TacomaJD
I LIKE CHEAP STUFF.....
98TJ said:My little brother was an alcoholic. I can't tell you how many times he "quit drinkin". He died of cirrhosis of the liver at age 36.
Its a tuff thing to really quit, but people do it every day. My ffriend was an alcoholic for 30 years. He would get his pay check and disappear for days and come home broke to a house full of hungry kids. One day he had enough and walked away from it. I knew a man who didn't draw a sober breath for 25 years and he quit drinking and went on to start and own a very successful HVAC business.
You can do it. Hang in there.
Know whatcha mean. I don't have an addictive nature. I quit dipping back in January and ain't had a dip since. I like to drink just like I like to wheel and ride motorcycles, but I don't need it. I am so busy now that I drink about 1/3 or less than what I used to drink when I had much more free time.
I was pretty hooked on pain killers after my bike wreck, was on em hardcore every day for around 9 months before I finally quit cold turkey and just relied on ibuprofen for the pain. When I came home from the hospital I was on 1 oxycontin twice a day and 2 oxycodones every 4 hours, then no more oxycontins, but I stayed on the oxycodones for a long time. I had several surgeries that year so I had be on them, but I also drank a lot of beer and popped them like candy. When my pain levels became tolerable, I stopped them and got super depressed. I am the happiest sumbitch you will ever meet, funloving, high spirited, etc. And for me to be depressed was ****ing weird. It lasted about 3 weeks, didn't want to do anything or talk to anyone, just laid around the house and did nothing. Finally it went away. But I now see how tough it is for people to kick drugs when their body physically needs it. My scenario was minor compared to some, so I can't imagine how hard it would be to really kick a high powered drug once you have become dependent on it.