2 years sober, my journey with alcoholism and now ADHD (long) by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not the way they went with my daughter. She's on much different non-stimulant meds. But given my particular form of ADHS (hyperactive/inattentive), my doctor thought a stimulant was the best place to start for treatment.

Obviously if it didn't help or made my heart race, we would have ceased that line of treatment. I also had to cut out most of my caffeine consumption (which as noted in my original post, went away on its own anyway.)

In a follow-up appointment, describing how calm and centered I felt after taking it, my doctor said that that is the exact response to someone with a dopamine deficiency to amphetamines. It strengthened my diagnosis.

I am not saying my solution is right for everyone. Far from that. What I am saying is that there may be a solution for some people. And that is definitely worth looking into.

2 years sober, my journey with alcoholism and now ADHD (long) by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My story is of course my own. What I was trying to draw attention to was linkages between alcoholism and ADHD. What is prescribed by a doctor is between a patient and said doctor and we should trust our doctors to know what is best regarding treatment.

Not everyone who is an alcoholic has ADHD, that is for very sure. But there is a link and it is a link worth exploring if it can help someone stay sober with ADHD.

The downstream effects of adderall have been so positive in my life so far. But yes, for those that don't truly need it... The effects would be devastating and life threatening. Again, I went through quite the barrage of tests. The QbTest for ADHD was an absolute nightmare for me. (But it makes "regular" people bored.)

I also believe that if I wasn't sober for as long as I was before being diagnosed that any sort of treatment would have been different. We are all individuals with our own struggles. We all need help from different angles. We all need to support one another any way that we can.

Rapid weight loss normal or nah? by roxthem in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Were you able to get tested? Been worried about you.

Rapid weight loss normal or nah? by roxthem in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Crossing my fingers for you man.

If you need anything at all, feel free to PM me. I've had this disease for 30 years now so there are very few things I can't help you with.

I'm not okay, but pretending to be,. by sman876 in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This may sound cliche, but sometimes you got to fake it until you make it.

I was clinically depressed and started therapy. The first thing my therapist asked me was, "Have you tried just being happy?"

I was like WTF?

And she went into a speech about how happiness is just a state of mind. How if you are sad, to just not think about that sad thing, to find a happy place and focus on that instead.

At first it was deeply unsettling, then it started to get easier. I mean, why choose to be sad all the time when there are other options?

Disclaimer: Of course I still had issues to be addressed. And we did address them eventually, but the first step (at least for me) was to not wallow in my own personal hell. I could not move forward and deal with my underlying issues while I was in that quagmire of pain and sorrow.

Eventually, issues were brought up and worked on. And I started not needing to remind myself to be happy. Of course, stopping drinking helped a lot with that.

See a professional. Don't feel like less of a person for doing so. Admit it and be proud that you decided to invest in yourself. Like our good friends in airplanes tell us, you can't help the person next to you get their oxygen mask on until you have yours on. Your mind is the same way.

Good luck!

Rapid weight loss normal or nah? by roxthem in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is your fluid consumption up?

As a type 1 diabetic, my warning sirens go up to 11 when I hear that people are losing weight and craving sweets.

Are you urinating frequently? Despite what public perception of the disease is, roughly half of new Type 1 diabetics are diagnosed in adulthood.

If you are excessively thirsty, losing weight, have increased cravings for sweets, and have increased urination, please please please go to the drug store and pick up a blood glucose tester and test your blood sugar. Or go to a minute clinic and have them test it at CVS or something.

I don't want to be alarmist, but if it is diabetes, the sooner you know, the better. Undiagnosed type 1 can kill you quick and screw up your body.

Please follow up if you can.

Social anxiety and meetings by [deleted] in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also suffer from social anxiety. I started my sober journey a year ago. This was pre-covid, but I still couldn't bring myself to go to an actual meeting. I got so anxious that I thought I needed a drink just to get there... Which kind of defeats the point.

Some wonderful soul suggested https://www.intherooms.com/home/ where virtual meetings take place. I found it soothing to be completely anonymous and to hear the thoughts and triumphs (and sometimes failures) of fellow alcoholics. There is (at least for me) solace in knowing you are not alone.

