57
by bigc
When my wife first told me she was planning on leaving me, I had been drinking pretty much every night for 2-3 years. Maybe a handful of no-alcohol days mixed in there, but only because of hangovers or some kind of similar self-inflicted ailment. I was also smoking pot, or vaping it, every day during that time. I wasn't hammered every day, but I'd start with a cocktail after work, have another while cooking dinner, smoke some weed while cooking dinner, have some good wine with dinner, and then have at least two drinks after dinner. I was drunk and high, in some capacity, every day.
When she told me she was planning on leaving, I stopped both substances cold turkey, and had classic DT symptoms. Fever, sweats, insomnia, IBS, mood swings...all of it. I went two weeks totally sober, and, proud of myself, went back to drinking...just a little bit less, and with one day a week without drinking. She moved out on November 3rd, citing a host of problems: intimacy, emotional unavailability, inability to listen to her concerns, and, it seems, her having found someone with whom she could have some kind of emotional intimacy that wasn't me.
Given that the holidays were coming up, and I've lost two very close friends in past Novembers, I figured I'd try to moderate as best I could. That worked OK, as I wasn't a drunken mess, and found it easy to lay off weed since it got my head spinning too much, but now that so many folks are doing 'dry January' I figured I'd take the opportunity to make sobriety easier on myself and join them. Now, a week later, with no drinks and no weed, I'm horrified to find that I feel like a completely different person. A person I remember form a long time ago, who likes to read, play music, eat in moderation, and get good sleep. I'm still dealing with anxiety attacks, partly because of the horror of losing my relationship of 26 years, but partly because I see, with some clarity, that I've been abusing alcohol for the better part of 25 years. I've used it to deal with my Mom's disability (then losing her in 2017), the loss of two close friends, and the general anxiety that I've felt, more and more, as life has progressed. I realize that alcohol and weed destroyed our sex life, and my ability to be emotionally available. And my dopamine levels are a complete mess, making daily life very difficult for the time being.
I don't feel like an addict. I've been fine without using the last 10 days. But everywhere I look for some kind of support or counsel, I find that it's directed at someone who is genuinely addicted, and is non-functioning. I've found some solace in the physiology of abuse, and in exercise, sunlight, meditation, and a good therapist, but it all feels so lonely. So many of my friendships have evolved around alcohol/weed, and so many of my friends seem to have no life issues, or problems moderating. I do fairly well with a monastic mode of living. I don't want to join a program, but I need some sense of community, or belonging. And I'm getting tired of being anxious all the time.