A
major compilation of past blogs in an attempt to open some eyes. It’s going to
be a long one!
I've been writing in an actual journal, so I have neglected this
site. Maybe I can do this in both places. I am now 7 days sober. 7 days. One
week. It doesn't sound like a long time, but let me tell you, this has been
some of the longest 7 days in.my.life. Now the withdrawal has started and at
first it was just a headache and I thought that if that was all I got, then I
was truly lucky. *Buzzer sound* WRONG! That headache was just the beginning!
Now, I
still have the headache, but I also have tremors, shakes, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, racing thoughts, jitters, nervous, racing speech, hallucinations and
severe mood swings. Happy is not one of those moods though. No. Fear, anxiety
and sadness seem to rule my days. And the urge to drink? Holy cow! Come 10 o'clock
at night, I could literally claw my skin off because my body is screaming for a
drink!
I stood in
the dining room last night wringing my hands, tapping my foot and crying.
Saying to Pat that I don't remember doing this when I was a teen and in a treatment
facility. I literally paced and cried, paced and cried...with an all consuming
thought that all I needed to do was just have ONE drink. Just one. That's all I
needed.
I did NOT
have that drink. Instead, I called some friends and talked to them. One of them
until about 4 o'clock this morning. I feel like such a jerk right now. I have
always been the one that my friends turned to for advice or for a shoulder to
cry on. Now the tables are turned and I am having to lean on them, because I am
so weak right now.
All I
want, all I can think about, the only consuming thoughts...
I want a
drink.
The other
thought? Something that someone said at AA.
"It
wasn't the 13th drink that got me drunk. It wasn't the 8th or 9th drink that
got me drunk. It was that FIRST drink." Or this one, "I know I have
another drink in me. I don't know that I have another recovery in me."
I don't
have the luxury of just having ONE drink. One to me leads to an entire bottle.
Then remorse. Guilt. Shame. And to think...I meant it every.single.time I said
that I wouldn't drink again. This time, I haven't said I won't drink
again.
I
said..."Something has to change."
Same day:
So, my doctor called me back. Not one of the
nurses, but my actual doctor, Dr. Victorica. I'm glad he called when he did
because I was almost manic and he could hear it in my voice. This was not
something that I was just saying was happening, but he could physically hear
the difference in my speech and tone. He assured me that what I am experiencing
is withdrawal and that we can treat this by detoxing my body. He will follow up
with me tomorrow, I am to be in his office the following day and every day, if
needed, to make sure I survive the detox period.
He stressed the absolute
necessity to not even take a sip of alcohol with the medication that he is
prescribing for the detox because it would truly be fatal. I'm not looking to
die. If I was, I would have simply continued on the path I was on with the
drinking. Because trust me, I was well on my way to an early grave. The only
thought that I have been able to come up with on why I was drinking so very
much, is that subconsciously I did want to die. When in reality, I do not. I
love my husband and my children, so very much. I just lost the ability to deal
with the amount of pain that I was physically in and then try to deal with the
amount of stress from our everyday lives. It isn't an excuse, but it was my
justification.
I can justify just about
anything if I truly want it or think I need it. It isn't hard to find those
reasons. Rationalization. Justification. "Stinkin' Thinkin'". Nice
term, huh. Stinkin' thinkin'...but it's true. An alcoholic needs no other
reason to drink other than whatever we come up with in our minds. We are our
own worst enemy, in every sense of the word.
You know something? I have
spent the majority of today in a truly manic state. Fidgety, itchy, jumpy,
stuttering, unable to form a complete sentence that made sense unless I stopped
to think about and then form each individual word in my head and then speak it
slowly and with clear intentions to get across what I was trying to say.
Tapping. My fingers, my hands, my feet....tap, tap, tap. I feel like my brain
is starting to slow down a little, so maybe the medicine is slowly taking
effect.
I am going to very clear and
state that I don't expect miracles. I know God is in the business of miracles,
but I don't expect one for myself. I know full well that this is going to be a
long, slow process of a lot of ups and downs. Hopefully the ups will eventually
outweigh the downs, but for now...this is my life.
Scattered. Shattered. Broken.
In a healing process.
Life = Temporarily Interrupted.
