Day 262

January 3rd, 2019

Lots of updating the web page and work today. Trying to delegate, I’m really hoping this is a new chapter for the store. It takes time when you start a business and I know this but I am also very impatient. This past December we had an excellent month. Our best yet and here’s to hoping that it continues and that we’re finally gaining momentum.

As a common theme as of late, I’m also overwhelmed. I’m certainly not complaining but I think it’s time to start delegating. A little scary but having a day off once in awhile would be lovely.

It’s kind of funny. I haven’t actually had a lot of time to enjoy more recreational activities since being AF and I can’t wait.

On New Year’s Day

January 1st, 2019                                                                                                 Day 260

On this New Year’s Day I am so very grateful for 2018. I accomplished some pretty amazing things in 2018. My life changed for the better in unimaginable ways. It is difficult for me to express the gratitude I am feeling as I write this. I did not, however, feel that way on January 1, 2018. In fact, on January 1, 2018, I may have been at my very lowest.

I remember the last weeks and months of 2017 very clearly. I had opened my business on November 4th, 2017 and the months leading up to it were extremely stressful. Come to think of it, the last few years had been extremely stressful. I was still reeling from two close deaths in the family from the previous two years, one on New Year’s Day, a big move from the city where I had grown up and lived my entire life to now being self employed in a new place with no public transportation and no close neighbors. I was, and still am, so amazingly grateful for the opportunity to start my own business but I was scared, incredibly anxious and filled with self doubt. Keeping a schedule of ten+ hour days, six days a week to keep the store open had curbed my drinking quite a bit. I resented not having the weekends off and spending long, lonely days at the store with little business but I admittedly needed the long schedule. When I was home, I was drinking.

With the move, my husband and I had purchased our first real home together. Truth be told, I still occasionally long for our 600 square ft, okay 599 square ft, first Co-Op apartment and the time and place that went with it. The move from the city to the suburbs afforded us the opportunity to purchase a beautiful, older, 3500+ square foot home on over 2 acres of land in a small, historic district. The house was in relatively good shape with beautiful bones but there was cosmetic work that badly needed to be done, before long the fixes would not be superficial. I love the work and seem to have a natural talent for painting walls, fixing plaster, ripping up carpets and refinishing floors, among other things. No doubt passed down from my mother who taught me how to paint and plaster and my Grandfather, who I never met. My husband, L, and I decided that it made the most sense for me to take a small part time job and that I would spend the remainder of the time working on the house. One quick estimate for floor refinishing and it was an easy decision to make. I could save us a lot more money from my efforts than I could earn so I took a part time job, 8:00am – 12:00pm, Monday through Friday. I was a bookkeeper and an administrative assistant for a small preschool and it was a perfect fit. I soon settled in to my new routine and I was home shortly after lunchtime to change and get down to work on the house. I also had another new routine. I would crack open my first beer of the day at around 2:00pm. Long, hot days, doing work I loved, no one else around, the iPad playing whatever music or news show I wanted, feeling productive and well, pretty buzzed. The only saving grace I think I had throughout my drinking career is that I could barley handle anything harder than light beer. Yes, I am aware of how utterly ridiculous that sounds. Unfortunately though, if you drink enough of just about anything, including light beer, it will begin to effect you. It was during this time that I was drinking anywhere from 18-24 beers every day. That’s a lot of beer. And a lot of recycling. And a lot of money. And a lot of calories. And a lot of stress. It also gets hard to purchase that much beer every, single, day. I got pretty creative about what stores I would go to and in what rotation. The mornings got a little tougher but I would soldier through because at the end of the day, I was really only spending about 7 hours a day sober. A daily, low level hangover was my normal, a continuous rumble that was as irksome as it was familiar.

With the grand opening of the store in November of 2017, my daily hours of sobriety did increase. My first beer was no longer in the light of the afternoon. When I would come home at 6pm or 8pm or 9pm, that would be the first thing I would do. Sometimes even before my coat would come off, I’d grab my beer and feel an immediate relief. There we go, the day is done and now I can relax. Can you feel the proverbial ahh?

