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06-19-2006, 08:18 AM
bluidkiti
Site Admin
Joined: 15 Mar 2005
Posts: 10500
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 03:57 am
What feelings were you having when you were first in recovery?
_________________
fibiray
Joined: 16 Mar 2005
Posts: 515
Location: Australia Central Coast NSW
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 08:18 am
I guess my feelings were of terror and desperation. I feared to drink as I knew I would die and I feared not to drink as I was only 23 years old when I came in. It was hard to imagine life without alcohol. My thoughts were certainly confused and clouded and this took a long time to pass, but my feelings were so sensitive and raw and whenever i felt anything it was always to the extreme. After the first 6 months I began to experience this really strange thing call contentment, which I had never experienced before. I was incredibly tough on myself in those days but I don't necessarily see that as a bad thing as it contirbuted to my commitment to staying sober. It took me a long time to trust and this was a real issue form me particularly coming from a violent background. I was at a meeting 2 weeks ago and an older sober member who had been sober for 35 years had said that we must get a least one person in the fellowship to be able to confide in. This rang true for me as I did just that. The concept of a sponsor and putting trust into that person was too much for me because of my trust issues. But I did have an ally and over the years have managed to surround myself with many allies in recovery that love and support me through thick and thin. I tell them anything and my life is an open book.
chow chow Cool
_________________
lightlover
Joined: 17 Mar 2005
Posts: 385
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 09:00 am
My feelings are twofold:
I am really grateful to be sober, to be rid of constant confusion, exhaustion, panic, guilt, shame, and chaotic thoughts & emotions. Right now, though, i am fighting to overcome my existential attitude towards everything and am quite doubtful that i will be able to experience the psychic change of which the BB speaks on any meaningful level. Right now, I am truly just existing, trying to bear down and make financial amends. That is my current goal, the one that is making me get out of bed in the morning. Otherwise, with relationships, to me it's like, "what's the point." If I am brutally honest, I really don't like real life, and I really don't like a lot of people. It is a daily battle to fight the desire to isolate. I truly understand that feeling of not wanting to live a life of using drugs anymore, but of not wanting to live life sober either. I sure as he!! don't know how to live sober and be happy, joyous and free at this point. I am sorry to report that my current level of awareness is only of the agonizing boredom and emptiness and alienation and pointlessness and purposelessness of my life....and a mourning for the private universe that i used to create in my head to entertain myself and get through the day. though i am grateful not to be actually believing my own insanity anymore, i feel flat and lifeless. And, of course, guilty that I can't be a better person, just happy with what I have, that I can't just stay in gratitude more.
Well, isn't that uplifting. I guess I must be a little depressed, I am sorry that I did not have better ESH to share with everyone.
___________________________
cassie
Moderator
Joined: 16 Mar 2005
Posts: 1029
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 07:13 pm
Good question!
At first, my feelings were of anger and resentment because I often wondered "Why me!" I had the 360 degree mood swings for quite a while and a huge pity party. But after a while, I felt a lot off regret and sadness. I greived for all that I had lost. That, of course, got me absolutely nowhere but grief was something I had to experience too. For a long time, I was overly cautious and would not myself be enthusiastic because I just knew something or someone was going to take what little progress I had made away. Gloommy Gussie Crying or Very sad was how I should have introduced myself at meetings.
It is different now. Acceptance and humility as well as the ability to laugh at myself are things I am grateful for. I try to understand my angry moments and work my way through them. I know how deadly they are. I am able to feel a wide range of emotion but without the mood swings. I have a chance today to be sane and sober and share the joy that comes my way. My HP and this fellowship play a huge part in that.
Again, thanks for the topic.
Site Admin
Joined: 15 Mar 2005
Posts: 10500
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 03:57 am
What feelings were you having when you were first in recovery?
_________________
fibiray
Joined: 16 Mar 2005
Posts: 515
Location: Australia Central Coast NSW
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 08:18 am
I guess my feelings were of terror and desperation. I feared to drink as I knew I would die and I feared not to drink as I was only 23 years old when I came in. It was hard to imagine life without alcohol. My thoughts were certainly confused and clouded and this took a long time to pass, but my feelings were so sensitive and raw and whenever i felt anything it was always to the extreme. After the first 6 months I began to experience this really strange thing call contentment, which I had never experienced before. I was incredibly tough on myself in those days but I don't necessarily see that as a bad thing as it contirbuted to my commitment to staying sober. It took me a long time to trust and this was a real issue form me particularly coming from a violent background. I was at a meeting 2 weeks ago and an older sober member who had been sober for 35 years had said that we must get a least one person in the fellowship to be able to confide in. This rang true for me as I did just that. The concept of a sponsor and putting trust into that person was too much for me because of my trust issues. But I did have an ally and over the years have managed to surround myself with many allies in recovery that love and support me through thick and thin. I tell them anything and my life is an open book.
chow chow Cool
_________________
lightlover
Joined: 17 Mar 2005
Posts: 385
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 09:00 am
My feelings are twofold:
I am really grateful to be sober, to be rid of constant confusion, exhaustion, panic, guilt, shame, and chaotic thoughts & emotions. Right now, though, i am fighting to overcome my existential attitude towards everything and am quite doubtful that i will be able to experience the psychic change of which the BB speaks on any meaningful level. Right now, I am truly just existing, trying to bear down and make financial amends. That is my current goal, the one that is making me get out of bed in the morning. Otherwise, with relationships, to me it's like, "what's the point." If I am brutally honest, I really don't like real life, and I really don't like a lot of people. It is a daily battle to fight the desire to isolate. I truly understand that feeling of not wanting to live a life of using drugs anymore, but of not wanting to live life sober either. I sure as he!! don't know how to live sober and be happy, joyous and free at this point. I am sorry to report that my current level of awareness is only of the agonizing boredom and emptiness and alienation and pointlessness and purposelessness of my life....and a mourning for the private universe that i used to create in my head to entertain myself and get through the day. though i am grateful not to be actually believing my own insanity anymore, i feel flat and lifeless. And, of course, guilty that I can't be a better person, just happy with what I have, that I can't just stay in gratitude more.
Well, isn't that uplifting. I guess I must be a little depressed, I am sorry that I did not have better ESH to share with everyone.
___________________________
cassie
Moderator
Joined: 16 Mar 2005
Posts: 1029
PostPosted: 07 Jul 2005 07:13 pm
Good question!
At first, my feelings were of anger and resentment because I often wondered "Why me!" I had the 360 degree mood swings for quite a while and a huge pity party. But after a while, I felt a lot off regret and sadness. I greived for all that I had lost. That, of course, got me absolutely nowhere but grief was something I had to experience too. For a long time, I was overly cautious and would not myself be enthusiastic because I just knew something or someone was going to take what little progress I had made away. Gloommy Gussie Crying or Very sad was how I should have introduced myself at meetings.
It is different now. Acceptance and humility as well as the ability to laugh at myself are things I am grateful for. I try to understand my angry moments and work my way through them. I know how deadly they are. I am able to feel a wide range of emotion but without the mood swings. I have a chance today to be sane and sober and share the joy that comes my way. My HP and this fellowship play a huge part in that.
Again, thanks for the topic.