Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You all have drinking problems! Really. This is not normal. Get help if you can't stop.
Maybe from your perspective. If you grew up in a diplomatic family or a european family, one or two glasses is not abnormal a few days a week 10, yes.
From my perspective, though, you have the issue.
Anonymous wrote:I, too, love my wine and used to drink everyday. But earlier this year I decided to really get serious about losing weight as I still had about 30 lbs of baby weight left (gained 60 total). I found I really just had to cut it out all together. The first week or two without it was really hard but after that I didn't even think about it anymore. After about 6 weeks of being sober, I started to allow myself drinks on one weekend day (usually Sat). Or if I had drinks earlier in the week with coworkers or something, then I would skip the weekend day.
But the key for me was to try to push off the drinking until after DS was asleep. Because if I started early in the day, then I'd just keep wanting to drink more. If I wait until he's asleep to get started (after 8-8:30) then I know I'll only be able to drink so much before I end up getting sleepy anyway.
Now since I'm close to my weight goal and its summer, I've eased back a little and will have drinks maybe twice a week (no more than 3). But if I do, I try to fit an extra workout in or be a little extra diligent in my diet for the next few days afterwards.
Also I love diet ginger ale. That's pretty much my go to soft drink. Perrier's good, too.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. You all have drinking problems! Really. This is not normal. Get help if you can't stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just stop or AA. Those are your two options.
They aren't, no.
Naltrexone has kept me sober for 18 months now. It's a goddamned miracle drug for me.
It should be more widely prescribed than it is; I doubt I'm a medical outlier.
I attended AA for seven years.
Naltrexone did in a month what AA couldn't do in all that time.
Who prescribed it in dc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just stop or AA. Those are your two options.
They aren't, no.
Naltrexone has kept me sober for 18 months now. It's a goddamned miracle drug for me.
It should be more widely prescribed than it is; I doubt I'm a medical outlier.
I attended AA for seven years.
Naltrexone did in a month what AA couldn't do in all that time.
Anonymous wrote:Just stop or AA. Those are your two options.