After three months of working 6 days a week, I was as ready as ever for Christmas and New Year’s Eve. I still only had the one day off but I had the day off with L which made me very happy. I still miss having days off together. I planned something to make for a New Year’s Eve Party Potluck, stocked up on beer, wine, champagne and orange juice and got excited. New Year’s Eve was going to be good, I was determined. I did my hair, which was a rarity these days. I planned out an outfit I liked, which had become a less than thrilling activity after gaining over 50lbs. In general, I was feeling pretty good. I closed the store early at 3:00pm for New Year’s Eve, excited about having off the next day. As I was happily making the miniature rice balls for the potluck, I was happily guzzling beer. I never wanted to seem greedy for alcohol at parties and quite frankly, I wasn’t used to socializing at this point. I was never a social butterfly by any stretch of the imagination but I had spent the better part of the last two years working in an office, mostly by myself, for four hours a day and then the remainder of my time in holey and paint splattered clothes getting my drink on in the early afternoons. The combination of nerves and wanting to arrive a bit beyond buzzed was fueling my growing desire for alcohol. By the time we left, late of course, it was 8:00pm and I was flying. At parties I would always bring and then proceed to drink, white wine. It was not what I preferred and I was not accustomed to the higher alcohol content but it always seemed far more respectable than throwing back bottles of beer. No one questions a wine glass in your hand.

I was still feeling pretty good at the party. I felt a little uncomfortable not knowing anyone other than the hosts but they went out of their way to introduce L and me to other guests and made us feel very welcomed. My fears of not bringing enough wine were also put to rest when I saw the bar area. These people were drinkers and that put me at ease. The hosts had also created their own signature drink for the occasion with a very cute name I’ve long since forgotten. It was blue and sweet and filled with rum, which reminded me of my honeymoon and man, was it good. I normally stay away from anything with hard liquor in it given how I tolerate it, or don’t for that matter, but it was New Year’s Eve, I was feeling good and the host was more than happy to mix up some more. I switched between the white wine I had brought and my honeymoon in a glass for the evening. I was mingling and talking, I even got up the nerve to ask an attorney who happened to specialize in alcohol licenses for her advice on my application for the business, things were going well.

Until they weren’t. The beer, the wine, the rum, oh the rum, had caught up with me in a way that sirens sound for a three alarm fire. We were in the middle of a deep freeze with temperatures well below zero and being as drunk as I was, I was also craving more cigarettes. Being the year 2017, soon to be 2018, no one else smoked cigarettes so I made sure to travel well outside the confines of the front yard in the hopes that no one would see me or smell the cigarette smoke. The driveway was one sheet of ice and I know that on that last trip I barely made it back to the house. I remember wondering how long it would take for my hands and face to get frostbitten if I couldn’t find my footing and get back up. Once back inside, it all becomes a blur. I have vague memories that are slurred together. I know that at one point I broke something, presumably a glass, and proceeded to cry. The ball dropped, Happy New Year handshakes and kisses were exchanged and I was way too drunk. I told L that I had to leave, as soon as humanly possible, perhaps an hour ago if that could be arranged. I was starting to stumble and struggled to put my shoes, that the hosts requested we leave by the door, back on. I remember my husband helping me into the car. I don’t remember, but was later told by my overwhelmingly supportive husband, that I cried the whole way home and kept repeating how much I hated myself. Once home, I remember L helping me get inside but running back out to move the car, realizing that it would be difficult to herd me the extra few feet to the door. In the few moments of his absence, there was a sharp pain and blood running down my carefully chosen sweater from my nose. I remember the dog running away to escape the thud of my body hitting the floor yet again. Stumbling, bloody, streaked with tears and running makeup I made my way into the powder room, slunk down on the floor and cried and cried and cried. In fairness, I probably needed a good cry. The sadness and stress, pressure and loneliness of the last two years had been catching up. I did not, however, need to be on the verge of a complete blackout, with a bruised face, nearly broken nose and mortified that I had stumbled out of my husband’s co-workers home. I don’t remember how I got into bed, what conversation was had, if any, or anything else about the rest of that night.

As you might imagine, the next morning was not pleasant. I eventually crawled out of bed to use the bathroom, smoke a cigarette and take a little “hair of the dog” remedy to try to get back to sleep to feel slightly better a few hours later. I cancelled plans with a very disappointed and caring family friend. This also meant that my loving L spent the day home alone, with me being infirm, on the first anniversary of his father’s death. I cried again and begged for forgiveness from L, to no avail, because he wasn’t angry with me. He was worried and felt terrible that I hated myself so. As always, he said all the right things and didn’t want to make me feel badly. I don’t know what feels worse, to be scolded or to feel so incredibly guilty and have the victim of your poor judgement react sympathetically.

