For the longest time I was an excessive person. I drank heavily and tried anything I could get my hands on. I would get prescribed adderall and benzos and abuse them so that they didn't work properly. Eventually I got into opiates and my life went downhill fast and I soon found myself living back at home with my parents and going to AA admitting I was an alcoholic. For years I have been tryuing to solve the mystery of my own mind, how I work, my ADD, and if I truly am an addict or an alcoholic or both. I've learned so much about me, after 10 years smoking pot and drinking I sort of lost myself. The last few years have been about rebuilding my life and figuring out how my mind works. Anyways, I'm on suboxone and wellbutrin and have been doing great. However I realized that AA was not something I wanted to become my life long addiction. the truth is i'll a;lways be an addict. But what I've learned is that I don't have to be addicted to harmful things. I left AA after 5 and a half months clean, and decided that I did not want to spend the rest of my life worrying about drugs and alcohol. So I have been drinking moderately and I'm able to do so because I no longer allow myself to drink alcoholically.
I don't drink in the mornings, or alone, and I never ever get drunk. Unlike before when getting super trashed was the goal, now I stop after a couple when I'm full and it's easy to do. Also I was prescribed klonnopin today for sever panick attacks. In the past the first thing I would do is take a handful and the bottle would be gone in a weeks time. This time however I'm following the doctors advice and refuse to self-medicate or abuse either alcohol or this drug. What I'm trying to say is this: Since I had a "spiritual awakening" a few months ago I felt a newfound love for myself and for others. I no longer want to abuse or hurt myself like I use to in the name of "fun" and a "thrill." I exercise regularly, eat really well, and sleep 8 hours a night. And I graduate from college in a few months. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I trhink all the reading on BL, AA meetings, and making bad mistakes with drugs in the past has finally sunken through my thick skull and I only want to do things correctly. Have any of you been able to reach that point where you use to abuse everything, and then for whatever reason found that you no longer wanted to go that route. I have the utmost confidence that I will be able to enjoy alcohol at appropriate times, in appropriate amounts, for the rest of my life. And because I truly do suffer from anxiety, I want to take this klonnopin correctly so that I can actually get the help I so badly need. Living with severe worry/anxiety was crushing my soul.
I know that klonnopin is habbit forming, addictive, and usually not good to take daily. But I have a severe predisposition towards anxiety and my doctor totally understands that (hes such a great man) and is willing to help me any way he can. Do any of you have any suggestions on the best way to correctly take klonnopin longterm? I'm thinking total harm reduction and I do not plan on drinking hardly at all (maybe 1 beer a week) because I know those 2 drugs interact horribly. Also I'm on wellbutrin daily, so on days that i know im going to be drinking with a friend later should i not take my dose of wellbutrin that day? I apologize for a scatterbrained post, I just have a lot of questions and would really like to hear what you guys think, because I seriously feel like a brand new person w/ regards to drugs and alciohol. Is this possible? Do you think I will crash and burn and not be able to keep this up? Anyways, I'll be around and let you guys know how it goes. If I'm able to do this it could maybe prove to be of some use and motivation for other addicts who are trying to find a balance in their use, and dont want AA's complete program of abstinence. Once an addict always an addict, men who have lost their legs, they never grow new ones, I'm not sure I believe thats true anymore.%)
I don't drink in the mornings, or alone, and I never ever get drunk. Unlike before when getting super trashed was the goal, now I stop after a couple when I'm full and it's easy to do. Also I was prescribed klonnopin today for sever panick attacks. In the past the first thing I would do is take a handful and the bottle would be gone in a weeks time. This time however I'm following the doctors advice and refuse to self-medicate or abuse either alcohol or this drug. What I'm trying to say is this: Since I had a "spiritual awakening" a few months ago I felt a newfound love for myself and for others. I no longer want to abuse or hurt myself like I use to in the name of "fun" and a "thrill." I exercise regularly, eat really well, and sleep 8 hours a night. And I graduate from college in a few months. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I trhink all the reading on BL, AA meetings, and making bad mistakes with drugs in the past has finally sunken through my thick skull and I only want to do things correctly. Have any of you been able to reach that point where you use to abuse everything, and then for whatever reason found that you no longer wanted to go that route. I have the utmost confidence that I will be able to enjoy alcohol at appropriate times, in appropriate amounts, for the rest of my life. And because I truly do suffer from anxiety, I want to take this klonnopin correctly so that I can actually get the help I so badly need. Living with severe worry/anxiety was crushing my soul.
I know that klonnopin is habbit forming, addictive, and usually not good to take daily. But I have a severe predisposition towards anxiety and my doctor totally understands that (hes such a great man) and is willing to help me any way he can. Do any of you have any suggestions on the best way to correctly take klonnopin longterm? I'm thinking total harm reduction and I do not plan on drinking hardly at all (maybe 1 beer a week) because I know those 2 drugs interact horribly. Also I'm on wellbutrin daily, so on days that i know im going to be drinking with a friend later should i not take my dose of wellbutrin that day? I apologize for a scatterbrained post, I just have a lot of questions and would really like to hear what you guys think, because I seriously feel like a brand new person w/ regards to drugs and alciohol. Is this possible? Do you think I will crash and burn and not be able to keep this up? Anyways, I'll be around and let you guys know how it goes. If I'm able to do this it could maybe prove to be of some use and motivation for other addicts who are trying to find a balance in their use, and dont want AA's complete program of abstinence. Once an addict always an addict, men who have lost their legs, they never grow new ones, I'm not sure I believe thats true anymore.%)