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Steve_c

Re: Alcohol
« Reply #20 on: March 13, 2011, 07:48:58 pm »
I only enjoy a drink at football, it makes watching QPR with all your mates a good day out. Tea is my most favorite drink about 10/ 15 cups a day.

dazmond

  • Posts: 24587
Re: Alcohol
« Reply #21 on: March 13, 2011, 11:21:20 pm »
i agree with tosh!!! ;D ;D ;D ;D

yes been there,done that many times!!nearly 5 years sober now and my business and life has never been in better shape!!

if you are a drinker it is a fantastic job although not so good if your drinking while up a ladder(or using a wfp!)and your customers might not like you coming round when your half p****d!!!

as for days off and lie ins.no problem!although you ll end up skint and ill!!


dazmond
price higher/work harder!

Sean Dyer

  • Posts: 2947
Re: Alcohol
« Reply #22 on: March 13, 2011, 11:23:56 pm »
most windowcleaners are religious men , infact 90 % !! ,i( i wont say which religion the majority of them follow ) and we all know where they stand on alcohol and drug abuse ..

myself im not religious but am teetotal , so i guess im in the 10 %
they still drink though mate trust me ;)

Tom White

Re: Alcohol
« Reply #23 on: March 14, 2011, 08:21:42 am »
most windowcleaners are religious men , infact 90 % !! ,i( i wont say which religion the majority of them follow ) and we all know where they stand on alcohol and drug abuse ..

myself im not religious but am teetotal , so i guess im in the 10 %
they still drink though mate trust me ;)

I know they do!  ;D ;)

Tom White

Re: Alcohol
« Reply #24 on: March 14, 2011, 08:37:39 am »
Did you enjoy your time in drink tosh?

I must say that you seem to be happy away from the booze which has got to be a good thing.

I don't think it was a case of 'enjoying' my last drink; I sort of drank because I felt I had to.  It was more for relief from the internal pressure that built up when I wasn't drinking, more than anything else.   I didn't drink for fun, I drank because it gave me a sense of ease and comfort, but in the end even that stopped working.  Alcohol is a drug, and that's what happens I guess.  And once I started drinking, I didn't drink in moderation.  I drank till either my supply had ran out (I tried to control my drinking by not having too much in the house), or till I passed out, if I did have access to more than my 'ration'.  My 'rock bottom' was more mental and physical (I was just truly sick and tired of feeling sick and tired) than material; though I had problems with relationships, earning a living, dealing with life in general, and I had regular thoughts and plans about suicide; and I had to drink every-sodding-day; like a treadmill I couldn't get off.

It does sometimes annoy me when people (like my Mother) still think I'm on some sort of knife-edge where they think at some stage I could possibly drink again (she knows alkies; my father was one) - and it's been nearly two years sober for me (it would've been longer, but I had to do some experimenting to see if I really was really an alkie, after a period of not drinking  ;D).

But now, after being shown how, I don't miss drinking at all, no more than I miss say,... eating kippers.  It's not a case of 'fighting' or 'will power' (though it took a bit of grit in the early days - but I had plenty of support from a brilliant bunch of people who'd been in the same situation as myself), and now I really just don't need to drink.  And to be honest, I don't think life has ever been as easy as it is now.

Anyway, I hope I haven't been over melodramatic.  I'm just tying to help anyone that may identify with me, that they may also have a problem with alcohol.  If anyone does suspect they have a problem, there's plenty of help available, and many of us find that it can actually be a blessing in disguise.  You can turn all the poo that comes with being a 'problem drinker' into some pretty good fertiliser for a happy life.  That might sound weird, but it's true.

dazmond

  • Posts: 24587
Re: Alcohol
« Reply #25 on: March 14, 2011, 09:11:37 am »
if you ve been drinking for years tosh im sure itll take more than 2 years of continous sobriety to convince your mother that that this time will be different!! ;D ;D

i know of people going back drinking after 10 years of sobriety and dying within a year.hell there is a guy whos gone back after 45 years of being sober! :o :o


its a strange thing!sobriety is easy when things are running smoothly!some just dont have the strength when faced with lifes ups and downs.

loved ones dying whether they they are murdered and raped/car accidents etc or through cancer/natural causes,losing jobs and many more horrors that some people experience.

who of us could say we will never drink again?im planning not to by the way!


best wishes for a long sober happy life!! ;) ;D ;D ;D


dazmond
price higher/work harder!

Tom White

Re: Alcohol
« Reply #26 on: March 14, 2011, 09:14:23 am »
You too, Daz, mate, and I'd better get my fat ass out to work.


chopsie

  • Posts: 1736
Re: Alcohol
« Reply #27 on: March 14, 2011, 11:00:36 am »
I enjoy a drink once or twice a week, Its very rare that there is any in the house and i dont really enjoy it at home compared to going out to the pub. me and the girlfriend have a bottle ot two of wine at weekends perhaps. Its the whole going out to the pub and socialising/people watching that i enjoy, i could not sit in an empty pub drinking. But the trouble is i cannot just have a couple, I end up having at least 6 pints and then end up rough the next day so don't work, so its costs a fortune to drink then even more in lost earnings.
chopsie