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04-20-2014, 09:57 AM | #1 |
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Join Date: Aug 2013
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First Year Sobriety
had compromised it. I do hope it helps you as much as it has, and continues to help me. Kevin First-Year Sobiety When All That Changes Is Everything By: Guy Kettlehack Chapter 3 Having Feelings, Not Being Them pages 76 through 83 "I always felt like a turtle, " says Sharon, a recovering addict with ten months of sobriety. "The least threat, and zap, back into my shell. Where, in the old days, I kept a fully stocked pharmacy." Now that the "pharmacy" has been emptied, Sharon is getting the courage to keep her head out of her "shell" a little longer, open her eyes a little wider. And she's slowly discovering that it's possible to experience the World Out There without descending into a state of abject terror. "I've had to learn everything from scratch," admits Sharon, who has worked for a number of years as a freelance editor. "It's been very humbling. Because for so long, I'd pretended I knew everything--and sometimes I almost convinced myself I did. I could name drop with the best of them. I'd had a few glamorous jobs as an editor early on with a number of conspicuous suc- cesses, big bestseller. God, I milked those for all they were worth. I left the company I was with just before they were about to discreetly suggest that perhaps I'd be happier elsewhere; I hadn't gotten any of my books in on time for a couple of yeras, and those that got through were disasters. But I had it announced in all the trade papers that I was going greelance. One magazine even did an interview with me: I went on endlessly about my 'need for 'freedom.' Truth was, I couldn't hold down a job in a company anymore. But I rode on my early stellar reputation for years. And it worked, for a while. I mean, when I was on Valium and other downs, I did everything I could to convey this image of total competence. 'No problem,' I'd say about anything to any- one. And frankly, I often believed myself. If you were as 'mellow' as I regularly got on drugs, you wouldn't have thought anything was a problem either! People would buy into it for a while too. Who doesn't like to hear that there's 'no problem'? But then, in- evitably, they wouldn't get the work they commissioned from me on time. I became positively ingenious with excuses. But even those wore off. I lost client after client. And one day I got so doped up I nearly killed myself." Sharon sighs. "It's been a long way back. Now that I've been through an outpatient clinic, and I'm going to NA meetings, I'm in a whole new world. As I said, I realize I have to learn every- thing from scratch. How to vacuum my apartment!" Sharon laugs. "For years, every so often I'd call in some expensive cleaning ser- vice and they'd send some poor crew over who would gasp at the mess I'd made of my home and work for two days to clean it up. Now I can't affor them, and I'm having to learn to take care of myself. I'll never forget the first time I actually found myself scrubbing my kitchen floor, on my hands and knees. I wanted to call in the neighbors and say, 'Look what I've done!' It was a big triumph for me. It still is." Slowly, Sharon is beginnning to establish herself as an editor again, taking on smaller projects, projects she feels she can han- dle in these early, baffling days of sobriety. "At first I couldn't read anything; a big liability when you're and editor! Now I can read and actually edit articles and book proposals. Maybe, who knows, someday I can get to the big stuff." Recently and old client, from what Sharon calls her "grandiose" days, called and invited her out to dinner at an expensive restaurant to talk to her about a "really big" job. Sharon knew she wasn't ready for something too taxing, but she was intrigued. "God, it was weird," she says. "This was the ex-president of a major company who'd bounced around from publishing com- pany to publishing company for years--not an uncommon oc- currence in the book business, but I saw, now that I was sober, one of the major reasons why he'd never been able to stay in one place. He was a roaring alcoholic." Sharon found herself far more fascinated by how her dinner companion was acting than by any "business" he was allegedly there to conduct. "It was quickly clear that the dinner was an ex- cuse for him to write off yet another meeting on his current pub- lishers's expense account. Which basically meant he got to drink as much as he wanted to for free. It was amazing watching him. I never really drank all that much when I was 'out there'; pills were my drug of choice. But I did downs, so I knew the zonked- out state this guy was feeling, the escape he was after. And that's what was so strange, fascinating, and sad. Moving, even. The more he drank, the childlike