How to Quit Being a Drunk – Alcoholism is a Choice

This is part three in an ongoing series.

A few weeks ago I posted a video on YouTube called ‘Alcoholism is a Choice’. I lost a few subscribers to my channel that day, and I can only speculate that this was because of my bold claim. The idea that alcoholism is a choice is not such a popular one these days. Some might even say that it is victim blaming – that it harks back to the nineteenth century when drunks were viewed as moral reprobates, and therefore deserving of anything bad that happened to them. That is not what I’m claiming at all, but I still view alcoholism as a choice.

Becoming a Drunk Might Not Be a Choice

There does seem to be good evidence that genetics play a part in addiction. Some of us may have come preloaded with certain quirks in our brain that make us prone to this type of behavior. There is also no doubt that people can have shitty childhoods and this pushes them into alcohol and drug use. I’m not disputing any of this. I never made a conscious decision to become a rock bottom drunk, and I doubt many other people did either. I might even be able to put a pretty good case together to prove that falling into alcoholism was not my decision at all. What I wouldn’t be able to do is provide justification for why I stayed that way for years. The evidence that drinking was ripping my life apart was undeniable yet I continued with the behavior. It is for this reason that I say that alcoholism is a choice.

Free Pass to be a Drunk

By the time I‘d hit nineteen years of age it was obvious to everyone who knew me that alcohol was causing me problems. The final straw came when my then girlfriend kicked me out, and I had to get my dad to save me from destitution. I’d been living in Scotland and he had to arrange my passage back to Ireland because I’d spent the last of my money drowning my sorrows. My family convinced me to go to a doctor who then referred me on to an addiction specialist. This expert told me that I had a disease called alcoholism.I wasn’t sure that I believed him at first, but I sure wanted to. It would almost give me a free pass to be a drunk – of course I’m drunk, I’m an alcoholic.

I remember one afternoon shortly after this sitting in a bar with some friends. They had all said that I was a ‘madman on the drink’, but I’d taken this as a compliment. I mentioned my diagnosis in a jokey fashion, but they didn’t react the way I expected them to. They couldn’t understand why I was still drinking with them if I’d just been told that I was an alcoholic. Duh – for me the answer was so obvious – it was because of my alcoholism that I was drinking with them.

The Proud Alcoholic

I learnt to fully embrace my new status as an alcoholic. When I thought about it more it just made so much sense to me. It meant that I could hold onto the idea that deep down I was a really nice guy but I’d fallen victim to some horrible disease. None of this was my fault – I was the victim here. I joined Alcoholics Anonymous and found that there was no shame in this diagnosis, I even suspected that being an alcoholic meant that I was a special kind of person – one of the chosen few. I loved the idea of angels with dirty faces. After all, so many of my heroes were drunks. Perhaps this rotten disease only affected those of us who were naturally sensitive and creative?

I don’t know if alcoholism is a disease, but I do know that thinking that way didn’t help me at all. I used it as an excuse for the inexcusable. It made me weak. I also picked up on the other excuses that could be used to justify my often appalling behavior. I said things like, “of course I’ve relapsed – relapse is a normal part of the recovery process”. In order for me to fully escape from my condition I had to completely give up on the idea that I was an alcoholic. I’m not saying here that other people should do the same, but I would strongly advise that they stop using it as an excuse.

Taking the Power Back

I gave up alcohol forever by realizing that this was a viable option. I accepted responsibility for my future happiness (and future pain), and I stopped seeing myself as being at the mercy of an uncaring universe. In Alcoholics Anonymous they believe that, ‘a Power greater than ourselves can restore us to sanity’. I tend to agree with this but believe that this power also exists inside of each one of us. Our drunken selves numb this power so that it is only a dim light. It doesn’t take much to get this power pumping again though, and all we have to do is to allow that to happen. We do this by becoming completely willing to do whatever it takes to stay sober and by no longer accepting any excuses for failure. It means realizing that not only can we create a great life for ourselves, but that this is also something that we truly deserve. We take back the power and by doing so we take control of our lives.

I remember what it was like to have a drink in my hand and tears rolling down my face – feeling like some mysterious force was making me do something that I really didn’t want to do. I had all the excuses but my self-pity didn’t help me one bit. I was the problem, and only I could find the solution. The secret to ending my addiction was so simple that I missed it for years. All I had to do was say ‘enough’ and really mean it and then develop he humility and willingness to do whatever was necessary to move on with my life. I had to become 100% convinced that my full recovery was possible. I developed that faith and that is what allowed me to succeed. The only time that we can stop drinking is now. There is no value in waiting to hit some magical rock bottom because we might not survive the impact.

