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John S2 Discussion started by John S2 5 years ago
A Troutnut1 Repost  One Year Ago




I know a lot of good quitters here have also chosen to give up or limit their drinking of alcohol, permanently or temporarily, in order to protect their quits. Great idea!  We are now entering the most dangerous time of the year for addicts of all types. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years are like the Bermuda Triangle for addicts of all types. Lots of good quits of all kinds disappear into the abyss and are never recovered.

Holidays can be stressful for a lot of us. Addicts of all kinds often revert to their old ways instead of learning new coping strategies. It is helpful to have a plan in place while you are celebrating. Here are some tips from my plan which is mainly focused on avoiding alcohol but apply to all quits. Lots of newbies will want to avoid alcohol during the holidays, even if they don't normally have a problem with it. Alcohol puts to sleep the pre-frontal cortex of your brain, which is in charge of reason and making good judgments. Killing off the pre-frontal cortex of your brain is like cutting the brake lines on your sports car and then going for a drive. Without the pre-frontal cortex we end up operating off our limbic system, which reverts us to our more primitive instincts. 

If you are in the first year of your quit, you definitely do not want to be operating with you’re a/k/a/ lizard brain at the next party or celebration.Here are my ideas and I hope others will contribute theirs here as well:

1. I ask myself honestly what is the purpose of me going? Do I need to go at all? Do I want to go? Have I good reason for going?

2. I arrange my own transportation. If things get rough and I need to make a hasty exit, I want to be able to do it without delay. This may involve separate cars, etc. A few extra dollars in gas is nothing compared to relapse.

3. I always take a supply of my favorite soft drinks in the car. More than enough is the proper amount.

4. I take my "binky". The binky is simply a stainless steel travel coffee mug filled with my favorite soft drink. It has a lid and I keep it with me at all times.

5. If someone offers me a drink I just hold up my binky and say, “I'm good, thanks!" And they have no idea what I am drinking.

6. I sneak back out to the car and refill as needed.

7. If caught without my binky somehow and offered a drink...  I simply say, “Thanks, I'll take a root beer, water, etc", without making any kind of a big deal about it.

8. I don't usually find it necessary to tell anyone that I don't drink. I DO drink! Just not things with alcohol in them. The exception to this would be if I regularly attend the same event with the same folks. Then they might as well know and be looking out for me.

9. I don't engage relatives or friends in arguments, politics, religion, etc. Some people are wired backwards at the factory, and I am unlikely to change them or fix them over Thanksgiving dinner. God created us both. Maybe created them to offset me!

10. I generally get there a little late and leave a little early. If asked why I just say “It's a school night for me!”

11. The ONLY people who ever notice that I’m not drinking alcohol is other alcoholics, usually practicing ones. Nobody cares if I put ketchup on my burger unless they happen to be obsessed with ketchup.

12. I didn't know this when I was still drinking… A huge percentage of the population doesn't drink, do drugs, or smoke! I learned to seek them out and spend more time with them and less with my drinking, drugging, smoking friends. There are also some excellent podcasts out there for sobriety, so if you can't hang with real sober friends you can at least hang with some virtual sober friends.

Beware that Birds of a feather drink and smoke together! I didn’t get in trouble or lose my quit every time I drank. But every time I got in trouble I was drinking. There’s a clue in there somewhere.  It is my sincere hope that you have the most wonderful Holiday...  Your friend in Montana,  Troutnut 1.



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