this post was submitted on 28 Feb 2025
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Stop Drinking

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This is a place to motivate each other to control or stop drinking. It is also a place for non drinkers to discuss and share.

We welcome anyone who wishes to join in by asking for advice, sharing our experiences and stories, or just encouraging someone who is trying to quit or cut down.

Please post only when sober; you’re welcome to read in the meanwhile.

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submitted 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by [email protected] to c/stopdrinking
 

A key point of many recovery programs is to separate yourself from your drinking buddies, which is probably the most difficult thing for anyone in any situation. It's something I still deal with in some ways: Drinking friends are extremely easy to find. Real friends absolutely do not show up everyday.

I was just thinking about some of the people this morning that I just don't have the need to associate with anymore. There are two that I still occasionally hang out with, but there was a deeper friendship besides booze from the start.

If you are having this problem now, it gets better over time, I promise. It may take a couple of years to learn life again, but you can heal. In retrospect, having much more time on my hands just made the initial loneliness much worse.

My friends changed but also the reasons to hangout with other people also changed. This took time for me to understand. What matters to me personally has slowly morphed over these last few years and that is reflected in who I choose to associate with.

My conclusion is that I absolutely underestimated the time recovery actually takes and how my views on things like friendship would shift. As my entire personality was based on alcohol, I have found that reevaluating past decisions or assumptions can be useful, if not paramount to moving forward. This, unfortunately, takes lots time and time is not a friend to anyone fresh into recovery.

(This was just another one of my random annual stopdrinking posts. If you needed to relate to this in some way, that is awesome. For me, self-reflection is important and I choose to make it public. If this post seems self-centered, that is because it is: It's just not unhealthy.)

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[–] DrCatface 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

totally agree with everything you said, I'm the same, my life will be over, no more chances. id love to be completely free, but I need to lean on others who've done it. i don't know how to live, im an 11year old in a 30year old body. been an AA tourist for a year, I got 1 week today and through the program it's like I've just rocketed through puberty. 4 meetings a week and lots of zoom. theres no other programs in rural NSW australia I'm just ecstatic to be with like-minded individuals, steps or no, hp or no, sobriety or no, I fkn love them and I tell them.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago

Well, rock on!

I am about a mid 20's kid stuck in the body of a 40 something now, me thinks. My brain was put on hold through my drinking years, and a whole different version of me grew up before I killed him off, metaphorically.

Keep up the routine of meetings, if you can. There is a ton to learn and a ton of experience from others you can learn from.

I believe I may have chatted with you before, and probably said many of the same things. Regardless, this is something I repeat to anyone recently sober, and still repeat to myself: If you don't want to get drunk, then don't drink. Super simple. (It literally saved my life, so I pass it forward from my first and only AA sponsor who told that same exact phrase to me, years ago.)