I WAS Doing Good
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Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 14
I WAS Doing Good
I was 8 days sober and feeling great both physically and mentally. I was starting to truly appreciate the "new me". Last night a very long-time friend called me and needed/wanted to talk. I got very nervous because of His drinking and knew that when we met up he would most likely already be intoxicated and have beer with him. I had not informed him that I had not been drinking. I did not binge but did drink 7 beers. I guess not too big of a deal other than I have to re-start counting the days again. I did not feel very good this morning. Interestingly I get a worse hangover when I drink 6 drinks than I do when I binge and have 15 or more. I was very disappointed in myself but it did reinforce my desire to completely abstain and recognize that for the time being I can not place myself in situations where people are drinking. This site has been very helpful during the past 8 days but have concluded that I need to search for a sponsor. Someone I can call when confronted with those types of situations. I should have known better and wish I could have exercised better self-control. I hope I can get control over this without hitting a rock bottom.
It was my first relapse, at 14 days, that convinced me I TRULY had a problem. I have been successful since, almost 14 months sober.
If I may suggest something. Tell this very long-time friend you've quit and that you'd appreciate if they'd respect your decision by not coming to see you drunk or with alcohol and the intent of getting drunk. Or else you won't see them! You must set boundries that have your recovery as the priority. Not the feelings of your friends, who, if they are your friends, should respect your request.
Good luck.
If I may suggest something. Tell this very long-time friend you've quit and that you'd appreciate if they'd respect your decision by not coming to see you drunk or with alcohol and the intent of getting drunk. Or else you won't see them! You must set boundries that have your recovery as the priority. Not the feelings of your friends, who, if they are your friends, should respect your request.
Good luck.
I think we have to be very, very careful in early sobriety about who we spend time with and where we go. I couldn't be around people who were drinking for many months when I began recovery. There are some hard choices to be made.
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