What are some of the physical changes you noticed after quitting? It's three weeks for me today. I keep reminding myself "One day at a time" and "GOD".
I stopped having the dry heaves, my hands quit shaking, my stomach stopped hurting, stopped braking out in cold and hot sweats, was able to sleep more than 2 hours without having to have a drink. That's just off the top of my head.
__________________
The smallest of good deeds is greater than the best of intentions.
Anonymous
The physical stuff is what I remember least about my early sobriety. I didn't have alcohol cravings the way I thought I would. I felt better physically within a few days, not being hung over. I did have sugar cravings which I indulged in. Mostly it was brain stuff going on. I guess in my first two weeks, I was just really into AA and the physical relief. My emotions caught up with me after that 2 week honeymoon and as much as I was into AA, my disease told me that's nice, but you really need alcohol to avoid feeling this anxiety and this crap. Instead of drinking, I shared that at a meeting and instead of them saying "see ya", they said "that thinking - that's alcoholism". That's when I realized I was born an alcoholic, because that thinking was there before I ever drank. That was when it began to sink in what was really wrong with me - that it wasn't about toughing it out and beating alcohol, but about changing my life, my attitude.
I wasn't worried so much about it. I was more concerned with making it to meetings. God is not going to help you stay sober unless you learn the program of AA through sponsorship, meetings, and stepwork.
Otherwise you are just on the wagon.
Physical changes are great but the spiritual ones are the ones that really matter.
-- Edited by pinkchip on Wednesday 1st of June 2011 10:45:12 PM
__________________
Keep coming back. It works if you work it. So work it. You're worth it!
Changes? My face was not red and bloated, I didn't feel terrible in the AM, I stopped shaking, had more energy, my digestive system worked better, my guts stopped hurting. bad things stopped happening.
Stopped waking up with my car running, or in strange places (is this physical?) Gained 4 inches in my chest and lost 4 inches in my waist (OK, it took some time and effort)
__________________
Rob
"There ain't no Coupe DeVille hiding in the bottom of a Cracker Jack Box."
What is your reply supposed to mean Pinkchip? I'm not "worried" about the changes. I'm enjoying them. And I also happen to be closer to God during this time, knowing I must lean on him and cannot do this on my own.
It just means build a program by going to meetings, getting a sponsor, and working the steps with a sponsor who has worked the steps. Otherwise, you ARE doing it on your own.
__________________
Keep coming back. It works if you work it. So work it. You're worth it!
What makes you assume I haven't been to a meeting? Just because I haven't announced it? For your information I have been to a meeting and I don't appreciate your smugness. I wanted to feel welcome here, not judged.
I'm glad you found us. I don't remember much about the beginning physical changes. I do recall getting good sleep for the first time in a long time (once I stopped drinking so much dang coffee at meetings! lol). Today I just feel so much better in my own skin. No more hangovers. No more shakes. No more urge to drink! I look back at pictures of myself in my last days of drinking and I hardly recognize myself. Poor skin, grayish coloring, I looked bloated and sickly, and looked heavier though I weighed less than I do now. Today I EAT RIGHT, get enough sleep, exercise. My skin has a healthy glow, my hair is shiny. I am in good shape and have muscle tone! I smell good! Though PinkChip is right, the inner stuff and spirituality is most important, I feel good about feeling better and looking better. It's sort of the icing on the cake. :)
11 months ago when I first got sober, I remember suffering with rampant emotions. Roller coaster mood swings, was on edge a lot. Over time I've mellowed out quite a bit, things don't "stress me out" as much, I'm amazed how much more energy I have now that I'm not putting so much into living in survival mode. I used to walk around in a perpetual state of exhaustion. I thought I had anxiety, depression, and chronic fatigue syndrome. I went to the doctor and he said, "Nope. You just are killing yourself with your lifestyle (drinking)." I've stopped fighting everything and everyone. I let things go that I have no control over, and give up control of things that don't matter. I buck up and take care of my responsibilities today that I used to fret and worry and procrastinate, and end up skipping or forgetting. I now am happy with who I am and feel a sense of inner peace, I'm ok just BEING me.
Life is good. I wish for you all of the joy, serenity, and acceptance that I have every day in my life today. One day at a time. WE CAN DO THIS! :) Heather
Aloha Kate and congradulations on the sober time. Physically one of the many things I had to deal with was tension. I was reacting to everything and everyone and filled with paranoia. Of course this was how I use to live while drinking also and it took me a long time to deal with the fear beneathe it all and finally just do more "responding" rather than just "reacting" to life around me. Drinking didn't lessen my fears it made them worse. The first change was not drink and then to attempt life without it. This is a daily, active, on purpose lifestyle for me...a hands on program which is more than okay for me because to go back to the early me is just so unacceptable now.
Seems to me that most of the positive changes for me didn't come for about 90 days. I noticed things like an increase in appetite, but I still felt sick after eating, and forget about sleeping lol. It took some time for my brain to regulate to the lack of outside "influences", so the roller coaster ride kept me pretty preoccupied with just trying to put one foot in front of the other and doing what others suggested. After about 6 months I noticed that I had more energy, and was sleeping through the night. Like many others, I lost weight as well. The changes that really matter to me today are the return of some sanity (working step 2 daily), and a stronger spiritual connection with my HP. I also like the fact that I can stop and think before taking action (at least most of the time LOL). I guess the last few changes aren't physical changes, but the spiritual changes make the physical changes seem trivial to me today. Remember, keep doing the right things and it only gets better!
Brian
__________________
Nothing ever truly dies. The universe wastes nothing. Everything is simply, transformed. :confuse:
I went to 90 meetings in 90 days when I came in to AA. I didn't go to "a meeting." I had a sponsor by day six and was starting to work steps. AA works by telling what you what I did and you can take it or leave it. You posted 9 days ago that you were doing readings on your own and had not been to a meeting yet and didn't want to because you "work with the public." Do you think the rest of us are unemployed or don't interact with the public?
Anyhow, I was going by your own words. It is not smugness...I am sorry if it came across like that. It's straight talk and people will give it to you in AA. What I want most for you is to not die from Alcoholism and to not relapse. What I want for you next is to find the wonderful gift of AA that I have found. It has changed my life so fully and it has been so amazing I barely have words for it.
So Kate, I just urge you to go after this with everything you have inside you and develop a superstrong AA foundation that will pay dividends later. I am not judging you. I pray you will post next about finding a sponsor, a home group, picking up your 30 day chip, working steps, then starting to take on service commitments and such. I don't want to speak for all the other members here, but I pretty much guarantee they will all tell you this is what they had to do to finally build up some lasting sobriety time.
__________________
Keep coming back. It works if you work it. So work it. You're worth it!