I found that the most difficult thing about giving up booze (once you're through the insane rollercoaster of the first hundred days) is dealing with everything life throws at you without a 'mute button.'
I spent years, decades, of my life reaching for a glass of artificial courage whenever things got tough - when I was anxious, stressed, scared, lacking in self-belief, bored or upset.
A glass of wine, I believed, would just take the edge off and make it all that much easier to cope with.
This strategy seemed to work rather well for a while, but then, one day, I realised that it had stopped working, and that my best friend had turned into my worst enemy.
For a start, I'd lost the ability to deal with all those events and emotions in any way other than the booze.
I'd forgotten how to use strategies like exercise, mindfulness and relaxation methods to reduce stress and anxiety. I'd forgotten how to just get through it. I'd forgotten that those emotions and feelings are all a normal, necessary part of living life to the full.
Also, the booze itself had made things worse. Drink - over time - increased my anxiety levels, and heavy drinking made my life way more unmanageable.
When I quit boozing, an amazing thing started to happen...
Gradually, I began to realise that I could cope with all of those things, those feelings, those emotions without a prop.
And, after a while, that made me feel like superwoman (relatively speaking). Invincible. Unstoppable. (With the help of a little cake, and lots of alcohol-free beer).
Regular readers will know that eight months after I quit drinking, I was diagnosed with breast cancer.
I got through the horror of that diagnosis, telling my children and coping with the treatment, completely sober. And now I feel like I can do anything. More than that, I owe it to myself to make the most of the rest of my life.
Not only did going sober give me courage, it also freed up loads of time. All those hours I spent hungover, tipsy, or just feeling bleurgh and unmotivated, were back.
And I found I was firing on all cylinders. Once I stopped numbing my brain with booze I rediscovered my long-lost creativity and my energy. My little brain synapses were fizzing and zinging and wanting to do stuff.
Here's a confession, though: I sometimes still miss the buzz, the high, of drinking.
Initially, after all those years of hectic havoc, I loved the calm and peace of sobriety, but now I realise that I don't want to live my life completely on an even keel.
I want to experience all the highs (and the corresponding lows) of the rollercoaster.
So, over the last year, I've been living by the maxim outside the comfort zone is where the magic happens.
Because I've realised that that is where you find your highs. Real, prolonged, meaningful highs, not the artificial, fleeting ones at the bottom of a bottle.
When you push yourself to do something new, something scary, when you learn to deal with all the inevitable failures and knockbacks and just keep on going, when you finally get there, it's the greatest high in the world.
That's why, after months of hiding behind a pseudonym, I finally 'came out', and wrote the book, The Sober Diaries.
And that's why, when my old college said they were hosting Cambridge University's first ever TEDx talks, I applied to give one.
I didn't think I'd get chosen. There are, obviously, a lot of very clever people amongst the Cambridge community who have done really amazing things with DNA and suchlike.
I am just an ex-lush housewife who wants to talk about how we can make going sober less shameful, so that, in the future, women like me won't need all those pseudonyms and the cloak of anonymity.
But, incredibly, they picked me as one of the ten speakers.
And now I am WAY outside my comfort zone, my friends.
But that is an entirely good thing, because I know that once I get off that stage on February 17th, even if I don't perform brilliantly, the high of just having got through the preceding twelve minutes will be amazing.
But that is an entirely good thing, because I know that once I get off that stage on February 17th, even if I don't perform brilliantly, the high of just having got through the preceding twelve minutes will be amazing.
And I still need those highs....
And so do you. So, why not find something you've always wanted to do, but been too afraid, or too lethargic, and SIGN UP. Do the Tough Mudder, like lovely reader, Ang75. Apply for that promotion. Go on a blind date. You have nothing to lose, and everything to gain.
And so do you. So, why not find something you've always wanted to do, but been too afraid, or too lethargic, and SIGN UP. Do the Tough Mudder, like lovely reader, Ang75. Apply for that promotion. Go on a blind date. You have nothing to lose, and everything to gain.
In other news, up on the SoberMummy Facebook page this week, a fabulous piece from the Huff Post on what 1000 days sober feels like, the genius Robin Williams talking about being 'ethanol challenged' and the inspirational Maya Angelou being...inspirational.
Click here to go the Facebook page, and 'like' to stay updated.
Love to you all,
SM x
Wow! What a brilliant thing to do. I hope that you enjoy every delicious minute of it and I have no doubt that you’ll soon be rivalling Sir Ken Robinson for the top spot of most inspirational speaker.
ReplyDeleteI had a feeling you might be picked when you said you'd applied - you will be fab x Great post today and has chimed exactly with something I had been thinking about doing which is so different but something I'd like to try so am going to go for it! I have a friend who is abig drinker and has all sorts of things she'd like to do but makes excuses why she can't. I think if she cut back on the wine she would feel more confident - it's sapping her, although she can't (won't) see it.
ReplyDeleteGo for it Sharon!!!! You rock x
DeleteWell done! You're going to be amazing!
ReplyDeleteWell done Clare. You are already an inspiration to so many people. Go you!
ReplyDeleteI knew it would happen, I felt it...you're such a great writer, but more importantly, an inspiration to many. Your example of how to live life without alcohol is phenomenal!
ReplyDeleteI’ve not reached the goal of 100% alcohol free, but I’ve come a very long way with changing how I use to drink. And in doing so, I’ve gain so much more in my life. So even if one doesn’t get to a sober free life right away, they still can improve and grow to get out of the alcohol despair. You go girl!!