200 Days


What's different this time? I have been asked this question a few times now. I mull over the possible answers.

Nothing.
Everything.
Me I guess. I am different ... or becoming different anyway.
Growth.

Years of dallying with drugs, then more years of heavy drinking followed by 3 or 4 years of efforts to cut down interspersed with spells of sobriety. What has changed? What is working now that didn't before?

... and will it keep working if I stop trying so hard?

The sunny days are sunnier that's for sure. A clear mind is better able to distinguish between the wood and the trees. Life feels simpler and less out of control. But the hard days seem just as hard as ever they were ...

... except they're not. Even the hard days don't seem to be filled with the darkness of despair that I experienced in my drinking days. I don't miss that. The rehashing of difficult memories and emotions, constantly trying to find a way to make the past better than it was. The inability to see beyond pain to the futility of these efforts. The inability to see the cost. To others. To myself.

I do miss the release.

I miss the anticipation of release too. The planning, the deviousness, rebelliousness even ... the feeling that I was doing something a bit deviant ... something just for myself and nobody else ... for no better reason than to make me feel good. I miss the ease of transition from one mental state to another that one finds with drugs and drink. Basically I miss getting wasted. How pathetic is that?

I guess part of the difference is that I do now see that as being pretty pathetic. Not so much the urge itself ... after all ... having experienced chemically enhanced euphoria you can't "unknow" how that feels ... how it suspends reality ... how it reconnects the disconnected feelings inside a person. It's just that it isn't real. Or sustainable. And eventually it blinds you to virtually everything else. To the point where nothing seems to matter much any more.

Addiction bequeaths nothing more than an impoverished life at best. But to see that one must first look from a perspective freer of the effects of the addiction itself. And how does that happen? How long does it take? How does one know to what degree addiction is still working on our own thought processes?

I guess by looking for inconsistencies. And that strange semi-logic that so typifies addictive thinking. Wishing is far far easier than doing. Such logic would appear on the face of it to be perfectly straightforward. Intuitive even. Somewhere in the addictive psyche that message seems to get muddled though.

It feels like wishing should be enough. It feels unfair that it isn't sufficient. We might spend years wishing our lives were different without ever lifting a finger to make it so because the addictive mind is in some ways addicted to what feels like stasis but is in fact decline. We don't see this decline ... or if we do we deny it ... or when it becomes undeniable we add it to the list of things we wish were different.

The problem with growth is you can't pinpoint single factors in subsequent changes that take place. A series of decisions made a long time ago started the process but at the time it didn't feel like the start of recovery at all.

It's tempting to focus on the slowness of the growth rather than the fact of it happening at all. Some habits are hard to break and if at the root is a fundamental lack of self belief then much inner work has to be done before outward changes are even the tiniest bit noticeable.

Despite the low feelings of late I am grateful to see 200 days sober. It is not a long time. I know that. Even so I am thankful to see outward manifestations of inner changes. To be on this journey of discovery and on a path that leads away from the dark days of my past.

5 comments:

  1. Any change is slow I think. Five years ago I came to the point in my depression where I wanted to kill myself. I didn't, thank goodness, but it has taken me five years of work to feel good most of the time. I had to change how I think to change how I feel. I also changed some of my beliefs. I quit beating myself up and became much kinder and more accepting of myself.

    It took a lot of baby steps but I'm slowly getting there, although I have no idea as to where "there" is.

    Be gentle with yourself, you fighting a great battle.

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  2. for the record, 200 is a mighty large number.

    you write this, Addiction bequeaths nothing more than an impoverished life at best. But to see that one must first look from a perspective freer of the effects of the addiction itself. And how does that happen? How long does it take? How does one know to what degree addiction is still working on our own thought processes?

    and i realize that every one of us is addicted to something. every one of us needs to practice over it. it is practice. it is an every.day.work. - whatever it is in the self that is the addiction. could perhaps be a behaviour or even an idea.

    marion wrote me a very helpful Buddhist quote. i'll ask her for it and i'll bring it here.

    you are gloriously working. holy holy. good on you.

    xo
    erin

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  3. Jos, I imagine 200 days must seem like a very long time to you. Life in slow motion. I have only ever been addicted to people, and for me what helped is that I focused my additive ego onto things that were good for me: art, running, my animals. Find those things you love and become addicted to them :-). Does that make any sense? I am so very proud of you Joss,you are amazing, never forget that. xoxo

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  4. many congratulations jos! i love what you have written and how perceptive you are about what makes people tick. and really it is only one day at a time, as they say, so 200 or 2000 is not the point - its today that counts. big hugs.

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  5. "It's just that it isn't real. Or sustainable. And eventually it blinds you to virtually everything else." This is such an important element to the process. It rather needs to begin here but can't. You must WILL yourself from the addiction for days enough that this realization is possible! So difficult Jos. And I am so proud of you! I was proud of you on day -200. Ground Zero. Day 1, 2, 3, 200 and counting! I love you Citrus! Bought you something Orange! I'll be sending it soon.

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