Cocaine
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Uk
Posts: 564
Cocaine
So along side my 27 days sober🙌🙌🙌🙌
I've just worked out the last time i took cocaine was...............wait for it ...............2months and 19days🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌. For me coke was always psychological not physical, they went hand in hand.
Feeling happy,strong and most of all proud to have got this far...........
I'm still standing, still fighting, still winning.
As always much love to everyone
🙏💖
I've just worked out the last time i took cocaine was...............wait for it ...............2months and 19days🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌. For me coke was always psychological not physical, they went hand in hand.
Feeling happy,strong and most of all proud to have got this far...........
I'm still standing, still fighting, still winning.
As always much love to everyone
🙏💖
Member
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 500
Didn't even know ya did coke, but good job quitting that too! You're even more inspiring. I was fortunate enough that I never got into anything like that, or smoking...it has always been about the alcohol for me.
I did drugs for a few years long long ago, but just quit when I started having adverse psychological reactions. There was no withdrawal or cravings. I just quit. I tried every drug that was easily obtainable on the streets in the late 60s. At that time, cocaine had not become widely popular. I have no idea what it's like, or how much I might like it. I just assume that drugs, pleasant or not, don't have much to do with my ability to accept the reality I am now comfortable with, and this is boat I don't want to rock.
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Uk
Posts: 564
So I'm clean and sober 🙌🙌🙌
🙏💖
I did drugs for a few years long long ago, but just quit when I started having adverse psychological reactions. There was no withdrawal or cravings. I just quit. I tried every drug that was easily obtainable on the streets in the late 60s. At that time, cocaine had not become widely popular. I have no idea what it's like, or how much I might like it. I just assume that drugs, pleasant or not, don't have much to do with my ability to accept the reality I am now comfortable with, and this is boat I don't want to rock.
I'm sure glad that I got sober before a lot of the things on the street today became popular.
People I knew in college had little interest in experimenting with addictive substances. And society was just beginning to differentiate between addictive substances and the so called recreational drugs. Prior to that, I was taught that all drugs were addictive, including marijuana. I was actually surprised to learn that marijuana was not addictive when I was 24, and this proved to be true in my experience. After years of daily use, I just quit, just quit. No problem at all.
I suppose a case can be made for psychological habituation, and I suppose that could loosely be considered addiction, but from my experience, none of the drugs I used, some quite powerful, demonstrated the addictive properties of tobacco or alcohol. But how the older generation fiercely condemned the youth for drug use, while they lamented the decline of society as they sat drinking highballs in bars or around the dinner table.
No wonder my generation rebelled against so much of what we had been taught. Even as I abruptly ended my days of drugging, I consoled myself that I could always depend on alcohol with the full approval of a society that accepted it as a perfectly normal way of altering our brain chemistry in a completely safe way. Sheesh! With the misconceptions so ingrained in mankind, how did we ever figure out how to land on the Moon or send rovers to Mars?
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