(and going on with my merry life just so happens to mean that I will STILL respond to the things sent my way, i can't even help it. I'll never be done here).
I'm sorry to be a grouch. If I were withdrawing from something, I might understand.
And I do understand something now...your ways, your "rigid" ways that I can't stand...they're really your only way to stay alive. I get it.
I don't think you'll give up on me. Bob might get fed up with me (I know you do for sure) and others might roll your eyes as well but like you've been "in recovery" for nearly my entire life, you've also all been addicts much longer than I have. I've been an addict for 9 months. Before that, you know what I was? A user. Just because I used pot doesn't mean I was abusing it (you can only abuse if there is a way to use). I drank, but I wasn't addicted. Used other things, but was not under any compulsions. So, for 9 months, I've been an addict. For about a year, I've had problems with alcohol. It's only been 2 years since I even started using anything, drugs or alcohol. If this were meth, I'd be out the door. If this were heroin, I might not be here. But it's minor stuff that moves slow. (You wouldn't think it's minor because you've been on the bad end of the deal, I realize that).
It's not like I don't have support. I've got a solid base of friends who are consistently giving me support. But there's just stuff you keep missing about all this. Whether I was in AA or NA or not, it wouldn't make a difference from what I've got now. I still wouldn't call anyone or tell anyone when I was going to drink or do drugs. But when I get to that point, I've got 5 people who I can call who will listen to me and talk me through it. I've started telling people the truth. I've shown them the ugly side of the coin and a few have even seen me in action, drinking expired alcohol that no one else would drink. the people I hang out with, they know the truth and they don't bother bringing alcohol around me anymore and they tame me down and when I talk about getting a drink, they give me the eye.
I don't think I'll ever go to AA/NA, but I'm not ruling it out. It would be more for educational purposes tho I think. I get crabby because all of us are saying the same stuff we've been saying and you all think you're hearing the same things every other addict says. Everyone wants to think their different. Few actually know it. (yea, I have the audacity to say that). You haven't stood where I've stood. Seen what I've seen. Talked to the people I've talked to. You guys think that your lives align enough to mine to know what I'm talking about, to know the bullet I must take. But you can't grasp what I'm talking about because my bullet is so unlike yours. It has nothing to do with addiction, it's far beyond that. The day my life moved from the path of most addicts is when I knew I was no longer bound. The band on my head was loosed. The chains of addiction came off. I am not held by addictions now, but old habits and a desire to reach into something beyond myself. Both of which have easy answers.
When I wanted something, I reached out and took it. I rarely struggled like the rest of you. I rarely tried. Sometimes I could really use some alcohol. But I just turn it off now. It's not so easy for addicts. I can turn it off. Sometimes I just didn't want to and sometimes are a bit harder than others. But then I realize, it's not about wanting to, just do it.
You guys are a perfect trio for this, I swear. You're the best. I do love you guys.