Hi freebee,
I'll only offer you a comment on one point since I'm still sorting myself out...
Good luck to us both.
It’s not about achieving ‘managed drinking’. I am not trying to get to the point of feeling I can drink 5 times a week, no more than 3 per day, as per somebody's guidelines... I am trying to get to the point where I basically leave it be altogether without even thinking about it - because I don't want it anymore - but without the constraints of feeling I am doomed to start drinking again if I touch a drop. I know people who as a rule do not drink at all in their daily lives, but will have one or two (max) on special occasions where custom calls for it (a wedding, a retirement party, or a special evening with their significant other two or three times a year.) To me that's the best of both worlds, and is where I would like to go. Not being a drinker without drawing awkward attention for 'having a problem'. Like it or not, being seen as a problem drinker who must “recoil from it as if from a hot flame” does draw negative and judgmental vibes from those around us, that's just the world we live in... or at least it’s the one I live in. Those vibes may range from boisterous rebuffs from drinking buddies all the way down to whispers behind the back from family, relatives and colleagues, but they are definitely there. I know from being there when the abstainers are out of earshot. Now, the boisterous drinking buddies do not merit delicate handling – if they make themselves a problem they need to be cut out, period. It’s all the others whose worlds I do not suddenly want to become an awkward presence in. I could see a hidden fear in my wife’s reaction… her words said “you? no, you don’t drink too much, at least not when I’m around…” but her eyes said “oh, no! please don’t put us in that boat!”
Now, if the whispering behind MY back was “Umm, no, I don’t think there’s anything wrong… I saw him have a glass of wine at Christmas, he must just not want to drink today...” I’d be ok with that.
Am I really being delusional here? (PS: I sincerely hope I have not offended anyone in the above; as said before everyone is different, and one person’s approach need not be another’s).
I guess the way of getter there is the topic of discussion. For many stopping cold seems to have been the only way to go. I don't know if it's a question of weak willpower or the fact that I've been a drinker for so long (or one being the result of the other perhaps) but I have never succeeded at going a whole month without alcohol, though I have tried several times. Looking back at those occasions though I note 2 things in common each time:
1. It was a tough slog, a battle to abstain from something I wanted; whatever time I did stay dry was spent knowing I was really looking forward to drinking again. Every day I was playing mind games with myself and using tricks and strategies to get myself through the hours without drinking. It was no fun and sooner or later the tricks and strategies ran their course.
2. When I did let myself drink again it was a capitulation... "good, now that we have officially failed at that, as we knew we eventually would, let's get back to enjoying our drinks, shall we?" Then it would be back to daily drinking again in the same old, often excessive pattern.
Among the insight and experiences I've read from others on this site, "don't beat yourself up if you slip, just get back on the wagon again without delay" has been tremendously helpful to me. I have been practising that more and more in the few months since joining here. Overall I am spending a lot less time with alcohol in my system, and I feel I am starting to see a real change in the extent to which I desire alcohol. The last few times I had a scotch or martini I did not get any enjoyment out of it and didn't bother having a second one. Even beer and wine are starting to taste like foreign and unwelcome substances, and my cravings for them are becoming fewer. Part of that might be psychological as I've become more sensitized to just how bad this stuff is for me and the need to put it behind me. Regardless, I see it as a good sign.
It’s not about achieving ‘managed drinking’. I am not trying to get to the point of feeling I can drink 5 times a week, no more than 3 per day, as per somebody's guidelines... I am trying to get to the point where I basically leave it be altogether without even thinking about it - because I don't want it anymore - but without the constraints of feeling I am doomed to start drinking again if I touch a drop. I know people who as a rule do not drink at all in their daily lives, but will have one or two (max) on special occasions whe