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I’m about two months in and I’m no longer thinking about alcohol all the time. In the past I was either regretting drinking the night before, thinking about and planning my next drinking opportunity or arguing with myself about whether or not I was going to drink that night. That. Has. Stopped. I had five AF days in a row this past week (okay, one day was with the help of a stomach virus) and I didn’t even think about drinking except once on my way to a trigger situation and that was easily overcome. It was truly effortless. And here’s the really crazy part. There’s a tiny, very tiny voice in my head saying, “Oh no, here comes the weekend and you have to drink. Why do I have to drink? Because it’s the weekend and that’s what you do.” I guess that’s two voices. Like I said, crazy but I bet people know what I’m talking about. So last night being Friday I had two glasses of wine and poured a third that I didn’t finish. No hangover this morning- this is epic.
Everyone says that Nal is just a tool and we have to take our own positive steps to accomplish our goals. I have some strategies that help me so I thought I’d share them in case they can help someone else. These are all strategies I’ve used for years to help me limit my intake, not just since starting Nal. But now I find that the Nal gives them a better chance of working, kind of like sharpening a dull knife.
-Plan an early morning activity once or twice a week that would be horrible to do with a hangover. Walk or exercise with a friend, sign up for an exercise class that will charge you even if you don’t show up, anything for which there will be a negative consequence if you don’t show up.
- Google “cancer alcohol” and read all the bad health effects of drinking. I know this is weird but when The Voice is telling me to drink, this scares me straight and gives me the extra incentive I need. Although since starting Nal I haven’t had to do this.
-Take up a hobby that will keep your mind and hands busy at night and that you can look forward to. Crocheting and the crossword are my personal favorites but whatever works for you. Pour yourself a glass of your favorite nonalcoholic beverage and when the voice in your head starts in, scream “SHUT UP!!” at it, but also in your head lest your family calls the SWAT team.
And here’s my favorite tip for people who struggle with sleep issues. This has worked like a charm for me so maybe it will for someone else, too. For years I had trouble falling and staying asleep. I’d often use booze as my soporific, but drunk or sober, I’d wake up in the wee hours and anxieties, guilt, worries about my children, awful stuff would fill my head and I’d be unable to go back to sleep for hours. I needed something to crowd out the negative onslaught, so I started listening to audiobooks all night. Every night when I go to bed, I put my earbud in (I cut the other one off), start my audiobook and it plays all night. When I surface, as I do between three and four times a night, my story is droning on, I listen for a few minutes and before I know it, I’m sound asleep again. I listen to books that I’ve already read before and that aren’t too exciting and I listen to them over and over. I’m not going for entertainment here; I’m going for a lulling distraction. Some of my faves: Saturday by Ian McEwan, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty White, A Brief History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson and my current go-to, The Complete Sherlock Holmes narrated by Simon Vance (awesome narrator). You can get all of these on Audible.com. So, if anybody out there dreads the thought of going to bed and trying to sleep without booze, check it out.
So there you go. Some encouragement for newbies or folks thinking about trying TSM- these pills have turned off the voice- and some tips that help me and I hope they help you.
_________________ Started Nal 5/7/15 Pre-Nal: 16 - 40 drinks US/week with fairly frequent runs of 3 forced AF days/week Now: 10 – 16 drinks US/week with consistent 3-4 effortless AF days/wk Goal: 10 or fewer drinks/week
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