Comments
Tim on January 27th, 2008 at 9:14 pm #
I suggest Reiki as part of the process of working your way back. Also suggest hugging your kids a lot :)
Simon on January 28th, 2008 at 2:24 pm #
Kev. Everybody. If you want something badly in life, you must decide what you are prepared to sacrifice. If you want to be a father to your daughters, you must sacrifice your alcoholic comfort. You must suffer the period of stress, mood swings and self-hate that leaving alcohol will bring. You must look into the mirror during the lowest moments and say to that poor man you see ‘I love my daughters and I’m becoming the father I want to be and they need’. You must pass through the suffering to get to the other side. There is no shortcut. You must face it to overcome it. It’s never too late to be the man you’ve wanted to be Kev. Face the suffering and overcome it properly. There is nothing unmanly about saying to everyone around you ‘Please help me’. Simon
Ben on February 2nd, 2008 at 5:08 am #
Been there — no kids involved — but I know the frustration of having a love affair with beer while being acutely aware of the price tag attached to it. The idea of ‘addiction treatment’ is a reflection of the American way (I’m about to tell it like it is, and you may not like it, but I’m trying to help). I actually got the best insight from a guy named Jack Trimpey (he wrote a book called “Rational Recovery.) All it really did was remind me of common sense. There is this mindset these days that is geared towards rehab centers and ‘life-long recovery’ and clinics that give people supplements or anti-depressants. The ‘experts’ have Phds so we assume they know what’s best. There is a flaw in this thinking: You’re looking to put the responsibility on someone else. I’ve seen these “It’s ok to ask for help..real men ask for help” lines, and I have to say that I think the people who say them mean well, and that they believe what they say, but if their idea of help means going to see some counselor or ‘expert’–I’m going to have to disagree. “Addiction” is defined in one’s own mind when his/her intuition says “what you’re doing is wrong.” You don’t need a doctor to tell you what you already know, and you don’t need to sit in a meeting several times a week to be reminded of it. You don’t need Antibuse to quit. You need to understand that there are two of you inside your head: One knows right and wrong, one loves to get buzzed. The one that likes to get buzzed will tell you “you can’t quit on your own…you’re fucked and you know it.” After you quit drinking for a while, it changes strategies and says “Hey, you’ve been good..been showing up for work on time..been good with the kids…you can have one…just be more careful this time.” Kev — you need to learn to recognize your enemy–whether its trying to console you or trying to rip you down and tell you you’re hopeless. Check out Rational Recovery online. I know Brad wrote a blog about information overload, but actually the information on rational recovery will help to remove a lot of the information overload you probably already have in your head (thanks to t.v. and other media when it comes to ‘treating’ addiction). –Best of luck!
Rod on February 2nd, 2008 at 9:53 am #
My thoughts are with you Do it I’m sure you win!
Brad Bollenbach on February 2nd, 2008 at 11:12 am #
@Ben: You hit the nail on the head. I haven’t read anything about Rational Recovery, but the name alone sounds exactly like what I’ve done to help me get through trying times.
Amit C on February 25th, 2008 at 11:52 pm #
A few things for Kev, -Try the 12 step program by AA, http://www.aa.org it has worked for many and is worth a shot. -As a indication of timing, the latest newsweek is about addiction, it mentioned Brookside institute worked for those when AA did not. The newsweek article Amit
Shirley on February 28th, 2008 at 3:13 pm #
I’ve been where Kev is and know the pain he’s feeling. Why do those who drink excessivly - and know it - continue to drink, despite all the reasons not to - family, job, etc? Because alcohol has become the crutch we turn to, to temporarily block out the feelings we have that we aren’t good enough, smart enough, loveable. It’s because we don’t love ourselves and feel no one else really does, or could. And the proof comes the next day, when we wake up after a night of binging, ashamed of ourselves and what we’ve become. Why can’t be like other people and stop after just one or two? I was afraid to acknowledge that I was an alcoholic for many years. An alocholic was one of those guys sitting in his own piss, passed out on the sidewalk, dirty, possibly homeless. I had a job, a home, some friends. Besides, I didn’t drink every day! Just on the weekends - although I ALWAYS ended up drunk, and often with someone I didn’t know. Then I started to crave a drink during the week and couldn’t say no to myself. I went to the company thereapist for a referral to a shrink “because I wasn’t happy”. Never mentioned drinking to him, but he asked the question “how much?” and suggested AA. I wasn’t eager to go - scared to death - but I followed up with his suggestion. It has now been over 17 years and I don’t regret it or miss alcohol in any way (I even quit smoking after a couple years sober). I am free - liberated from feelings of shame about my behaviour, lack of responsibility. Was it easy? How could it be? It was scary. It took a complete change in the way I viewed alcohol. Now I regard it as something to which I have an allergy - like some people are allergic to strawberries, or nuts or shellfish. It’s not a moral issue - I just can’t drink it. Once I was free of the compulsion to drink, I could start to look at myself in a more realistic way, and come to accept myself as one who has flaws but is a good person, with value and capable of love and being loved. As for AA - the beauty of the organization is that it’s NOT run by “experts” and PhD’s - it’s me, and you and all the others who’ve experienced the same feelings and pains, who understand just how crappy you feel and what’s the experience is like. Some are well educated, come from privilege, some are poor, with little education, single, married, young, old, male, female - none of that means anything. But - make sure you find the meeting or group that feels right for you and where you’re at ease. Like any group, the individuals you interact with will make or break your experience of it. Whereever you live - there’s an AA meeting somewhere nearby. No transportation - no problem. Mention it, and someone will volunteer to pick you up and take you home. The first step is the most difficult - look up the phone number of the nearest AA organization, and give them a phone call. Tell the person who answers you’re scared and unsure - he/she will know just what you mean. Get your life back. You deserve it.
johan on March 6th, 2008 at 7:33 pm #
i absolutely love your honest “its a fucking war” style! i wouldn’t have put the last line there, excuse for being honest… its a pleasure to read, thanks :)
Fee on May 15th, 2008 at 10:32 pm #
I am blown away by your open and honest approach to life. Thank you so much. And Kev - if you have the ability to so openly bare your soul about the depths of your darkness the war is more than 90% won. The devil frolicking in the playground of your mind is on his deathbed. And that surely is something to go hug your kids about! Post a comment
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