I managed to stay sober today. I now keep a note on my hand that always reminds me that sobriety is a matter of life and death.
I must desire sobriety more than anything else, for without sobriety I am hopeless and shall have only shame, regret, guilt, and psychological torture.
I have let everyone who cares about me down by my recent relapses. One day at a time I shall break free of this bondage.
I shall daily confess here whether or not I stayed sober. Feel free to comment on anything that helped you win against an addiction.
I had to surrender myself to recovery, whatever that would mean, because my way didn't work. At all. Not even for 24 hours. I'd wake up in the morning sick, humiliated, hating myself for having succumbed yet again, and wanting with every fiber of my being NOT to do it again. But by noon I knew it was all going to happen again, though I had no idea why. And when the full realization of the horror show that was my life finally sank in, I knew there was no way out.I had to stop and I couldn't stop. I was totally screwed.
I didn't go to AA to be cured, or to be fixed. I didn't even believe that was possible. I just went because I had nowhere else to go that wasn't part of my 'death spiral'. So I went, and I kept going, because there was nothing else. What I wanted wasn't even part of the equation. What I wanted had been lost long ago.
So I went, and I kept going, and I did whatever they told me because I had no will or ideas of my own, anymore. Yet it was in that hopelessness that I finally became willing to learn, and to change.
Sounds to me like this time you've finally come to the end of your road. And that's good. Give up, now. Surrender your will, dismiss your own thinking because it's doesn't work. It's sick, and it's toxic, and it's quite insane. Let those who have been where you are, and recovered, tell you what to think, and how to live, and then do what they say.
You've wanted to die all your life. Now is your chance. Stop being "you". Let your 'self' go. With the help of your fellow recoverers, start learning how to be who you would have been had your mind and spirit not been poisoned by addiction. That's what people are recovering in those programs. And you can do it, too. But first you have to 'let go'. Let go of who you have become so that you can find out who you would have been without the addiction. The rest of us can't wait to meet him. To see him living 'happy, joyous and free'!