I knew that this needed to stop. This did not happen frequently but when it did, it would take weeks to recover, both physically and emotionally. My preoccupation with alcohol had been growing and my secret little afternoon nips and weekend eye openers were leading me down a very frightening path I didn’t know how much longer I could control. I knew this. I had for quite some time that this was not “normal”. Something had to change. There was only one problem. I was absolutely terrified of what my life would be like without alcohol in it.

I did not vow to never drink again, I knew that I would only be lying to myself. I would come up with rules that I would eventually break and cut back for awhile. I would attempt to limit myself to only a few beers a night, succeed for a time, mostly due to circumstance and opportunity. I would feel better about the situation, tell myself I had worked myself up for nothing, everyone drinks too much sometimes, don’t be so hard on yourself. The internal dialog would continue and eventually I would feel so good about things that I would relax and celebrate, listen to my music all night, alienate my L and wake up sick, feeling guilty and full of shame. And so it goes.

In the beginning of 2018 there were a lot of snow days. It was terrible for my slow to start business and made the long days even longer and feel even more pointless with no profit. It also meant that I was home earlier and began sliding back into my afternoon habits. I also found that the more I drank, the more concerned I became and the more concerned I became, the more anxious I would become and the more I drank. My own neat, personal cycle of hell. I was also approaching 37, rapidly it seemed. As my mother liked to remind me, almost daily, my biological clock would run out before it started ticking. Motherhood was never something I felt strongly called to like some other women, my sister for example. She had 4 kids by 35 but knew from a very young age she wanted a large family. I could never imagine not having a child or becoming a mother but that was always something I would do down the line. I was becoming increasingly aware that someday was rapidly approaching. This was also adding to my heightened anxiety about my drinking.

In short, I was a mess. I was desperately afraid of  the business failing, which seemed imminent. I had gained over 50lbs back of the weight I had lost for my wedding, I was terribly homesick and still trying to adjust to the move we had made 2 years ago and now I was convinced that I wouldn’t ever be able to get healthy enough to carry a child. The pressure was mounting and I was not having an easy time of it.

I don’t know exactly how it happened, but sometime in March I stumbled across a blog about living an AF (alcohol free) life. The posts really resonated with me and I took note. It felt like a well put together Pintrest board and was much more appealing than a church basement. I started following along regularly and binge read the posts and quickly found that everything I had been thinking, feeling, and experiencing for the last 10+ years was being echoed back to me.

As it turns out, I was far from alone. I was not alone and my experiences were actually very typical and very common for many women. That was the first thing that struck me. Almost every entry I read and comment that followed had me thinking, “I could have written this”.

One of the things that Katie Bee’s blog addresses is that having an issue with alcohol looks like different things to different people. Just because you’re not jobless and laying in the gutter doesn’t mean that your life would not be improved by the absence of alcohol. After much internal debate, namely that if I pursued the online course to quit drinking, I may actually have to quit drinking, I discussed it with L and we both agreed that it would make sense for me to take the course. I recoiled at the price, it wasn’t the least expensive thing to do, but if it worked, it would certainly pay for itself on more than a monetary level.

It was the end of March and the course began in April. It was completely online, as anonymous as you liked and I had classmates. Lots and lots and lots of classmates. Women from all over the world. These women were also my lifeline in those first few weeks. The day that the course began, it was a Monday and it was my day off. I had a massive panic attack and went on a complete day long bender. Suffice it to say, I was a mess. I was so worried that I wouldn’t be able to do this. Then what? I wasn’t bad enough off for rehab. I was too afraid to go to AA meetings. I slept it off and logged back in the next day at the store feeling utterly awful. And I posted. With a complete honesty that I could never muster in person, I recounted my fears to my invisible classmates. It felt good. It felt good to get out all of my worries and fears that had been silently strangling me for years. I was no longer hiding and pretending that I felt great and that everything was hunky dory.