he became. I felt I was in some clinical laboratory watching him. He mad these associa- tive leaps, just like a little child does, not able to hold one thought for longer than a moment, quickly moving on to the next feeling or thought. Inhibitions washed out of him with each glass of wine. He spilled out his marital troubles; he was on the verge of a divorce. Nobody understood him. Which reminded him of a trip he wanted to take to Venice. Or was it Corfu? Oh, who knew. He did love to travel. Didn't I? Yes, we should really work on a travel book together. Perhaps a travel novel, yes, that would be lovely. Maybe, to hell with it, we'd stop being editors and write it ourselves. Who knew more about writing than two old pros like us? And by the way, was I sure I didn't want a drink? Why was I so quiet? I really was so much more fun when I had a few drinks... "What struck me most was that he was so desperately trying to escape any pain--and desperately, it barely consciously, seek- in to make contact with someone. He seemed like one of the loneliest people I'd ever met. And I identified--God, how I iden- tified with him! How alone I felt when I was still drugging and drinking! I was convinced no one, no one at all, could ever un- derstand what I was going through." Sharon frowns. "I'm still not saying what moved me most, though. It's just this: My terr- bly drunk dinner companion reminded me that I'm after exactly the same thing now that I was when I drugged and drank--a feel- ing that I'm all right. A feeling of oneness with the world. Self- acceptance. The ability to stay in my own skin. An escape from hating myself. An escape from fear. The ability to tolerate life-- to enjoy it. Or, in Bill Wilson's words, to be 'happy, joyous and free.'" Sharon closes her eyes for a moment, then opens them; her face is full of new light. "That's the revelation. I saw this poor drunken guy trying, vainly, to do what I am starting to be able to do sober; accept and get comfortable with my feeling. With who I am. All the pills I was taking weren't the answer, though, God knows, I tried to make them be. This guy, still drinking, hadn't learned what I was now sure was true: Drinking wasn't going to give him the peace he was after. All drinking could do was make him drunk. Sever him from himself. Keep him from being who he wanted to be." Bombing out on downs hadn't ever helped Sharon to attain the sense of self-acceptance and serenity she now realized she'd always been after and also now realized she at least had a chance of attaing, sober. "What began as a way to get rid of my inhibi- tions--zonking myself out with drugs--ended in paralysis," Sharon said. "I see now that I took pills because I was so desper- ate to feel good about myself, but they never really helped, even if, for a while, I thought they did. All that ever happened was that vacant, childlike, transient state I'd seen in my drunken friend. The pills were only a cover-up. But so was any attemp to find self-acceptance or self-esteem in my job. Even when, in the early days, I had my big professional successes, nothing really touched me deep inside; nothing really made it easier to accept who I was." The "small" triumphs Sharon can lay claim to today--cleaning her home, buying groceries, taking on manageable projects and getting them done when she says she'll get them done--thes are all immensely more gratifying to her than any flashier success in her drugged past. She now feels, she says, "at least a glimmer of the serenity my drunken friend and I were starving for, out of it on booze and drugs. It's a real serenity. Something that comes out of who I am. Not some ephemeral 'feel-good' state temporarily imposed on me by a drug, by something external. I've earned what little serenity I feel. I'm developing it, cultivating it in my- self. And it's real--in fact, all of my feeling are real--in a way no other emotional state ever was before. I can cherish, depend on, allow feelings to enrich my life and make me open to more and more things. Less apt to retreat back into the old shell." This is the ideal, anyway. Sharon admits that she still panics; she still feels overwhelmed by life, by the swings of her moods, by sudden doubts about her future, fears about whether she'll be able to continue her professional ascent, confusion about just who she "really" is now that she's not losing herself in drugs. But alread, helped in a strange way by seeing how lost her intoxicated dinner companion seemed, she's begun to see, as many people begin to see in their first year of sobriety, that self- acceptance might after all be possible in sobriety. The instinct for self-preservation, the fierce desire to live, not die, that seems to characterize many addicts' and alcoholics' first moments of re- covery, is one that can be nurtured, cultivated, brought to bloom. The "flower" is a feeling of genuine self-acceptance, the