Re: Premier Mental Health Mutual Support Thread
311you saved someone's life. not many people can say that.
I am so sorry for your loss.Hex wrote: Mon Nov 25, 2024 3:22 pm My grandma died yesterday. Am beyond gutted, she was more accepting of me and my partners than my parents. Just want to cry and be held
i'm so sorry, Hex. Grandmas, when they are good Grandmas, are so special. sounds like you had a very special one. sending love and condolences.Hex wrote: Mon Nov 25, 2024 3:22 pm My grandma died yesterday. Am beyond gutted, she was more accepting of me and my partners than my parents. Just want to cry and be held
Sobriety certainly helps, and drinking is certainly something of a bottomless pit. But sobriety just brings all the non-drinking pain to the fore, and that can be a LOT of pain to manage.
Totally. Finding a way to actually deal with whatever the pain is is a lot better than drinking though.bigc wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 12:43 pmSobriety certainly helps, and drinking is certainly something of a bottomless pit. But sobriety just brings all the non-drinking pain to the fore, and that can be a LOT of pain to manage.
That's been my experience, too. I've gone long stretches without booze, or with very little booze, and everything really does lighten up a lot. Which makes the post booze shame and frustration all the more challenging. Sometimes I just want all the feelings to go away, and booze works for that in the short term.andyman wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2024 12:57 pm Totally. Finding a way to actually deal with whatever the pain is is a lot better than drinking though.
To anyone considering it, I was a bundle of raw nerves at first; drinking had worn away any sort of coping mechanism, which is part of what's so insidious about it. It erodes the other coping mechanisms until it's you have left to lean on. They grow back over time though.
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