• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Alcohol Was Not The Answer

Status
Not open for further replies.
Yes it held back the tears for me but the dam filled without an outlet then emotion exploded in anger. I was an angry drunk (have the missing teeth as a reminder) After 15 years of drinking, the last 3 years desperate not to but unable to not drink, my first year sober had a lot of tears. I had 15 years of not crying to catch up on. That is the way I have chosen to look at it anyway, it's the only way it makes any sense to me. All I can say is that at some point alcohol ceased to be a medicine and became a need, a compulsion and a craving. An interesting point is that I did cry in my last 3 years drinking, over each and every first whisky of each and every day. Desperate not to drink it but even more desperate to! Sober now and have not had the compulsion to drink creep into my soul for a long time now. Living one day at a time and grateful to be sober.

Regards, Robert
 
I feel so helpless to give it up right now. It is the only thing that holds back the tears.
I know where you are. Me too. Not strong enough to make the change yet; all the advice to give it up makes sense but my inability to do so makes me feel worse. I need it just now. I'll get there, but need more time.

Don't feel bad - we do what we have to to get through. I'm just trying to minimise the damage at the moment. It's not so long since I was slicing up my arms, so drinking doesn't seem so bad in comparison.

Hang in there
Nicola
 
I was also self medicating with alcohol and found that it was causing my behavior to deteriorate. My anger outbursts seemed to be brought on by alcohol and I was even becoming violent. Then the next day a horrible feeling of sadness would overcome me. So, I agree wholeheartedly, alcohol isn't the answer and congrats to all who have overcome. I had been drinking every day for months and I quit. Oh my gosh I was sick for days.
 
When my benzos didn't work, I felt the need to self-medicate daily with alcohol as well but since my Dr put me on Topamax as a mood stabilizer, the need for alcohol seemed to slip away after a couple of months. That was a relief because I was fighting it but I was tired of waking up feeling wired all the time.

So I googled it and found out that they also used it to treat alcoholics - go figure. I was lucky that I wasn't self-medicating very much so maybe that was why it worked on me.

Topamax doesn't make me gain weight either (in fact the oppposite) which made me happy because the Paxil and Seroquel I was on previously made me gain 30lbs. I've lost 10lbs now. Some of the other side effects were not pleasant though but I think I'm through the worst of it and my body has metabolized because I feel more or less normal now.

There is still the pychological urge that pops up every now and then though.
 
Nice to read that others went on the pilgrimage in search of an answer too. I am coming up to 4 years mid January clean and sober.

It is interesting to be able to look at the hows and whys of my addiction now, and be able to see that addiction is a symptom, not the disease in and of itself. None of the meds I take can be addictive, because I know that I will abuse them. Prior to getting clean, I was abusing anything and everything I could get my hands on. Alcohol was the one constant in my life, since I was in grade 7. I was a black out drunk my very first time getting drunk. Definitely not the last time I got black out drunk though. At the end of my using career, I was abusing benzos, Gravol, cocaine, alcohol, cold medications....anything that would make me numb.

When I got sober the first time, was when I found self injury on a big scale. I still struggle with that today when I get really overwhelmed, but also know that it is a desperate struggle for me to not dissociate more often than not.

I relapsed for 6 months, then realized that things weren't getting any better with the drugs when I tried to kill myself.

I went to rehab for 6 weeks, then into a support recovery house for 6 months. Having that space away from drugs allowed my brain time to heal enough that I could see that there was a reason why I used drugs the way I did. It was not because of some moral failing on my part, I was not a bad person. I used drugs because I didn't know how to handle the insanity of my emotions and the nightmares and not sleeping and realizing that I was not and will never be like other people.

Coping skills were not modelled for me as a child. Using alcohol was modelled and extreme violence as well. So of course I didn't know what to do. Psychology suggests that when we start using drugs in any way to squash things down or to cope, we stop growing. I stopped growing mentally and psychologically at a very young age. So getting sober was like starting to learn as a kid, but in an adult body.

Having cPTSD and trying to get sober in the gong show that was the support recovery house was trying, at best. I am clean not because of that place, but rather despite it. The level of violence that took place there was horrifying to me, as someone with trauma.

There is an awesome book called "In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts", by Dr. Gabor Maté. He is a doctor who has a practice on the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver BC, the place they always show and talk about in terms of addiction issues in Canada. He writes about how every person he treats for addiction issues has a history of trauma. He makes the people people. He humanizes them, puts a face to the person and tells their story.

Just like us. We all have our stories.
 
I thought alcohol was the answer too. I would drink as much as I possibly could as fast as I could. I loved that AHHHHH feeling. And even though I knew a few hours later I would be depressed, anxious, unable to sleep and doing and saying stupid things, I thought it was worth it.

It became a vicious cycle and only made everything worse. To make a long story short, yesterday made 5 weeks of being sober. It really isn't the answer and I'm glad I realized it.

YAY!!!!!!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom