Anonymous wrote:Today is Ditch New Year's Resolution Day.
Anonymous wrote:I'm doing dry January and haven't posted before. The hardest part was days 3-7. I had Naltrexone to get me through and that was great. I stopped it after a couple of weeks.
I'm still having anxiety in the evenings and I wish that would go away. That's the hardest part. I know that a nice drink would make all of that go away. My chest feels so tight
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're over halfway there!!
Tonight seems tough. Sunday scaries I guess. But making it halfway gives me confidence! I just booked a spa day for the first weekend in February to celebrate the success! AND I don't even have to feel guilty because I will have saved enough money from not drinking all month to cover the cost!
My husband has done this before and told me the two-week mark is notoriously a tough point. We can do it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just found out that a friend of mine from.college died of alcohol use disorder last year. I send a holiday card to his parents' house every year and received a letter from his mother informing me of his death. He was early 40s. I'm not actually surprised given that he had serious problems with alcohol in college but it was still so horrible to learn. That shit is toxic!
Do you mean liver failure?
This is not the only way people die of AUD.
Can you be more specific
My friend's mom did not specify how he died exactly, saying only it was due to alcoholism and that things had gotten so bad it was a mercy that he passed. Heavy alcohol use for years damages just about every organ so there are many ways to go.
I had a friend with alcohol addiction and he died from kidney failure at 50.
Anonymous wrote:We're over halfway there!!
Tonight seems tough. Sunday scaries I guess. But making it halfway gives me confidence! I just booked a spa day for the first weekend in February to celebrate the success! AND I don't even have to feel guilty because I will have saved enough money from not drinking all month to cover the cost!
Anonymous wrote:I’ve done DJ for a few years and every year I say I’m going to re-examine my relationship with alcohol and every year my intake creeps back up after January is over. But this year feels different for some reason I’m really feeling good and enjoying it, and I feel like a more present parent on the weekends without the fog.
My spouse and I developed poor habits in 2020. It seemed like having a few drinks while sitting around at home was the only thing that made the weekend feel different from the other times we were sitting around at home. Now that things are closer to normal I think I want to stick with drinking socially or intentionally rather than just because it’s a Saturday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just found out that a friend of mine from.college died of alcohol use disorder last year. I send a holiday card to his parents' house every year and received a letter from his mother informing me of his death. He was early 40s. I'm not actually surprised given that he had serious problems with alcohol in college but it was still so horrible to learn. That shit is toxic!
Do you mean liver failure?
This is not the only way people die of AUD.
Can you be more specific
My friend's mom did not specify how he died exactly, saying only it was due to alcoholism and that things had gotten so bad it was a mercy that he oassed. Heavy alcohol use for years damages just about every organ so there are many ways to go.