How to Quit Being a Drunk Series

Part one – Welcome to the Series
Part two – The Payoff
Part Three -Alcoholism is a choice
Part Four – Rock Bottom Myth
Part Five- The Problem with Ambivalence
Part Six- Getting Motivated
Part Seven – From Arrogance to Willingness

11 Replies to “How to Quit Being a Drunk – Alcoholism is a Choice”

  1. Love this : ” The secret to ending my addiction was so simple that I missed it for years. All I had to do was say ‘enough’ and really mean it and then develop he humility and willingness to do whatever was necessary to move on with my life. I had to become 100% convinced that my full recovery was possible. I developed that faith and that is what allowed me to succeed. The only time that we can stop drinking is now. There is no value in waiting to hit some magical rock bottom because we might not survive the impact.”

    Another excellent blogpost, Paul.

    I think that alcoholism can be experienced very differently by different people. but I do believe that common to all those experiences is an ultimate *choice* to surrender to the truth – the reality of what life has become as an alcoholic. There is more than one way to do this.

    The way in which you have stated that you did it and what got you there is compelling.

    Thanks for making the effort to share.

    1. Thanks Mary,I found that trying to fight my enthusiasm for drunkeness didn’t work. I did have to surrender to the truth because life kept on getting harder while I remained stubborn and unyielding. By waving the white flag I actually got my power back becasuue the person I’d been fighing all along was myself.

  2. Hey, you didn’t comment for my last comment, but that’s okay, I do tend to just speak before thinking. I know I can be a little this way and that, and you know enough about me to know that I am harmless enough. I have also committed to my sobriety differently from you. I feel I am an alcoholic, I know that to be MY best way.

    I am also taking anti-dpressants which have worked wonders. I know that there will come a time when I will try mindfulness but I don’t have the time I feel, at the moment, to commit.

    Point being, that even though there is a difference there are also similarities I find too here. I suffer from anxiety terribly, and my drinking was off the shelf. I too have, and feel fortunate to have my life back on track, but I won’t deny that without the pills, I don’t think I would be doing this well.

    So, I admire what you are trying to achive, that you don’t take anti-depressants, that you have a child, and are married, and have chosen writing as a profession, not an easy task, but none the less commendable.

    I do think though, as well, and this may not have come out in my last post to you, that I do think sometimes you are hard on yourself, and you take your addiction really seriously. So much so, that I feel like you are holding something back, maybe that’s the anxiety coming through which I’m picking up on.

    So, maybe I’m taking the easy path in many ways, and I see that you are being stronger than me, but sometimes when I look at how my path is, I feel that it doesn’t have to be so hard for you, that things don’t have to be so serious. So, I hope you find what you are looking for, through the meditation, the writing, the training, but I also hope you get the time to be gentle, loving and kind to yourself in the process.

    I quit blogger, facebook, google +, twitter, and linkedin. I’m trying to quieten a few things down in my life. I rarely talk or think about drinking though that much I know, although, I can see a difference in my life without it.

    best wishes,

    Paul

    1. HI Paul, I’m really sorry that I didn’t reply to your last comment. I did mean to but it slipped my mind. I’ve a few worries in my life at the moment, and it is causing me to become a bit scatter brained. Maybe you’re right about me being a bit too serious about things. It is something I’ll have to think about.

      I love writing, butI do get days when I wonder if it would be better for me to walk away from the internet. Maybe get a real job 🙂

  3. I meant to say you take your sobriety really seriously, not addiction really seriously… sobriety, not addiction… I’m babbling again aren’t I?

  4. Hi Paul, very shortly, thank you again, excellent post from you. This is exactly what I think, and also like to think, about alcoholism. Repeating that alcoholism is a sickness, it has not taken me very far. I used to drink too thinking that hey, of course I am drinking and can’t stop, because well, I am an alcoholic! Now I am trying different strategies…and it is going better. Slowly.

    1. Good to hear from you Katriina, and it is nice to hear that things are going better for you. I think the worst enemy we have is so often ourselves. I’m just too good at making excuses so I have to try and cut them off at the root.

    2. Good to hear from you Katriina, and it is nice to hear that things are going better for you. I think the worst enemy we have is so often ourselves. I’m just too good at making excuses so I have to try and cut them off at the root.

  5. How we handle alcoholism is all in our perspectives. I totally agree with the part where you said that you control your own destiny positive or negative and can chose to keep drinking or stop drinking. That played a major role when I stopped drinking.

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