knowl- edge, the certainty that feelings don't have to be toxic. Feelings are a kind of mental weather that will eventually pass and change into something else, not something you get trapped in forever. This is what is meant by "Feelings are not facts." "I realize that saying 'I'm angry' when anger hits isn't pre- cisely true." Sharon says. "It's truer to say "I feel anger." Its im- portant for me to remind myself that I am not my anger; anger is a state I happen to be in, temporarily. Not that ther might not be some very good reasons for being in that state, reasons that bear looking into. But my anger, or any other feeling I have doesn't have to kill me. Or make me pick up a drug." It's the experience of so many recovering people that sobriety breeds flexibility. The more sober we become, the more difficult it is to categorize ourselves in any rigid way. Once again, Sharon illuminates: "I used to think I was the type of person who never, oh, I don't know--liked baseball, say. Or who would never get peeved when somebody cut in front of me in line at the grocery store; Iwas always too mellow to be bothered by anything so petty. Now, sober, I'm finding I do sort of like baseball. In fact, I was ready to hurl a few baseballs at this pushy woman at the market the other day who barged in front of me in line!" Sharon, like many other recovering people, is discovering she isn't a "type" after all. She's capable of any number of responses, and capable of feeling any number of emotions. A big lesson that Sharon helps to teach us is simply this: We don't have to become our feeling. Improtant as feelings can be as signals, markers that tell us what's going on inside, we come to realize that feelings are not "facts," especially as we allow ourselves to witness their coming and going. "This too shall pass" may be, at different times, the most exasperating and the most reassuring slogan you'll hear at Twelve Step meetings. What it seems to remain, however, is true. The only constant in sobriety (or in life) seems to be that however you're feeling now isn't how you'll be feeling tomorrow. Or later today. Or in a moment. But something beneath this doesn't change quite so precipi- tously. At least, this is what recovering people who've got a few months of sobrity under their belts tell me. As we allow our- selves to witness our feelings (rather than identify ourselves completely with them), we seem eventually to become aware of a deeper "river" beneath all our surface emotional turmoil--a sort of calm, reliable, deep flow of serenity that doesn't go away, no matter what's happening back up there at the surface. We learn, in fact, that we can always come back to this subterranean flow for sustenance and direction and peace. Making contact with this river seems to be an organic consequence of sobrity. We seem to give ourselves the best chance of sensing it as we al- low ourselves to experience feelings with judging them, allow what we feel to come out, whether in a trickle or in a tor- rent--all the while hanging on to our decision that, no matter what, we don't have to pick up a drug or a drink. This river of serenity seems to make itself felt too, when we reinforce our de- cision not to drink or drug by doing something we know from experience is positive, such as going to a Twelve Step meeting, making a phone call to another recovering person, or doing something else we know will bolster our decision to stay sober. We learn from all of this to "hang on" so that we can truly "let go" of feelings that seem to assail us, that seem as if they would put us under. We learn they don't have to. We've got options-- not the least of which is simply waiting until whatever feeling is tormenting us passes. It's clear to me from talking to people in recovery that these revelations about feelings don't all come at the same time or rate or as completely for some people as they do for others. Often the only thing that makes sense to any of us in the first year of sobri- ety is that reliable standby: "Don't drink. Go to meetings." But, perhaps in a quiet moment, you may begin to feel the deep flow of that "river" I've described, and realize, as Sharon realized, that you're cultivating more peace of mind and self-acceptance that you ever thought you could before. Conciousness of this flow seems to increase the longer we stay sober. As you begin to work the Twelve Steps and keep renewing the pact with yourself not to drink or drug, the pull of that serenity deep within you can't seem to help but get stronger. However, don't worry if all you can feel right now is the tur- moil on top. In fact, dealing with that turmoil constitues a very important aim for everyone who grapples with sobrity, no mat- ter how long they've been sober. Staying sober is a day-to-day (sometimes minute-to-minute) process with some very practical realities. |
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