You have all read "questions to tell you if you have trouble
with alcohol" or "ten signs that you are an alcoholic." This is not
that kind of story. This is the story of what it feels like, deep
inside, when alcohol takes over your life. This is a day in the
life of an alcoholic.
You wake up feeling rotten. Sleep was disturbed. You go from
passed out to waking up every 15 minutes. When its finally time to
get up, the throbbing head pain is there to greet you. Like some
type of crazy percussion instrument - boom! boom! Is this the
feeling of alcohol or just the feeling of morning - who knows since
they go together so tightly.
| In the United States, roughly
50,000 cases of alcohol poisoning are reported each year, and
approximately once every week, someone dies from this preventable
condition. |
The promises and pledges start. Today is the day I give up
drinking. Never again. I won't let my life go like this. I will
stop. Today. It becomes a mantra - a prayer - a chant. I won't
drink ever again. That was it. No more. I won't drink ever
again.
And you mean it. You really are sincere. This is really it. All
those promises from the past are forgotten. This is a new day. This
is the day you really will get sober. Stay clean. Be healthy. Be
the person you really want to be.
You made it through breakfast. SEE - you can do it. You can stop
drinking. Sure, you failed in the past, but this time you really
mean it. Maybe you didn't really mean it all the other times. This
is different.
| Alcohol abuse statistics show
that roughly 53% of U.S. adults have stated that one or more of
their family members or close relatives exhibits abusive and/or
excessive drinking patterns. This statistic goes a long way
in establishing the extensive nature of alcohol abuse and alcohol
dependency in the United States. |
You're on a roll. Getting dressed. Will throw out that empty
bottle when I leave the house and never bring another bottle of
booze into this house. You're resolved. No question.
Off to work. Feeling edgy. Feeling unsure. Feeling just a bit
off. Well, its probably just the hangover. It will pass, and you'll
never have one again. This is a good day.
You make it to 3 PM. This is easy. A piece of cake. Your boss
asks you to come into his office at 3:30 PM. What is this about?
Did he know you were drinking last night? Did he smell it on your
breath. Are you going to get fired? What will you do without a job?
Who will pay the bills? You obsess for 30 minutes. Your head runs
wild. You need something to calm you down. You need something to
slow down your mind. You need a drink but you are not drinking
anymore. Just forget that. Ever try to forget something that is in
your mind every second.
| Treatment of the alcoholic can
be divided into 3 stages. Initially, the person has to be medically
stabilized. Next, he or she must undergo a detoxification process,
followed by long-term abstinence and
rehabilitation. |
It is 3:30. You enter you bosses office, only to find that it
was a group meeting - not about you at all. All that worry for
nothing. But the worry stays. The issue goes away but the worry and
obsession stay. Why? What is this? Things went right and you are
just as upset as if they went wrong. You are coming down off the
alcohol and nothing can feel right.
But, you are back on track - you tell yourself. Its almost time
to go home. You tell yourself you are not drinking anymore. Not.
Not. Not. You mean it. But the drive home takes you past your
favorite booze store. No. No. You repeat endlessly NO. And then you
turn into the store as if possessed. You don't want to be there but
you are there none the less. You don't want to drink anymore, but
you are in line buying a bottle. You hate yourself with a passion
for hatred you didn't know you had.
| According to a 2007 Science
Daily report, research demonstrates that drinking patterns and
habits that were set in motion during adolescence are likely to
continue through adulthood. Although it is easier said than
done, if the widespread and damaging consequences of alcoholism and
alcohol abuse are to be significantly reduced, then the main target
for this educational effort has to be adolescents. |
How can you do this? Why is this happening? But as you walk in
the door of your home, you are driven to open that bottle, throw
down that first drink - and you sigh. Relief. You needed it.
And your chant changes to "I will start tomorrow. Honest." I
will never drink again starting tomorrow. And, even as you say it,
you know you are doomed to this circle of hope and desperation.
Is this what your life feels like? This is alcoholism. There is
help.
| Research studies about
alcoholism and its effects reveals that chronic, excessive, and
abusive drinking increases the risk of developing certain types of
cancer, especially cancer of the voice box, colon, throat,
esophagus, the rectum, and of the mouth. Furthermore, medical
research has shown that women who drink two or more alcoholic
drinks every day may increase the probability that they will
develop breast cancer. |