The support and encouragement I received that day got me through that first week. In full disclosure, I was still having a few beers a night for that first week. I would not allow myself to participate in the course at all once I opened up a beer, it would have felt disingenuous and I really did want to give it a proper try. By the end of the week I was spending so much time at night catching up on the exercises and chatting within the course that I was actually having only one or two beers before bed which just seemed silly. I decided to follow the course and give alcohol up for just six weeks. After the six weeks, I would see how I felt and go from there. Although still feeling extremely anxious about not having anything to drink under a plethora of circumstances, I committed to it.

Six weeks turned into 8 weeks and so on and so forth. My alcohol free experiences were ticking up with the days. Went out to dinner AF – check, went to a networking event AF – check, day 60, day 80, day 150. At 150 days I decided to start this blog. I don’t know if anyone will ever read this but I will have an account of this amazing journey and accomplished something  that I set out to do. I have been making notes and writing every day since then but have not fully published them all yet. Most of my entries are very short and probably quite boring. This is by far the longest and the most I have written about the topic, even privately.

I am certainly no expert on the subject and I can only share my own experiences. As I sat at the very same party on December 31st, 2018, this time with my Cranberry Cider Seltzer, very happily I might add, I had the comfort of knowing that I would not be crying on the bathroom floor with a bloody nose.

In 2018 I gave up drinking. I lost 50lbs and no, the weight did not melt away but I have a lot more energy to run now. I learned a lot about myself and what I really want in life. I learned to appreciate the little things and what I truly enjoy. I learned what contentment feels like. I learned what it feels like to set a goal, accomplish it and the feeling of satisfaction that comes with it. I learned that I still have a lot of learning to do and I’m doing my best to cherish every lesson.

 

Day 163 – Tracking towards my future self

September 26th, 2018

I track a lot of things.

Every day since June I’ve tracked my temperature in preparation for when we are ready to start trying to conceive. My husband thinks I’m pessimistic but I feel that this way, if we have any trouble, there will be a record. He’s also not a worrier so he doesn’t always understand my “getting ahead of the problem” attitude. Ok yes, a lot of the “problems” I am getting ahead of don’t actually happen but it’s good to be prepared. I use Glow, if anyone knows of any others that are good, I’d be happy to hear about it!

Twice a week I track my weight. I purposely limit myself to 2x a week for this because emotionally I can’t handle any more than that but it does help me to stay on track. My body also hates me and I will mysteriously gain 2-3lbs in a week that I then have to loose as if it’s actual weight. No quick water weight dips for me! It really is a mystery too, I don’t cheat on my diet and I work out 6 days a week like clockwork. Ah well, I’m at a net loss so I’ll take the good with the bad. I use My Fitness Pal.

I have my “mini” workout that I do every morning, Monday through Friday, which consists of free weights, crunches, leg lifts and now, planks. If you want to see results, do planks. It’s hard and you’ve never realized how damn long 30 seconds is but it works. This is timed with the watch L got me for my birthday. Oh my goodness! I don’t think I mentioned that on my B-day post. Yes, he got me the Apple Watch to help track my running! It is AMAZING! If I wasn’t running I honestly don’t think it would be worth it for me but I do love it for the activity tracking. It is definitely not something that I would have gotten for myself. It also tells you how many calories you burn which I love. I do my 10 minute mini workout and then off to the gym I go or for a run. I try to hit 2 miles of something, at a minimum. That can be on the treadmill, the elliptical, there is another machine too that’s like an elliptical, but different, whatever it is I try to get to 2 miles.  I really like to run outside but it gets hard in the morning with the traffic and of course weather permitting. I’ve come up with a few alternative routes to help with the traffic.

The watch also gives you daily goals based on your activity. I am really, really trying to ignore it. I do worry that I will become slightly obsessed with hitting all of my goals, or closing my rings, each day.

I also try to meticulously plan out my days so that I can fit the most in. We are not even very busy yet, unfortunately, but as a business owner there is so much to do. I only have very part time staff to keep payroll low and man, it becomes a challenge. Once again, I do not want to complain about the opportunity but it can be very overwhelming. Especially when you realize that there are no sick days, no mental health days, no calling out. I’m really, really hoping to be able to take some time for myself on a more regular basis soon, but for now, the books just don’t justify it. I use my Notes app constantly to try to add in items for each day with deadlines.

And yes, you guessed it, I also have an app that tracks my days of sobriety or AF (alcohol free). I was on the fence about counting days at first but decided at some point that there was no reason not to. It also became a source of inspiration for this blog so there’s that.

