Pretty pink fairy
Banned
- Jan 30, 2008
- 31,981
Five pints During the Watford game, ended up at the wrong station on the way home ?
Regards
DF
Regards
DF
One of the big things for me is seeing the direct correlation between my resting heart rate (according to my Fitbit) and the days/periods where I do or don’t have a drink (not big amounts either - usually 1 or 2 330ml cans)
The drops are 3 or 4 day abstinences:
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June 2020 for me was almost completely dry:
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With life being tricky at the moment for a number of reasons, I’ve got into the bad habit of having a can or two every night unless I make a concerted effort not to.
No beer currently in the house though, so unless I start on the wine or spirits (psychologically easier for me), today should be day 3 dry.
A few years ago the thought of a Friday evening at home without a few beers was completely unimaginable and frankly, pretty horrifying. But I have just started my third year AF (apart from a minor lapse about 18 months ago) and I honestly don’t even think about - or indeed miss - drinking these days.
I always said I wasn’t stopping drinking altogether but just that I ‘wouldn’t have a drink today.’ But it’s just rolled and rolled to the point where I really can’t see myself drinking again. I do occasionally find myself think a cold beer or a nice glass of red would be nice, but not enough to tempt me. The health benefits have been extraordinary but then I used packing up booze as a reason to spend far more time in the gym and have shed a growing beer gut (my waist measurement is back to what it was in my early 20s) and packed on a decent additional amount of lean muscle.
If you think all of this makes me sound very dull and not a little smug then you’d probably be right, to be fair. Anyway, cutting out booze entirely isn’t for everyone - but even if you are thinking of just cutting back a bit then I’m sure you’ll feel the benefits.
I guess it varies from person to person but in my experience, for anyone looking to cut out booze for a while, the above post by [MENTION=36757]Happy Exile[/MENTION] is excellent advice and will almost certainly help you to quit temporarily and probably lead you to stopping drinking altogether - if that is what you want.
To be perfectly honest, I was quite afraid at the prospect of stopping altogether as I felt I would be missing something I really enjoyed and it would leave a huge, empty hole in my life and routine. Good day? Have a beer! Bad day? Have a beer! Wednesday night? Ah, Thursday tomorrow - that’s almost the weekend… have a beer! Monday evening? Oh god, time to reward myself for getting through the start of the week. Have a b….well, you get the picture.
So how do you break a cycle like that? Well, for me, telling myself that I can tomorrow but just not today helped to remove the fear factor. Even as I write this I know that if I want to, I can have a beer tomorrow. But I probably won’t.
One day at a time.
...my new addiction to not drinking.
Year 2 of making changes to a daily bottle of wine drinking routine.
Last year reached 192 days not drinking. Most of them in a block from Jan to June. Was happy with that.
This year went alcohol free till July but then drank solid to end of October. Dry November going well and fairly buzzing today. 211 days not drinking, 223 by December. Not sure about December but have 10 days pencilled in.
Next year will be a big non drinking block at the beginning of the year followed by keeping 10 days Alcohol free every summer month. Aim will be to go 240+ days without.
A fine balance but a semblance of control. My addiction to drinking tempered by my new addiction to not drinking.
Nice phrase! I am going to have to borrow that.
Sometimes I find it hard explaining to people why I don't want 'just the one.' Partly it's because I genuinely don't, anymore, and partly it's because (I now realise), I've become addicted to not drinking. But that isn't always an easy concept for people to understand. So I just say, "maybe later. Have you got a diet coke?"
Year 2 of making changes to a daily bottle of wine drinking routine.
Last year reached 192 days not drinking. Most of them in a block from Jan to June. Was happy with that.
This year went alcohol free till July but then drank solid to end of October. Dry November going well and fairly buzzing today. 211 days not drinking, 223 by December. Not sure about December but have 10 days pencilled in.
Next year will be a big non drinking block at the beginning of the year followed by keeping 10 days Alcohol free every summer month. Aim will be to go 240+ days without.
A fine balance but a semblance of control. My addiction to drinking tempered by my new addiction to not drinking.
Peroni 0.0% very close to the real thing of anyone much better than the previous version.
Peroni 0.0% very close to the real thing of anyone much better than the previous version.