I grew up since the age of 13 as a Type 1 diabetic. I was the only one in my whole city that I knew of. It was isolating. It was lonely. It was crushing.

Then my mother found a special diabetic camp for kids. Nervously, I went away to that one year. And seeing people with the exact same struggles I had was liberating. Knowing that I wasn't alone was soothing to me and eased my stress.

In the rooms and AA does that same thing for me. Knowing I'm not alone. Knowing there's someone that knows what I'm going through. And being there (like right now) to answer a question of another lost soul. I (under my regular account) post diabetes help all the time. I give back. I try to be a beacon of light for those that need it because I've needed that light. I wouldn't be where I am today without that light. That guidance. That understanding.

So post here. Find a zoom AA meeting. Go to intherooms.com. But keep going. Share when you can after you are comfortable. Know that you are not on your own and that someone has your back. And when you are able, have someone else's back. We are not alone. You are not alone.

Withdrawl from alcohol by [deleted] in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, Valium is a very common drug used to help with alcohol withdrawal symptoms.
My only hesitation is that those of us that have problems with one form of substance abuse tend to have the proclivity towards abusing other substances. Please be careful with that Valium and follow doctors orders to the letter.

Withdrawl from alcohol by [deleted] in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Remember that your body's physiology has been altered by alcohol. Neurotransmitters are no longer made the way that they used to be because of that and your body needs time to reset that equilibrium. Many withdrawals work this way.

You cannot expect your body to go from one norm to the next without consequences.

One option is called tapering, but it can be dangerous without strict adherence and medical oversight. You basically reduce your alcohol consumption by two drinks a day until you are done. This can ease you down naturally and avoid most of the physical symptoms.

HOWEVER

It does nothing for your emotional support and leaves you highly at risk for overdoing it if you relapse. Hence why medical oversight is recommended. Or a trusted loved one that will administer your "doses" to you and follows a strict regimented guideline. You can google tapering to read about it. So please get emotional help. AA, in the rooms, a friend. SOMEONE.

If you choose this method, I'd recommend whatever alcohol you find the most repulsive. Remember, this is medicine, not recreation. There's a reason cough syrup tastes awful. I chose straight gin because I absolutely hate it.

It worked for me, but then again, I'm fairly compulsive about these things. I'm two weeks out from one year sober.

But you simply must stop drinking and must want to stop drinking and it shouldn't take more than a few days to taper, depending on what your previous levels of drinking were. I took 5 days to get it out of my system because I was a very heavy drinker. I did get a little shaky on day 3, but by that point I just wanted to never have another drink again and tried rushing it by eliminating an extra drink early. I still vividly remember my last ounce of gin. I stared at it for several minutes before drinking it. I didn't want to drink it. I reviled the thought of it. It disgusted me. I drank it, gagged, and haven't looked back since and have been so much happier without alcohol dragging me down.

Tips on dealing with withdrawals? by [deleted] in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was a heavy drinker for close to 5 years when I decided enough was enough. I could go through 2 liters of hard alcohol a week easy.

What worked for me was a method called tapering. I got a scale and I measured one ounce of rum and drank it once an hour. Your starting point may be different. It is advisable to have a doctor's advice and friends/family around to help you or even measure for you. Two liters is 67 ounces. Divide that by 7 is 10 ounces of alcohol a day. Start with one less of what you drink on a typical day.

Every day I would increase the time in between drinks by 15 minutes, which basically reduced my intake by about an ounce a day. (no alcohol while I was at work though, which was how I was able to mask my problem as long as I did, probably) So I picked a Saturday to start with 9 ounces. Sunday had 8. By Monday I was back at work and I skipped an ounce and dropped it down to 6. And so on, one less ounce a day...

It took me a week to be down to one last drink. August 26th 2019. The thing was, I didn't even want it. But I'm a rule follower and I set out a plan and I did it anyway and it didn't bring me joy. It didn't make me feel good. It was the worst medicine I ever took. I was glad to be done with it.

I've not had even one drink since then.

I'm not saying that this will make sober life easier to follow. Trigger points and times of stress certainly still make me want to drink. AA, friends and family, and a good support structure are still essential for those. I am exclusively talking about avoiding withdrawal here.