Maybe it’s just me but I’ve discovered that being fit, tracking my hormonal cycle, keeping my daily tasks organized, staying sober and accounting for the days can really make me feel like I have some sort of OCD. Now, not to make light of OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder), most of my family members have been diagnosed with OCD and I wonder about myself at times, but all of this tracking does kind of drive me a little insane. I also have a good amount of anxiety.

The structure helps bind anxiety, or so I am told. I sometimes think that all of this tracking does help by giving me some sort of real data to collect and document. Something tangible that I can see, punching in real numbers and something that I can look back on, with results. Tangible evidence keyed into my phone, a sign that everything I am working towards will mean something, or at least I hope it will.

Thinking about it a bit more, I suppose this blogs serves that purpose also. Taking all of the little moments of the day, recording the memorable ones and being able to look back over it all down the road one day. I do wonder what my future self will say and what lies ahead.

 

 

 

 

 

Day 161 – Soberversary

September 24th, 2018

After reminiscing about my wedding anniversary yesterday,  I realized that this month is also another important anniversary for me. This month makes my 6 month soberversary. It’s kind of funny because I will get the occasion pull or sad feeling about no longer drinking alcohol but it is just that, occasional and fleeting. As I am getting further away from that life and the days are adding up, drinking is just not something that I’m terribly missing in my life. When I started the course I told myself I would try to commit to the 6 weeks and see how it goes. After getting through the six weeks rather easily, or much more easily than I expected to, I said, ok, let’s get to Day 100. Katie Bee, the designer of the course encourages everyone to, “take sobriety for a proper test drive” at 100 days. And so I did. I think that is one of reasons why I started writing at 150 days, I felt like I needed another little challenge, a fun one.

Sitting here at Day 161, I am taking a moment to reflect on what has happened over the last six months. I don’t take a lot of time to pause and I will often run from one “goal” to the next, not that I am always successful, but if you don’t step back and look at your accomplishments, it can feel a bit like running a marathon on a treadmill. Sure, you’ve gone the distance but you haven’t taken anything in along the way.

Without further ado, here is some of what has changed over the past six months: I stopped drinking alcohol. I started running and ran my first official 5k with a group of ladies I meet at 7am, every Sunday morning, to run with. (We are also running another 5K coming up very soon and the group has agreed to wear t-shirts in support of my business, which I very much appreciate and their support feels so very kind to me.) I’ve lost 37 lbs. I’ve started thinking much more seriously (although still apprehensively) about motherhood. I’ve started thinking much more seriously (although still apprehensively) about quitting smoking cigarettes. I’m feeling more confident, although still unsure of what everything is leading up to. I’m learning more about myself. I’m trying to be kinder to myself. I’m happier. My anxiety is down to all time lows (for me) completely naturally. I’ve saved over $2500.00. I’ve met people I wouldn’t have otherwise met and crushed new goals. I have a long way to go on this journey, and it will keep changing.

When I first started the course, the idea of never having another drink again was absolutely terrifying. The day before I began the course I had a major panic attack. It took me over a week to get with the program and go completely alcohol free with my course mates. One of the things I could have never predicted when I began this journey is that after 161 days, I simply do not have a place for alcohol in my life right now. I have taken the time and energy that I would’ve otherwise spent on planning, drinking and recovering and introduced new interests and goals. I don’t know what will happen in the future, but at the moment, I am looking forward to continuing this journey and hoping to learn all that I can and take advantage of every moment and spending more time doing what I truly love to do.

intheendsomeofyourgreatestpains

 

Day 160 – I don’t hate Mondays

September 23rd, 2018

So happy today is Sunday! It’s odd having Mondays off as your only day off. While most of the world is crying on Monday morning I’m relieved that I have a little break. I mostly end up running around trying to do as many errands for the week as humanly possible but hey, it’s a change of scenery. I hate to feel like I am complaining about the store and my crazy hours because I am so, so, so grateful for the opportunity but it does get a little bit much sometimes. There are weeks where I spend 11+ hours a day here, go food shopping on Saturday nights with the hubby, (it’s really a date night), go to the gym and just keep doing it all over again. If you have seen the movie Groundhog Day, that about sums it up. Haven’t thought about it like that exactly before, maybe I’m doing something wrong every day.

