Snapdragon wrote:
I haven't been doing too well with TSM - and to be honest was on the verge of giving up altogether. Then I read Guapo's post (fortunately before he deleted it!!) and it really resonated with me. He described how he had been doing TSM for over a year and was drinking as much as ever. Then he read Stanton Peele's book 'Recover' and it completely changed his life.
I had read Guapo talking about 'mindfulness' but I really didn't understand. So I've brought the book and I'm now reading and working on the PERFECT method - which is all about mindfulness. I have only just started, but I think I finally understand how I'm going to actually get over this pathetic addiction. I will continue with TSM - together with mindfulness. I am learning to meditate - there's a great exercise here on You Tube
https://youtu.be/q9HFoRSTaMA I'll keep you posted about how I get on but - THANK YOU Guapo - I wish you hadn't deleted that post, because I'm sure it would resonate with others too.
Hi Miss SnapDragon. I'll summarize what I said before, as it was a good path for me. After 6 months or so of OK success with TSM, I did things to change my perception of alcohol. Voila !! Success.
1. TSM works as advertised, makes drinking unrewarding, so it loses it's appeal. I would still overdrink though, as I still apparently craved the alcohol "high".
2. The ultimate goal I think is to not want to drink. Indifference, take it or leave it, don't crave alcohol, etc.
3. Drinking without considering the consequence is mindless. It's easy to do, because alcohol sets the stage to continue drinking mindlessly once you become inebriated. Then it's all out the window.
4. Awareness of drinking (mindful) is when inebriation DOES NOT occur (space drinks, set limits, don't get drunk). That means a change in thinking, but NOT willpower. Using willpower is why abstinence doesn't work.
5. Anyways, the only way to become mindful is to stop mindless drinking. Drinking less leads to drinking less !!
I compared the upside of drunkenness, to drinking within reason (as above). There is NO upside to drunkenness !!
Your mind won't let you see that, because it wants to keep you in it's comfort zone, which is inebriation. ANSWER: Quit pounding down alcohol !!
I can tell you, that after 2 years of this, the thought of inebriating is repulsive. The thought of drinking a little within reason is fine. But there is no craving to become drunk. That won't happen if you're drinking excessively.
A few years ago I'd be through a bottle of wine at least by now. I thought that was a "good" day. That never happens now. This will be a good day !!
Taking Naltrexone, or drinking daily is self defeating, both are depressants ultimately. Drinking mindfully occasionally with Naltrexone to keep things in line works fine.
Lets face it though, a social life without some alcohol blows, IMHO.
Hope that helps