Sundays are different
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Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: MN
Posts: 8,704
Sundays are different
Quick update on the knees: Going well. Therapist is very impressed with progress, I've hit every milestone that has been set for me either on schedule or ahead of schedule. See surgeon next Thursday so we'll see if the braces come off. Freedom! Now on to the meat and potatoes of the post.
For about 3+ years, Sunday was a day to recover from the previous 2-3 days of drinking. It was typically a long day spent drinking Gatorade, water, forcing down some food, reading or watching something on TV to take my focus off of my hangover/minor withdrawals etc....I've not consumed any alcohol for 70+ days. I cannot express in words how rewarding it is to feel well on Sunday, not be worried sick about how I'll feel early Monday morning for work. The mind and body are now calm on Sunday, positive thoughts and actually looking forward to that early Monday start time as opposed to dreading it. I am also noticing the urge or cravings have reduced drastically. The memory of the weekend drinking cycle has faded. I do not find myself rushing through Friday so I can get home and start getting that buzz going. I am also experiencing a feeling that the way I'm currently living my life is the way normal people live their lives. The ones that aren't chained to alcohol in some way. Its quite a transformation. I am pretty darn committed to keep this going for a long long time. Jeff.
For about 3+ years, Sunday was a day to recover from the previous 2-3 days of drinking. It was typically a long day spent drinking Gatorade, water, forcing down some food, reading or watching something on TV to take my focus off of my hangover/minor withdrawals etc....I've not consumed any alcohol for 70+ days. I cannot express in words how rewarding it is to feel well on Sunday, not be worried sick about how I'll feel early Monday morning for work. The mind and body are now calm on Sunday, positive thoughts and actually looking forward to that early Monday start time as opposed to dreading it. I am also noticing the urge or cravings have reduced drastically. The memory of the weekend drinking cycle has faded. I do not find myself rushing through Friday so I can get home and start getting that buzz going. I am also experiencing a feeling that the way I'm currently living my life is the way normal people live their lives. The ones that aren't chained to alcohol in some way. Its quite a transformation. I am pretty darn committed to keep this going for a long long time. Jeff.
Great post, Jeff!
You've hit on something that really started feeling transformational for me as sobriety deepened. Yeah, this is how people live when they're not addicted. It's coming up on two years for me, but I'm still in awe of what weekends are like. I get stuff done and have fun. It used to be such a depressing existence for me. I'd feel like hell and get barely anything accomplished. To make matters even worse, if I was visiting my family in Wisconsin, I'd usually stop in Hudson to bring back booze so I could start the work week with a hangover.
To say that I appreciate weekends is now a major understatement!
Keep up the good work. You're doing great.
You've hit on something that really started feeling transformational for me as sobriety deepened. Yeah, this is how people live when they're not addicted. It's coming up on two years for me, but I'm still in awe of what weekends are like. I get stuff done and have fun. It used to be such a depressing existence for me. I'd feel like hell and get barely anything accomplished. To make matters even worse, if I was visiting my family in Wisconsin, I'd usually stop in Hudson to bring back booze so I could start the work week with a hangover.
To say that I appreciate weekends is now a major understatement!
Keep up the good work. You're doing great.
Quick update on the knees: Going well. Therapist is very impressed with progress, I've hit every milestone that has been set for me either on schedule or ahead of schedule. See surgeon next Thursday so we'll see if the braces come off. Freedom! Now on to the meat and potatoes of the post.
For about 3+ years, Sunday was a day to recover from the previous 2-3 days of drinking. It was typically a long day spent drinking Gatorade, water, forcing down some food, reading or watching something on TV to take my focus off of my hangover/minor withdrawals etc....I've not consumed any alcohol for 70+ days. I cannot express in words how rewarding it is to feel well on Sunday, not be worried sick about how I'll feel early Monday morning for work. The mind and body are now calm on Sunday, positive thoughts and actually looking forward to that early Monday start time as opposed to dreading it. I am also noticing the urge or cravings have reduced drastically. The memory of the weekend drinking cycle has faded. I do not find myself rushing through Friday so I can get home and start getting that buzz going. I am also experiencing a feeling that the way I'm currently living my life is the way normal people live their lives. The ones that aren't chained to alcohol in some way. Its quite a transformation. I am pretty darn committed to keep this going for a long long time. Jeff.
For about 3+ years, Sunday was a day to recover from the previous 2-3 days of drinking. It was typically a long day spent drinking Gatorade, water, forcing down some food, reading or watching something on TV to take my focus off of my hangover/minor withdrawals etc....I've not consumed any alcohol for 70+ days. I cannot express in words how rewarding it is to feel well on Sunday, not be worried sick about how I'll feel early Monday morning for work. The mind and body are now calm on Sunday, positive thoughts and actually looking forward to that early Monday start time as opposed to dreading it. I am also noticing the urge or cravings have reduced drastically. The memory of the weekend drinking cycle has faded. I do not find myself rushing through Friday so I can get home and start getting that buzz going. I am also experiencing a feeling that the way I'm currently living my life is the way normal people live their lives. The ones that aren't chained to alcohol in some way. Its quite a transformation. I am pretty darn committed to keep this going for a long long time. Jeff.
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Excellent perspective, Jeff. And I relate completely. More than just looking forward to the work week and going to my workplace (that I tended to avoid when I was drinking, claiming that I "worked" from home), I also look forward to challenges and difficult situations. These would usually freak me out when I was living on the edge between drunk and hungover all the time, but now I don't only have very little anxiety about them, I welcome these situations. It's not really new way of being because that's how I was younger before I picked up that nasty drinking habit: someone motivated and energized by challenges and problem solving. It's all familiar again. But instead of constantly over-extending myself, now I use my free time to unwind and then happy to be back, well-rested, curious, and driven. Sometimes I still can't even believe it seems like I've learned how to relax in healthy ways and how to find a good balance between challenges and peace.
Keep up the good work
Keep up the good work
Great post, Jeff! You've hit on something that really started feeling transformational for me as sobriety deepened. Yeah, this is how people live when they're not addicted. It's coming up on two years for me, but I'm still in awe of what weekends are like. I get stuff done and have fun. It used to be such a depressing existence for me. I'd feel like hell and get barely anything accomplished. To make matters even worse, if I was visiting my family in Wisconsin, I'd usually stop in Hudson to bring back booze so I could start the work week with a hangover. To say that I appreciate weekends is now a major understatement! Keep up the good work. You're doing great.
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Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: MN
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Yes definitely. As more time goes by, it seems that the importance of drinking is becoming less and less. I find myself thinking "why was it so important to drink?" Maybe that's what people are referring to when they say it loses it power.
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