Good morning
Good morning
Hello and thanks for taking the time to read my first post. After a brief time reading some of the posts it looks like I have found the right place. I have tried to quit drinking on several occasions but they have always come as a result of family members asking me to. Now I am making the choice to live without alcohol.
I'm 44, a weekend binge drinker and to be honest I am sick of it as much as those I love are.
I'm 44, a weekend binge drinker and to be honest I am sick of it as much as those I love are.
Thank you for the encouraging words opivotal. I know the support is going to make the difference this time around. Reading other posts and seeing people who have gone through the same experiences makes me feel I am not alone in this.
Guest
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Sunny FL
Posts: 647
Welcome to SR alva. If you are willing and ready, you can do it. Admitting is the first step. Ask for help. Lean on friends and family. Pray if you believe. What ever it takes. I am the same age as you are. I could no longer use the excuse I was young and having fun. Time for me to grow up and take control before it killed me. Stay strong.
Welcome Alva! I too had that weekend problem. Stick with this forum...we can do it. Was not even tempted this past weekend, even with offers of wine. Woke up each morning happy I felt good. Glad you are here!
It's amazing how you feel when you are able to get out of bed on a weekend morning with no hangover, have a great productive day and actually have no fear of going to work Monday morning. That's where I'm trying to get to and for more than 1 weekend in a row.
Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Scotland
Posts: 143
Welcome to SR alva. If you are willing and ready, you can do it. Admitting is the first step. Ask for help. Lean on friends and family. Pray if you believe. What ever it takes. I am the same age as you are. I could no longer use the excuse I was young and having fun. Time for me to grow up and take control before it killed me. Stay strong.
Alva - being just plain sick of it is a good reason to stop. I was, too - but instead of stopping I drank more. I was trying to find the old happy, carefree feeling drinking once gave me. It wasn't coming back - but it took me years to realize it.
Coming to SR showed me that others had been down the same path and had gotten their lives back. Before that, I was all alone with the problem. I found the encouragement I needed here, and never looked back. I hope you'll feel the same.
Coming to SR showed me that others had been down the same path and had gotten their lives back. Before that, I was all alone with the problem. I found the encouragement I needed here, and never looked back. I hope you'll feel the same.
Alva - being just plain sick of it is a good reason to stop. I was, too - but instead of stopping I drank more. I was trying to find the old happy, carefree feeling drinking once gave me. It wasn't coming back - but it took me years to realize it.
Coming to SR showed me that others had been down the same path and had gotten their lives back. Before that, I was all alone with the problem. I found the encouragement I needed here, and never looked back. I hope you'll feel the same.
Coming to SR showed me that others had been down the same path and had gotten their lives back. Before that, I was all alone with the problem. I found the encouragement I needed here, and never looked back. I hope you'll feel the same.
I have been going through and reading posts for most of the day and it truly gives me hope for the first time in a long time.
Sick and tired of waking up feeling like crap, worried what I don't remember, worried about how angry people are with me and sick of having the anticipation building as the week progresses and the weekend draws near. I want the excitement to be built on dealing with this addiction one day at a time, being proud of myself and having my family proud of me.
Currently Active Users Viewing this Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)