I am also really looking forward to Columbus Day weekend which our anniversary falls on. I love thinking about our wedding and the months that lead up to it. Some people get stressed and hate wedding planning but we genuinely had fun. I was feeling great. I was still drinking but it was extremely curbed due to a new job and well, wedding planning! I had gotten a promotion shortly after I was hired, I lost over 60 lbs, the man I loved wanted to marry me, life was good! Everything is better with L, he truly is my best friend. We love to spend time together and I am so thankful that we met. His patience is seemingly endless and he believes in me in such a way that sometimes I am convinced he is a crazy man. This year will be our 7th anniversary and I am looking forward to many, many, many more.

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Day 159 – Change, Barbara Streisand and anxiety

September 22nd, 2018

This week I purchased a mini course through Udemy to quit smoking. It was very inexpensive and I figured a course helped me to stop drinking so why not. I’m VERY nervous about this. Truth be told, and I HATE to admit this, I don’t really want to quit. I also don’t want to die an early death or cause harm to my loved ones but I really don’t want to quit. I’m trying to shift my thinking though. Changing habits is so difficult but I’m finding that the anticipation of changing is actually worse than the change itself. Every time I would even think about quitting drinking or just taking a break from alcohol, I would sit there and think of every possible instance where I would feel horrible or be missing out. I  convinced myself that if I stopped drinking I would experience the worst panic attack of my life and not have a crutch for it. Long story short, every time I even contemplated the change I would be panic stricken. Fast forward, and none, read that again, NONE, of my fears have come true. If anything, since I have stopped drinking my anxiety is way more controlled than it has been for years and completely naturally. I am now doing the exact same thing about the cigarettes. Imagining how horrible car rides will be, how much weight I’ll gain back (the fear is strong on that one), how I’ll never get a break because that’s literally the only thing I take time for in the day, which is true, and also very unhealthy, the list goes on and on. I’m picturing myself staring out the window, wistfully, dramatically, with The Way We Were playing in the background… Yes, it’s quite ridiculous. (And if you’ve never heard The Way We Were by Barbara Streisand you are now required to look it up for the full benefit of this imagery. You’re welcome.) Equally ridiculous is running a 5K, making my personal best time and seriously craving a cigarette. And of course, the more I think about quitting, the more anxious I get and the more cigarettes I smoke. Sigh. I was really hoping to make it to my goal weight before I quit smoking cigarettes but I’m looking at about another 20lbs still and I would like to quit before December. I’m just giving myself serious anxiety now. I’m going to check out the course and stop this nonsense. And go smoke a cigarette.

nothingwilleverbeattempted

 

 

Day 158 – Podcasts and happy places

September 21st, 2018

I’ve been trying to find a good podcast. One of the (many) perks about sobriety is that you get to really know yourself again. There was a time, no matter how long ago, that drinking, and thoughts about drinking, didn’t take up significant space in your brain. I am only now realizing that I don’t really know what I like to do. Like, for fun. I don’t really have time for a full on hobby or anything like that and since time is limited I have to choose things that are interuptable and that I can enjoy when I have a minute here or there. It’s actually taken a bit to get this far, as silly as that seems. Here are a few things that I have discovered and since I am talking about things I like, I’m going to put this in list form, because I LOVE me a good list.

  1. I really enjoy being productive
  2. I love to read
  3. I really enjoy writing
  4. I like to have my headphones in listening to NPR or music and now, podcasts!
  5. I love to learn and take in new information
  6. I like to think and brainstorm
  7. I like, no, NEED alone time
  8. There is absolutely nothing like a hot bath but a long, hot shower will do and this may count as a separate thing but, oh my word, you can’t have enough candles!
  9. Magazines. Yes, there’s Pintrest but nothing gets my 12 year old self as excited as a new, glossy, magazine. I’m shrieking inside just thinking about it! Eeee!
  10. I love being inspired and finding inspiration

