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-   -   Commitment (https://www.soberrecovery.com/forums/newcomers-recovery/412047-commitment.html)

Dee74 07-01-2017 12:58 AM

Commitment
 
I've been walking a bit this week trying to get back some endurance and strength in my bad leg.

It reminded me of times gone by.

I remember when I was a drinker nothing stopped me drinking.

I once walked through a tropical storm to get booze, I fell through a glass topped coffee table and still drank, I fell down a flight of stairs and had blood literally gushing out of my nose and still drank.

Like drank.. immediately.

I drank when I had a fever, I drank when it was my last $20 in the world and even I drank when I had somewhere to be - like a friends wedding (I didn't make it to the wedding).

I was a very committed drinker.
150%

To stay sober I've had to be every bit as committed to not drinking.

I often see people saying they are weak - and I felt that way too - but really...there's a strength in all of us.

It takes a strong resolve to be that devoted to something - it's just a shame it's something like self destruction...


We just need to re-direct that strength in positive healthy ways :)

Why not use that drive, that stubbornness that commitment - and free the right part of yourself?

Feed the part - the good part - that wants the madness to end, and the part that wants change.

It sometimes seems like a Herculean task but however big the mountain might seem, it's the little choices we make every day that sets our ultimate result.

I promise that everyone here will get out of their recovery what they put in :)

http://www.coolnsmart.com/images/cns...s1-650x464.jpg

D

Susiegirl 07-01-2017 01:21 AM

Wow Dee - you have done awesome. I truly hope I can find the strength to tackle this massive problem. Thank you for all your support X

JimiC 07-01-2017 02:06 AM

Well said and very inspirational! Thanks Dee :)

LadyBlue0527 07-01-2017 03:04 AM

Thanks for the inspirational post Dee!

I know a while back there was a phrase going around on here. "You have to want to be sober more than you want to drink.". As much as that sounds upsetting to some nothing could be more true.

I quit so many times and put myself and many others through some horrible things until I finally got it.

It has nothing to do with being weak. It has to do with 100% complete acceptance that there will never be an excuse to drink. No possible circumstance, ever. You don't have to dwell on that daily but the moment thoughts come creeping into your head it has to take the forefront. The sooner this is done the better the success and the quicker the cravings leave.

I loved my alcohol. If you told me there would come a day I hated it I would have laughed at you. I hate it now. I accept it's ok for others but not for me. I know it will never fix anything, only make things worse or delay me from getting past what I'm dealing with. I'm finally free (coming up on 14 months) and life is far better than I could have ever imagined. I'm realistic that I must always stay mindful but the rare and random thought of alcohol is almost a joke now. THIS can happen for YOU too.

As long as you allow possibility to leave its foot in the door the longer it will take and the harder it will be.

Accept, DO!

You CAN do this, you are far stronger than you think!

Jules714 07-01-2017 03:11 AM

Thank you, Dee...
J

Sammy1980 07-01-2017 03:20 AM

Dee74
You are so inspiring and so non judgmental. I have not been totally alcohol free these days. I was 100% sober for 4 months but have been drinking a few here and there. I know I have to stop completely before it creeps back to full days of drinking. I am trying every day to not have a drink. I have had about two a day for two weeks now. Today will be day 1 again. I know I can do this! I refuse to go back to those awful days.
Thank you again for your posts!

joandmelandhan 07-01-2017 04:11 AM

Brilliant post Dee thank you ❤❤❤

tomls 07-01-2017 04:29 AM

Since I have quit, I have felt everything you just said but I have a hard time putting it down in words. Thank you.

RetiredGuy 07-01-2017 04:31 AM

Great post Dee. Thanks for all you do for us on SR.

kenton 07-01-2017 05:03 AM

Thanks Dee ... for this awesome post and all the other posts that have helped me immeasurably over the last few months xx

Ps I never used words like "immeasurably" before I got sober. Sobriety is making me smart :)

2ndhandrose 07-01-2017 07:41 AM

Thanks, Dee!!!

Your post resonates with me, I would drink through anything. :dee

Now, I am sober through everything. :scoregood no matter what!

:grouphug:

tealily 07-01-2017 07:42 AM

So true. Thank you, Dee, for this inspirational and insightful post, and for all you do for everyone here. I've appreciated your counsel from afar for all the years I've been lurking here. (Think about all the people you've helped without even knowing it!)

Venecia 07-01-2017 07:51 AM

This is an exceptional post, Dee. Very bump-worthy in the future!

Upstairs 07-01-2017 08:07 AM

Thanks Dee. A very true and inspirational post!

thomas11 07-01-2017 08:10 AM

Amen Dee, so true. Thank you.

MidnightBlue 07-01-2017 08:19 AM

Thank you so much for this post, Dee.

Delizadee 07-01-2017 08:33 AM

Dee, thank you for your wise words and inspiration!

I am a stubborn chick too.

I stopped giving up on myself last year. I grabbed hold of the people, places and things that could support me until I could figure out how to stand on my own sober legs.

We can all do it you're right, because we're all stubborn. :)

Thank goodness for our stubborn streaks! Just have to learn to use them the right way!

Aellyce 07-01-2017 08:33 AM

Very wise and to-the-point, Dee. Thank you.

I have had a similar experience and would only add that, I think, there also needs to be a substantial shift as far as the source of commitment goes, our addictive thoughts/behaviors vs working on recovery. At least for me, the work of recovery involved re-discovering, or in some aspects discovering for the first time, these healthier sources of motivation. Also connections to the world in new ways. I was very much a commitment phobe in my youth, and then it backfired and developed into the addictions and obsessions (drinking a major one, but I had others as well). I've found that it takes a radical shift in perceptions (both self and the external world) to make sobriety and recovery last. I agree that it seems like a Herculean task at first and also sometimes after considerable time sober. But I generally feel, like you also suggest, that completing this task in smaller ways, in the everyday, reinforces the commitment greatly and cements it with time.

Thanks for the reminder again :)

poolside 07-01-2017 08:46 AM

Great post, Dee! 😃 Thanks for sharing.

SoberLeigh 07-01-2017 02:39 PM

No surprise - awesome post from our truly awesome Dee.

Thank you for this and all of your inspirational posts.


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