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Post Info TOPIC: Mental Obsession


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Mental Obsession
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From the moment I started drinking, I loved it, and I loved it so much I planned and plotted so that I would not become an alcoholic like my father.  I thought I knew about alcoholism - an alcoholic was someone who craved alcohol and went into withdrawal without it.  I didn't want to be come one of those, because drinking was something I wanted and needed.

After I read the Big Book the first time, and saw the part about a mental obsession with alcohol, the light bulb clicked on.  Well before I had physical symptoms, I had the mental obsession.  Obtaining alcohol when I was underage - planning the next drink/drunk.  Planning to not be an alcoholic!  Normal people don't think stuff like that!

I never had physical symptoms beyond a rough hangover... headache, sweats, puking... mostly gone by the end of the day (so I could start again).  But the obsession... that was there, in full bloom, from day one.  That is what makes me an alcoholic - not how much, or what, or where, or when, I drank.

I still notice alcohol... when I'm with people, and someone is drinking a beer - letting it sit there and get warm, I'm thinking there's somebody who doesn't know how to drink... LOL.  I still have drinking dreams.  I still have thoughts and memories when I pass by the beer cooler at the store.  Or if I catch a whiff of alcohol in a restaurant, or party.  I will always have that, because I'm an alcoholic... and I'm grateful for the reminder.  I don't want the memory of my disease to fade away, lest I forget what I am.  The obsession is still there to remind me, but I don't have to act on it today.

To some people this might seem like self-torture, a constant temptation.  But it's not really; these thoughts are not constant.  They pop up to remind me, and I turn them over - I do a mini step-3 on them.  And it works.  The first time I ever did this, I was astonished.  I was only a few weeks sober, driving out on the highway - had about an hour drive.  I started thinking about buying a 12 pack.  I didn't really want to, but the thought was there.  I remembered what I heard at meetings about turning it over... so I did, in my head I said ok God, I'm supposed to give this over so here you go.  Of course I didn't believe it, but when I got home it dawned on me that I had made the rest of the trip and never thought about the 12-pack again.

I've done that hundreds of times since, and it works every time.  It's not a minute to minute struggle, but more like the phone bill... shows up on a regular basis, to remind me.

Barisax


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Hi Barisax,

I can relate to the experience of "noticing" alcohol when around people drinking. I feel like a pavlovian dog when someone else is holding a glass of wine--my eyes go straight to the glass and instinctively look for the bottle. It takes so much to not to walk over to the bottle and pour myself a glass, but even if I really don't want a drink my eyes still go straight for the alcohol and note everyone in the room who is drinking and what they are drinking.

I'm pretty new at the not-drinking-when-I-want-to thing, so I just need to steer clear of all alcohol for a while.

Take care,
Laura

-- Edited by Laura at 02:19, 2007-02-21

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MIP Old Timer

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There are still some days I miss my biggest love "alcohol"...but shes pretty abusive eh....so me thinks, that today...I'll just stay away...:)

Obsessive? I think that most of us can be....with anything....if we forget to put on the brakes...

Mental? Wouldnt know about that one.....but the voices are still there..:)


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Laura wrote:

Hi Barisax,

I can relate to the experience of "noticing" alcohol when around people drinking. I feel like a pavlovian dog when someone else is holding a glass of wine--my eyes go straight to the glass and instinctively look for the bottle. It takes so much to not to walk over to the bottle and pour myself a glass, but even if I really don't want a drink my eyes still go straight for the alcohol and note everyone in the room who is drinking and what they are drinking.

I'm pretty new at the not-drinking-when-I-want-to thing, so I just need to steer clear of all alcohol for a while.

Take care,
Laura

-- Edited by Laura at 02:19, 2007-02-21



All's fair in love, war, and sobriety...  there's nothing wrong with staying away from alcohol and people who are drinking, places that serve alcohol, etc.  I have been sober a while and I still avoid these situations unless there is a reason to be there - not so much because I'm afraid I will drink, but just because I don't really want to be around a bunch of drunks, or attend a function where the primary activity is drinking.  Obviously you can't avoid it forever, but in early sobriety, there's nothing wrong with playing every card you have.  For me, I didn't go around any alcohol at all for 6 months.  Not that I picked 6 months it just worked out that way.  I still passed it up in the supermarket, I still saw beer commercials.  But I didn't go to any alcohol serving party or get-together, and fortunately no one else in my household was drinking at the time so I didn't have to open the fridge and see it.  After about 6 months, I went to a company picnic.  I brought my family and there was plenty of food and plenty to do without drinking.  I did notice a very small number of people who never got more than 10 feet from the beer tap.  I would have been one of them, and thinking "everybody" was drinking as much as I was.  But from my sober perspective, I saw it was only maybe 5 people out of 200!

Barisax
 



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