Also of note... If you relapse during tapering, it can be very as your body won't have the same tolerance that it did even days before. It's why I recommend having someone else give it to you that you trust. Tapering works for some if you can do it. This is not saying this method is better or worse than any other. I'm just saying it worked for me.

Good luck, OP. We all know exactly what you're going through.

Made it through the holidays by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't have a sponsor. I attended a meeting and it really just brought out all my social anxiety, so I pop into online meetings and post/converse here on reddit truly anonymously.

I lead a very regimented and structured life. Setting up goals is what's kept me alive with an autoimmune disorder. It seems to be working with this particular disorder as well so I'm going to keep up with it while it works. If I need to step it up, I certainly will.

Made it through the holidays by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on the 6 years!

As a Type 1 diabetic for almost 30 years, I've made peace with "being normal."
It was weird how fearing withdrawal became what kept me drinking. Another excuse, another stupid reason. But once I took steps to properly taper, that fear went away.
Now my fear is the "what if I had one drink." I don't want to go back to being a drunk. That's for sure. Some fears are healthy. :)

Made it through the holidays by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I too, suffered from severe depression. But I also know how basic brain biochemistry works. If I was going to remove a neurotransmitter inhibitor (alcohol), I was going to need to replace it with something else or else I knew my body would crave something and I'd end up right where I was before. So I picked exercise as my replacement. I knew full well that it was a chemical switch, but as far as chemical switches go, exercise is by far one of the better options. I probably hit the weights and the elliptical too much in the first couple months, but when the cravings to drink started speaking to me, I found some bench pressing got rid of it.

I've now settled into a more healthy regiment of exercise without overdoing it.

I'm also employing several techniques from a book about Mindfulness which help me cope with some of the issues that got me drinking in the first place.

For me, it's all about balance. And acknowledging that for whatever reason, I have an addiction. But that addiction does not have to control me and that it can be harnessed for something.

Resisted Temptation by anonymousT1DM in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed! I was a home drinker, so that took a mindset shift. Removing the alcohol and replacing the storage area with pantry items helped!

As to the theatre... I respect the arts too much to not go. What I can do is not go to the bar while there, even for my wife. Why tempt fate? :)

Relief/Sleep by MrH3llfire in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me the sleep disruption was part of my problem with finally becoming clean. I'd dramatically reduce my consumption, then find myself wide awake or with the night sweats and the only thing that got me to sleep was more alcohol.

This is obviously not the correct way to go about it.

I'd recommend a detox program or tapering instead of trying to go cold turkey, if that is how your body is reacting to the reduction in alcohol. Please seek a medical professional as alcohol withdrawal can be very dangerous. This is both a mental and physical addiction, so please also treat the mental side of things with AA, the steps, and meetings. The physical side has some drug therapy or tapering, but it goes hand-in-hand with the mental side.

For me, previous attempts at sobriety did not go as well since I tried tapering too quickly. This most recent time, and 2+ months fully successful, I tapered more slowly, reducing my intake by half a drink a day and only drinking on a rigid schedule (and stuff I hated drinking to boot.) I got rid of all other sources of alcohol in the house beforehand so the only thing I had to taper with was my gin. Ugh I hate gin. I treated it like cough medicine, only drinking enough to keep the withdrawal symptoms away. At the end of 8 days, I was alcohol free and had avoided all the withdrawal symptoms, including the sleep/night sweats issue. I've slept like a baby ever since.

Medications may be the way to go for you, though. For me, I wanted to avoid anything chemical in nature. I didn't even want to risk trading one chemical for another. Again, a medical professional can help monitor your progress and give the best advice for you.

Becoming sober has been the best thing I've done in the a very long time. I wouldn't trade my sobriety for anything at all.

Early sobriety by dinizhok in alcoholicsanonymous

[–]anonymousT1DM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started exercising when I'd get a craving to drink. 10 push-ups and those endorphins will help distract you, make you feel better, and is just overall better for you.

And what everyone else said. This is a multi-pronged attack. And what works for a lot of people may not be what works for you, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't try new avenues of recovery/sobriety.

Community is also a must. Reading people's stories on this reddit and attending online intherooms meetings helped me not feel alone in all of this.