Get the Support You Need

Learn from thousands of users who have made their way through our courses. Need help getting started? Watch this short video.

today's top discussions:

logo

Mother's Day is coming in a few weeks!

AABBYGAIL RUTH

2024-05-15 10:52 PM

Depression Community

logo

Addiction

Lynn123

2024-05-15 9:17 PM

Managing Drinking Community

logo

Challenging Worry - Worry Time

Ashley -> Health Educator

2024-05-14 3:33 PM

Depression Community

logo

Fibre

Ashley -> Health Educator

2024-05-06 5:05 PM

Healthy Weight Community

This Month’s Leaders:

Most Supportive

Browse through 411.753 posts in 47.056 threads.

160,635 Members

Please welcome our newest members: RBARDAJE, CuppaJo, GCAJULAO, RPABIA, TEBON

We have lost the ability to control our drinking:


12 years ago 0 82 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
thanks foxman!

I used to drink on average 8 beers a day, starting late afternoon, into the evening until around 10pm.    It wasn't often it was less, because once I started, it felt impossible to stop.  
12 years ago 0 12049 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Thank you for sharing this!
 
 
Josie, Health Educator
12 years ago 0 1562 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
But there is a solution:

There is a solution. Almost none of us liked the self- searching, the leveling of our pride, the confession of shortcomings which the process requires for its successful consummation. But we saw that it really worked in others, and we had come to believe in the hopelessness and futility of life as we had been living it. When, therefore, we were approached by those in whom the problem had been solved, there was nothing left for us but to pick up the simple kit of spiritual tools laid at out feet. We have found much of heaven and we have been rocketed into a fourth dimension of existence of which we had not even dreamed.
12 years ago 0 44 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Very interesting, thanks so much for sharing!
12 years ago 0 1562 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
This is from the book called Alcoholics Anonymous: I have to revisit this when working with newcomers. This keeps my memory fresh:

We alcoholics are men and women who have lost the ability to control our drinking. We know that no real alcoholic ever recovers control. All of us felt at times that we were regaining control, but such intervals usually brief were inevitably followed by still less control, which led in time to pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization. We are convinced to a man that alcoholics of our type are in the grip of a progressive illness. Over any considerable period we get worse, never better.

We are like men who have lost their legs; they never grow new ones. Neither does there appear to be any kind of treatment which will make alcoholics of our kind like other men. We have tried every imaginable remedy. In some instances there has been brief recovery, followed always by a still worse relapse. Physicians who are familiar with alcoholism agree there is no such thing a making a normal drinker out of an alcoholic. Science may one day accomplish this, but it hasn't done so yet.

Reading this thread: