Alcohol for me was the only thing which completely cured my social anxiety and enabled me to have a social life. I went from being housebound for years on end, to spending every night in pubs and meeting complete strangers off the internet.
Being sensitive to alcohol (and drugs for that matter) it only took 2 or 3 beers for me to get very intoxicated, and at that level I could be myself and just communicate with people and maintain eye contact easily with no fears at all.
I began to like the whole routine of going to the same pubs, meeting people and hanging out smoking, particularly in the summer. It soon got to a point though where I was drinking just to go get to the pub or even to the shops. I seemed to be incapable of doing anything outside the house unless intoxicated.
This lifestyle was fun while it lasted but it soon became unsustainable and started to take its toll on my health. I even passed out one time and had to be carried home. I started being sick in random places and usually on arriving home plastered. But worse than that I started to get these terrible hangovers. Not just ordinary hangovers. They would start about 4 hours after my last drink. Excruciating headaches. Real agonising pain like my brain being ripped open. My blood pressure would be sky high so I could feel and hear my pulse throbbing and with each pulse, pain.
This would sometimes last 2-3 days, during which time I'd be confined to bed not eating. These "hangovers" or whatever they were started to become more frequent until eventually they would start even after 2 drinks. I took this as a warning sign I had to stop drinking, which I did.
When the drinking ended, so did my social life. I've never been the same since with alcohol and can't enjoy it like I used it anymore now. If I have one beer I feel groggy and a mild headache. So that is about my limit now..just one beer or a glass of wine and no more. My body can't take it. I guess there is a lesson here. I'm lucky I didn't get physically addicted to alcohol rather than just psychologically dependent on it as a social crutch. Maybe the hangovers thing was a self-protection mechanism thing to stop me abusing alcohol like I was.
I find this interesting. I have abused virtually every downer that is available (notably ketamine, benzos and opiates), excepting only RC's and things like that, but I never felt even slightly attracted to alcohol. This is strange given my patterns.
And are you saying that, when an alcoholic wakes up hungover, they can get rid of their hangover by drinking more?
Is drinking 'euphoric' for alcoholics?
I don't think a hangover can be cured by drinking more, that has certainly never been the case for me. I see a hangover as really the early symptom of alcohol poisoning. It's your body's way of telling you this stuff isn't doing you any good at this quantity in your body.
You can definitely get euphoric from alcohol if you drink enough. It's the most pro-social drug I ever took and nothing else suppresses inhibitions quite like it. The only problem is, it's such a dirty toxic drug and has such a high body load at the level you need to get the good effects.
Alcoholism and the symptoms of it alcoholics exhibit are not the same as hangover. The kind of symptoms are fear, anxiety, confusion, depression, shaking, sweating, possibly hallucinations. Drinking more makes those go away temporarily.
Why do people drink alcohol? I don't understand. I mean, why do they become addicted to it?
Well alcohol can be extremely physically addictive to some people, just like hard drugs or benzos. And you can get tolerance too so that you need to drink larger quantities to get the same effects, and the more you drink, the more additive it becomes and damaging. A vicious circle that gradually destroys you much like heroin, only over a longer period.
How do alcoholics ever get past the hangovers, headaches and nausea?
That's a very good question. For me, it was the hangovers, headaches and nausea which stopped me becoming a full blown alcoholic I think. Perhaps for alcoholics, if they continue to ignore those warnings long enough their body finds ways to adapt to them and they don't experience them as severely.
Opiates and benzos don't really have any down-time, at least not unless you're addicted and without a source; but alcohol, it seems, always culminates in feeling like dirt.
I hope this doesn't constitute 'triggering'.
I agree with you, alcohol is a really dirty toxic drug to put into your body in large quantities regularly. It probably destroys more lives than all the other drugs put together.
Give me an opiate or benzo any day. The only issue with those is rapid tolerance and dependency, then all the hell of withdrawal. I'm lucky I have never had to face that *touch wood* as I'm always careful with drugs. I was on Valium almost daily for 2 years under a doctor, and I've self-medicated with Tramadol and other opiates, but never been addicted.