. There's come some sort of self-reliance; not in a material sense, but a deeper kind of integity that's giving me new priorities. I have discovered that I can have a good effect on things and that it's not all about me, though only I can sort myself out. It can't be done for me. I can have a good life without drinking and without associating fun with booze. In all my life I have found that most bad things that have happened to me have happened while I was drinking.
    I'm genuinely grateful to have another shot at life and I don't want to mess it up again; mine or anybody elses. I still feel like a Newbie. There's still so much to learn about everything that I used to take for granted and I'm having a great time finding out.

    #2
    My Personal Way Out

    Beautiful post Popeye.

    I remember your rock bottom very well and I have been a witness to your climb back..little by little, bit by bit you pulled yourself up by the bootstraps, despite others telling you that you couldn't do it and hampering your progress with mean and hurtful comments. Yet you never faltered or complained because you told me that it didn't matter, nothing was going to deter you and you meant what you said.

    You have embraced sobriety and your achievement with a quiet grace and dignity, not shouting it from the rooftops but just getting on with it and doing it beautifully.

    You are a fine man Popeye and I am proud to call you a friend. Bravo xx
    "It's not your job to like me, it's mine!"

    AF 10th May 2010
    NF 12th May 2010

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      #3
      My Personal Way Out

      Lovely motivating and positive post popeye and i am delighted that you have found your way out. great work my scottish friend.


      :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.

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        #4
        My Personal Way Out

        Pops,

        I fully agree with what Oney said (she has a knack for it, don't you think?).

        You've quite an inspiration to me - showing how things can be done calmly but with incredible determination.
        I'll do whatever it takes
        AF 21/08/2009

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          #5
          My Personal Way Out

          hi all,well im out the door , to like popeye said,WORK, VERY IMPRESSIVE POST POP S,your story is a lot likemine,i can relate,specially on how the ABUSE ? alchohol not only can affect us,but how it will affect our family members,you my friend are in inspiration to all,gyco

          Comment


            #6
            My Personal Way Out

            It's been an absolute inspiration to follow your journey Pops.
            I remember your rock bottom and how you dragged yourself back up with such courage and quiet determination.
            Congrats on your new life:-)
            "The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person doing it"

            Comment


              #7
              My Personal Way Out

              Popeye, what an inspiring post. Congratulations on your work to stop drinking and reclaim your life. Exploring the spiritual side is an interesting process, isn't it? I realize more and more every day that what I was so desparately chasing through AL was right there all the time. Just had to get sober to see it.

              Thank you for sharing yourself here. You give me hope.

              DG
              Sobriety Date = 5/22/08
              Nicotine Free Date = 2/27/07


              One day at a time.

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                #8
                My Personal Way Out

                Thank you so much pop. I'm proud to know you...Techie
                Outside of a dog a book is mans best friend. Inside of a dog its too dark to read

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                  #9
                  My Personal Way Out

                  Sharing a part of your journey like that spreads seeds hope and gratitude. Those my friend, are an invaluable everlasting gift. Thank you for that, popeye :h
                  sigpic
                  Thoughts become things..... choose the good ones. ~TUT

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                    #10
                    My Personal Way Out

                    Pops - I didnt know the pre AF Popeye and the one I see posting is a lovely happy contented guy with nothing but positive vibes to share, what a wonderful outcome to a rocky journey
                    "In the depths of winter I finally learned there was in me an invincible summer ."
                    AF - JAN 1st 2010
                    NF - May 1996

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                      #11
                      My Personal Way Out

                      Thank's for writing that Pop's. Very inspirational, and motivational post. I like the last line about having a great time finding out about the thing's you've taken for granted. Me too.

                      All the best to you my friend.

                      '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-

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                        #12
                        My Personal Way Out

                        Pops, I read that with a proud tear in my eye ........... you were my very first friend here and I still remember the day when we both first joined, you were PaulB and I was PaulaW .....then we discovered cartoon characters

                        We have shared many highs and lows during the last 4 years, and I am so very proud to know you and to call you my friend .......... you are an inspiration to many here.

                        Thanks for sharing this, I hope that you are very proud of yourself :l:l

                        Much love, Paula :h:h
                        sigpicXXX

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                          #13
                          My Personal Way Out

                          Hi Popeye,

                          You were one of the first people to welcome me to MWO, so it's with great pleasure that I can now read about you.

                          Your post is inspiring and heart warming, and I just want to thank you for letting us be a part of your life by giving us this story.:l And, of course, congratulations on what you've achieved - we all know the work it takes, and I admire you greatly for it.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            My Personal Way Out

                            Popeye,

                            What a delightful post. Proof of what can be achieved if you stick to your plan - and stick to it you did. You have my utmost respect.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              My Personal Way Out

                              Pops, that is an amazing post. Your journey has not been smooth but each juncture must have been an incredible learning curve.
                              I love your simple philosophies and the way that you approach your new life.
                              Very inspirational my friend and I wish you many many more years of finding your true wonderful self :l
                              Living now and not just existing since 9th July 2008
                              Nicotine Free since 6th February 2009

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