May 23, 2012:
Ah ha! You
now have that song running through your head now too! He he...at least I am not
the only one with songs/words/phrases running on a fast track through my brain.
I'm a sharer. And yes, that is a word...otherwise it would have put a little
red squiggly line under it for me to see and say it wasn't right. So, I'm good
this morning on spelling!
I took my medicines
this morning and must say that I feel extremely, extremely calm. Although my
brain seems to be running circles around some track inside, my body is not
responding to the thought processes. There is a disconnection in there
somewhere and I am perfectly fine with that. I can deal with this feeling a lot
easier than I can when I feel like I want to jump out of a moving vehicle or
claw my skin off because I can't stop tapping or jumping or heck, even just
forming a coherent sentence!
Maybe that's why
I picked up my blog again. If I type this out, then it forces me to focus on
each individual word within the sentence. Okay, I can type almost faster than I
can talk, but today the coordination required is making me slow down and pay
attention. Plus, you can't hear me stuttering if I am typing something. Because
right now, I stutter...a lot.
Of course, right
now I have a fly buzzing around my head and it is driving me insane! That
little buzz of its wings flapping. Grr! If I can catch this thing sitting down
for longer than 1.3 seconds, I am going to kill it. For now, as long as it
doesn't land in my coffee, we're okay....for now. I'm watching you little fly
and I will get you.
What I would like
to do right now is go outside and have a cigarette. Transfer addiction. That's
what I have to battle right now as well. I not only have to fight the urge to
stop drinking, but I also have to fight the urge to start smoking. Sheesh! No wonder
the majority of alcoholics fall off the wagon as many times as we do before we
finally get our crap together and truly make it work. I think that is my
biggest fear. Hitting a milestone marker and "celebrating" by having
a drink. Because the thinking in our minds is that we have been sober for X
number of days/months/years, so what will one drink hurt is. One won't have any
effect. I am extremely realistic in this journey. I know that at some point,
that I will do that exact thinking and I'll trip up.
This is not
something that most just casually toss to the side. I wish I could really have
you all step inside my head for even just an hour so you could truly understand
what goes on inside the brain of an alcoholic. It's not pretty. It doesn't even
remotely begin to make any sort of nonsensical sense. It's all a jumble.
And this is where
I am right this moment. Because I can't anticipate what will be happening in
the next. So, I deal. Sorta.
May 26, 2012:
I spent this evening at my meeting with my fellow crazies,
otherwise known as my fellow alcoholics, and we each own that. We each took
different paths to get there, but the important thing is that we got there.
Some of them say that "The state of Texas 'suggested' I come to AA"
and we all chuckle, and I am sure some of you will read that and wonder what is
so funny about it. Well, that's why we all say we're crazy. There is a fine
line between sane and insane...we know we walk that fine line each day that we
wake up and make the decision to NOT drink that day.
Now, I
want to share something. I come from a long line of crazy. I come from a long
line of strong willed people. I come from a long line of "fixers". I
had a conversation with someone today that told me they were praying for me,
but there were a couple we know that were not praying for me. I feel like a
pariah because I broke the sacred family rule...I acknowledged that I have a
problem so that means that there is now no way to unacknowledge the giant pink
elephant in the room. Denial is NOT a river in Egypt my friends, but it's
something that some people I know live by. If you don't want to pray for me,
that's fine. I'm not angry. Please don't be angry at me for having the courage
to openly state that I have a disease. I cannot be "fixed" and unless
YOU are an alcoholic, then the honest truth is that you will NEVER understand
where I am, what I have gone through, what I am going through or what I will
continue to battle. That's okay! You don't have to fix me. I'm not broken. I am
just sick and fighting a disease that still baffles most.
Intolerance...let's
talk about this. I am 11 days sober today. I do not look down my nose on anyone
for whatever their circumstances. However; people have intolerance for me right
now. They cannot tolerate the fact that I am just being honest. Not brutally
so, just truly looking inside me and the demons I have to conquer. If at any
point, you "help" someone by tearing them down and making them feel
completely inadequate, so that you can feel better about yourself...you are
exhibiting intolerance and just downright horrid behavior. If you are an
alcoholic and you want to come talk to me, then talk to me like you would
anyone else, don't try to tear me down in order to build yourself up and place
yourself on a pedestal. When you fall, I will not be there to laugh or point,
but I will be on solid footing waiting to hold my hand out to you and help you
back up. Because that is what alcoholics do, those of us that are getting help,
we reach out to others and talk to them and offer them help that we
receive.
