You definitely came to the right place... I've found myself in your situation too (except I'd snort over smoke to control the duration). At first, I was a supermom. I finally had the energy and mood lift needed to grind through mundane parts of life as a mother, create an environment of stimulating activities from my daughter, and get through an excessive course load to work toward my degree. One of the first things I noticed was trouble with memory and more negative physical side effects as the use went on... The wonderful community here has been nothing but helpful and chalk full of great advice.
Like you I tried to taper. No one knew about my habit... My husband, family, and friends were oblivious for nearly 2 years because I didn't go overboard, tried to limit my use, and took care of myself. Eventually the small problems both added up, and got bigger. My health was failing, and tapering only actually made the process of stopping worse. Your situation will vary, because you are you (and I'm me? lol) but I've been clean since June with one lapse in September to remind myself why I stopped.
Here's what I've found useful:
- cancel your life for at least a week, I know this feels impossible but you will need time and rest
- VITAMINS! A good multi vitamin, a B Complex, and chelated magnesium were my saviors
- unless your health depends on it, DO NOT GET METH ABUSE ON YOUR MED RECORD! After being horrifically abused in the hands of medical professionals with chips on their shoulders... Trust me, it's not worth it.
- only tell your "hide the body" friends, the ones your trust not to judge or talk about you to others, the ones that won't treat you like some "junkie"
- Hydration and nutrition (at least for me) were even more difficult after stopping, bland soft foods are your friend
- BENZOS! Seriously, it's substancially better to be calm and relaxed while in total dysphoria. Opiods help too, but avoid starting a replacement habit by keeping the use short term.
- don't fight the urges to use! Fighting the desire strengthens it, where I found that accepting that you want to revert to old coping mechanisms and reminding yourself it will pass helped a bunch.
- (IMO) avoid meetings... meetings are full of court ordered people who don't take sobriety seriously. If you are easily influenced I would avoid and stick to online communities moderated with your recovery in mind.
- Antidepressants made it easier to function early on, and have made coping with the fallout less miserable.
I've been on vyvance (40 mg) for awhile to help treat my ADD, but unfortunately it costs too much and the midwest solution to substance using ADDers is not to do anything else... Sorry if this is scattered, I've been on the rebound from that for the last couple days. It's important to know that the negatives only continue to grow the longer you go... I hope this has helped, and welcome to the dark side.