Yes, you read that right. The first thing on my “fun” list is that I enjoy being productive. I’ve stopped fighting it. I can head into workaholic territory very easily. One of the things that I thought I enjoyed about drinking is that I thought it relaxed me. I have a very hard time relaxing or just doing things for fun really and I’m seriously working on that. Not to say that I’m overly serious and don’t enjoy a good time. On the contrary, I can be a bit too silly sometimes and then people don’t get my humor and its weird. But I digress. When I feel that I am not accomplishing something, I can get a little cranky. To be more specific, I get frustrated. I think in the past I’ve confused that feeling of frustration as a craving. Emotions can be tricky to pin down. We also don’t all like the same things. I know, earth shattering! For me, that concept actually is. I spent my down time and days off, “relaxing” with alcohol, loosing coordination and my functionality dwindling as fast as the hours went by, for a long time. When I look at my list now, even if I had just been sitting on the couch watching tv, stone cold sober, it still would’ve been a terrible fit. Rather than doing what I think I should be doing, I’m doing more of what makes me happy. I took a moment to define what it is that I truly enjoy and now I am making sure that there is more of that in my life. When I took the online course to help stop drinking, (have I mentioned that yet?), one of the things that is mentioned in an exercise is to think back to what you liked to do when you were little. I didn’t think much about it at the time but after looking at my list, it’s still pretty much all of the same things. So simple, but thinking about what puts me in my happy place has been, well, fun and kind of relaxing.domoreofwhatmakesyouhappy

Day 157 -Bad Day

September 20th, 2018

At the end of the day, no matter how bad the day feels, I am always grateful that I am on this journey of sobriety. It is so wonderful to feel clear headed. With that being said, there is nothing I’d like better right now than an ice cold beer. Oh, who am I kidding? A freaking case would work nicely.

But I won’t. I won’t because I know that it’s not going to actually make anything any better, that I would be terribly disappointed in myself and, if nothing else, I just can’t go back to hangovers. So the pity party will have to continue sans alcohol.

I don’t know why I’m feeling this way exactly but I guess that happens sometimes. Lots of little things adding up. So it’s a nice hot shower, carb free aromatherapy and early to bed for me.

Writing the title makes me think of the Lisa Loeb song, Bad Day. Does anyone remember that song? I’m pretty sure that’s the name of the song but I am terrible about song names so please correct me if I’m wrong.

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Day 156 – Happy Birthday!

September 19th, 2018

Happy Birthday to me! Tonight it’s tortellini alfredo and warm rolls for me. I’m a little sad and feeling a bit nostalgic as the birthday tradition of L and I spending the day together is on hold due to my self-employment. It’s ok and we have plans for later. For 6 years, on my birthday, which is also National Talk like a Pirate Day and yes, that is a real thing, we did the same exact thing. And it was great. We would start the day on Sullivan Street Cafe for brunch in Manhattan, where you could get brunch any day of the week. That also meant day drinking, which I looked forward to any time it was deemed even somewhat acceptable. It is also my first sober birthday in a long time. I’ll have my AF beer, commit carbocide by eating all things carby and go to bed knowing I will not feel awful in the morning.

Of course, being a woman, I’m heading into dangerous territory. Otherwise known as the last-call-for-baby-making territory, as my mother is fond of reminding me almost daily. I will admit, that was definitely a motivating factor for giving up drinking. I still have to quit smoking cigarettes which I am extremely anxious about and in turn, makes me want to smoke more cigarettes. I’m also anxious about becoming a mother. Especially with the store and not knowing if or when we will be successful and feeling overwhelmed, the idea of throwing a baby into the mix is somewhat terrifying. With that being said, my body will not care whether or not I was able to hire more staff or if the bank account came out flush that month. If I don’t make the choice to try, I may lose the choice.

De-cluttering Day 151

September 14th, 2018

I’m feeling sooo tired. Still typing on my notes app but sticking to it at Day 151! I own my own business and there just aren’t enough hours in the day. I wish I could say that I am flooded with customers but that has yet to happen. It will be one year in November since we opened and I’m hoping (praying, begging, screaming in silence) that will come soon. No matter how many hours I spend at the store I feel like I just can’t seem to catch up. Today there was a photography session with the marketing company my husband and I hired. They took full shots of the store and I had to remove all the clutter from the desk, any stray boxes or misplaced items. It felt AMAZING! and then Iooked behind the cash wrap area in the back room. Yikes! So instead of ticking other things off my list, I decided  that I had to do something about this. I spend the rest of the day de-cluttering. I was surprised, instead of feeling the weight of all the other tasks I hadn’t gotten to, I felt relieved. Moral the story: de-clutter. I suppose sometimes we have to shuffle through the papers and get through the messy. (I know there is an eloquent metaphor in there somewhere..)

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