One of the most difficult traits in mastering sobriety, is dealing with feelings.. FEELings are the other"F"word everyone is uncomfortable with. I was so terrified of confrontation and expressing myself, that I had to be buzzed first. This usually led to another drink for good luck, which usually led to another
drink to go. At which point, I would either cancel, or not remember the confrontation.
I feel lonely, gulp. I feel hungry and im too tired to cook, gulp. I feel happy and its overwhelming, gulp. I feel sad and I don't want to care so much, gulp. The worst, ugliest, most destructive combination of emotions...."PMS"...GULP, GULP, GULP.
Anger, sadness, heartbreak and fear, all are experienced and dealt with in a far less dramatic and severe manner. Who would have thought? I thought I was always going to feel psychotic and insecure, afraid to express my needs. Turns out, every sober day that passes by it gets easier and less stressful. The intake of chemicals, had pushed down all the feelings I needed to deal with, which created years of compressed emotions to reveal themselves over a period of 90 days. This is where the need for excessive amounts of exercise came in, which helped with the ridiculous amounts of chocolate intake. I had overloaded my body with years of frustration, and knew it was not going to happen overnight. It took hours, days, weeks of focus and determination.
The process went something like this: feelings emerged, I ate chocolate, feelings emerged, I went biking. Feelings emerged, I went walking. Feelings emerged, I read the “Big Book.” Feelings emerged, I went shopping. Until finally, one day I woke up with a clear head, a strong heart, thinner, and with a pretty hefty pay pal statement. I know that amount of money I spent online was not even half of what I use to spend of alcohol in 90 days. I still had a significant amount of brains cells left, and my dignity. I have come to realize that dealing with emotions sober, is so much easier and more productive than the alternative. Eventually, those feelings are going to come out, they most certainly should be organized and tactful.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Shots of Chocolate
Red wine use to be my boyfriend; he was
very obedient. I would keep him anywhere I wanted to and pull him
out for a visit whenever I chose to. He was bittersweet, full of
calories, and physiological turmoil. It was a dysfunctional
relationship, it needed some serious mourning. I needed a sufficient
replacement for that unfulfilled high I so craved, it was
inevitable and overdue.
And so my sobriety began, with
chocolate ice cream, and, well, basically anything chocolate. I
would take it to bed with me, that delicious half gallon, a pleasure
to cuddle. Regardless of calories, I was staying sober, even if it
meant gaining weight. I could hear my nurse practitioner in the back
of my head saying “moment on the lips, years on the hips,” it
didn't matter, it was my tongue that would enjoy the moment anyway,
not my lips. I craved sweets and carbohydrate during every waking
hour, and kept Reese’s next to my bed for 3 am, my midnight snack.
I had not experienced cravings of such since I was pregnant, which
was 19 years ago and it was the longest I had stayed sober until now.
I knew that scale was hitting the high end of double digits and I was
prepared (gallon of skim milk). It was a trade off; I would full fill
my need with another vise, this time one that ultimately would not
land me in the drunk tank or a with a DUI. It was a wiser choice
that eventually landed me at the gym, 30 lbs heavier, but I was
sober.
I use to write about being single and
dating, the light side of life alone. It was wonderful, living the
life of a city gal; happy hours and ladies nights. It didn't really
matter what it was specifically happening, it could have been a
boring Sunday, I would be there, dressed up, and ready to interact,
show everyone how independent I was. There was so much more I was
hiding, that was affecting every aspect of my life; I was suffering
from alcoholism and depression. My dating and single experiences didn't end with a broken heart, they were accompanied with an awful
hangover and a consistent insecurity.
I was convinced my “social” drinking was
normal, what a single lady should do because most of the media
encouraged it. It was anything but social, it isolated me from the
real society, healthy and productive society. I was hiding from my
real feelings and I lost interest in everything. I was hiding behind
makeup and a smile.
I wanted and needed a better life, and
in time, would be finding it. I have been given another opportunity
to share my life with you and I am honored. This time you will see
my journey through recovery and adulthood, without happy hour. So
much has happened that is not always interesting, but will be
rigorously honest, and hopefully a little humorous also. My name is
Michelle and I am a single mother, a woman who loves living, and I am
an alcoholic.
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