I was not
one of those who received a visit from some members of AA. I was not a
"social" drinker, meaning that I did not go to a bar to drink with
others. Oh sure, if I was out with others, I would have some drinks. Most
usually I lost count of what all I drank and a couple of times, I drank enough
and was "functional" enough that a few of my drinks were on the
house. How sad is that? A person can drink enough that would make a normal
person pass out and I could pass a sobriety test. I'd blow off the charts
though if they had me take a breathalyzer test though...no doubt in my mind...I
would have been put in a holding cell to sleep it off. Thank goodness I have a
husband who loves me and never once allowed me to go to the bars alone, not
that he didn't trust me, but he would make sure I was not bothered while I got
plastered. For the most part, I drank at home, alone. I didn't have a bartender
to cut me off, because I was my own bartender. Had I gotten one of those visits
from members of AA, at the time I would have listened, taken their information,
thanked them for coming and then I would have thrown their literature in the
garbage. I didn't have a problem. We had family issues that gave me a reason
for drinking. I had personal demons that gave me a reason to hide in a bottle.
I'd justify my drinking any way I could. Chicken parmesan for dinner? Well, you
should have a nice glass of wine with that pasta dish, you know...to help bring
out the flavors. Weather forecast predicted a 20% chance of rain...come to find
out that Noah probably should have built an Ark for my front yard...I can't go
out and do anything in the rain, so I'm gonna stay in and have a drink.
I was of
the thought that an alcoholic started drinking before noon. I wasn't an
alcoholic. I didn't drink before noon. Heck no. I'd go in and get my glass
down, set the whiskey bottle on the counter and when the clock said 12:01, I
poured my first drink. I didn't drink BEFORE noon...so I didn't have a problem.
Everyone else had a problem. It was 5 o'clock somewhere. Blah, blah, blah.
Britney got a good grade. I celebrated with a drink. Britney got in trouble at
school. I dealt with it by having a drink. Pat was in a bad mood. I drank
his bad mood away. Angry? Have a drink. Happy? Have a drink. Depressed? Drink
it away.
My family
doesn't understand. One wants to know what is the "root" of the
problem. Well, what I am learning is that there is no "root" of the
problem that can be "fixed". This is truly a disease and one that can
be treated. I will never have a day in my life where I won't be an alcoholic.
However; I will eventually have more days that are good than I have days where
I am withdrawing. Eventually, I will be able to fully live my life. My days
will be replaced with actually living instead of craving a drink and white
knuckling through the urge to fix a drink.
However; I
made it through another day. With God's grace, I made it through. I want to
share this last thing and then I am calling this done. Each meeting is opened
with The Serenity Prayer and we end each meeting with The Lord's Prayer. So if
there is anyone reading this that thinks you may have a problem with alcohol. I
will ask that you attend a local AA meeting. There are no judgements made and
even if you don't have a belief in God, that is okay as well. Only when you
start working the steps are you asked to recognize God as YOU understand it in
your life...essentially, you just need to recognize that there is SOME KIND of
higher power that will help you overcome your struggles. We do not recognize
any one specific higher power, but my personal belief system is that Jesus
Christ is the Son of God and He is my higher power.
Thanks for
listening to my babble.
My name is
Dee and I am alcoholic.
And that's
all I got right now.
May 30, 2012:
Celebrate the small
victories, don't worry about what tomorrow may be, and thank God for the fact
that He gave you today to live. Right now, that is how I am having to live my
life. Celebrating the small victories.
I am 14 days sober
today. 14 days. Two weeks. I am so close to my half way point to my 30 day
sober chip and I want to jump up and down and clap! I haven't had an urge to
take a drink in three days now. I'm still dealing with some residual withdrawal
symptoms. Mainly shaking and stuttering, but mentally I am in a much better
place. Oh, I forgot the sweats. Yeah, I sweat...for sure. Worse than any hot
flash ever hit me. My body is finally filtering out the toxins I ingested. Yay!