About 16 years ago, on January 28, 2003, life I knew began. I am 23 years old and decided to end the most important, influential and toxic relationship in my life - that was the day I stopped drinking.



4. I don't have a vision for the future
Until my drinking took over, I was a dreamer and a desperate romantic. I like to fantasize about the future, what I will do, where I am going, and who I am going to meet. When I realized that I didn't know where I was going, I knew I was too deep.
I remember when I graduated from college, someone asked me what I wanted to do, and I couldn't come to anything. I thought, I need to find a way to pay for the party. One day, when I woke up, I realized that I was completely lost. There was no plan other than drinking, which was terrible for me.
For almost every alcoholic, the bottle will eventually steal the show, Dr. Hokemeyer said. He explained: "Because it requires so much care and feeding, it can absorb vitality from one's life."
5. It puts me in trouble
Several times in my use, it has an impact, including destroying or destroying relationships, and being arrested or suspended.
When I was installed, I did what I did if I was awake and would not do it. Some of my actions - such as deceiving a boyfriend, lying on my drinking, taking drugs and taking drugs or taking money from my family - compromised morally. Sometimes I put my life or other people's lives at risk. Many times I even violate the law, indulge in illegal substances, drunk driving or provide alcohol to minors.
I used to blame other people for the bad things that happened to me. I often like to say that I have made a mistake in the wrong time, or that I am not lucky. But the truth is, every time I get into trouble, I am drinking or using it. Since I am already awake, the biggest trouble I have encountered does not go beyond minor violations.
Dr. Hockmeyer explained that alcohol is a central nervous system inhibitor that can slow a person's intelligence. This allows incredibly smart people to make bad decisions. He said: "Good and gentle people become arrogant." "Otherwise patient and meticulous people will become impulsive and reckless."
6. I lost my opinion of myself and became emotionally numb
In the last few years of my drinking, I lost my identity. I remember the first week of rehabilitation and the counselor asked me my favorite color. I looked at her blankly. "I don't know," I replied. I no longer have interest or passion, goals or wishes. For most of my life, I have been passionate about books, art, music and culture, but it has been several years since I strolled to the bookstore and found fun in the written text. I remember the last night I was dressed, looking at the mirror and seeing a distant stranger staring at me.
What is even more terrible is that I literally mean that you stop caring and care about everything. For a long time, alcohol paralyzed my feelings and eventually seemed to eliminate them. However, some mornings, usually after the carnival, I will wake up and my emotions will erupt in a dangerous way.
According to Dr. Hawkeyer, alcoholics are not uncommon. As a central nervous system inhibitor, over time, alcohol makes our emotions dull and makes us afraid to feel anything. However, once the effect disappears, all of these sensations will emerge - making it easy to fall into the cycle of alcoholism. You must drink to calm them down.
7. I failed in life
Everything in my life has failed... literally. In my first year at the university, I was on the list of the dean until the junior year. When my drinking went all out, my goal was to graduate early. But in the first semester of my senior year, I almost failed every class, and many of them were due to participate alone. I almost destroyed all my meaningful friendships and relationships.
This also caused me to lose my job and my relationship with friends, family and lovers, as I mentioned above. In short, it takes me out of all the components of a happy and successful life.
Dr. Hawke's solutionExplain that this is the case for most alcoholics because the disease thrives in isolation. However, the opposite is true: it can be cured by the health and healing relationships of others. "Because alcoholism takes over our rational thinking and distort our emotions, we can't achieve this. We are still caught in the destructive hand of disease," he said.
8. Bottom line
When I finally fell to the bottom and began to think about waking up, a very smart person "take a good look at yourself in the mirror and soak it all," she told me. . "All emotions, feelings, shame and incomprehensible morale are low, really letting you experience it yourself." I did. She said that it changed my life. "You don't feel this way anymore."
She is right. From the day I drank, I experienced a climax and a trough. My heart has been broken. I have been sorrowful and even shamed - but I never felt so low that day.
If you can solve these problems, you should consider dropping the electronic bottle. Or, if you are not sure if you are an alcoholic, you can sit down and write a way about how alcohol affects your life and share it with your loved ones.
Remember: Many people have regretted their drinking, but I have never met a person who is remorseful.
If you or someone close to you is addicted, you can help.