RedLeader
Bluelight Crew
Man, you're 24 years old. Even if you're been drinking hard for a while, it's unlikely that your liver won't be able to repair itself over time. It's a very resilient thing. Sure, your levels might be not so great right now, and even if a doctor presents this to you, s/he will also probably let you know that as long as you get this under control at your young age, you can (and will!) lead a long and happier life.
I had all kinds of physical problems when I was boozing hard that I was convinced were related to my liver. The pain on the right side of my body. The weird tingling all over and brain zaps when I ate too much or from another reason, felt like my other internal organs were rubbing up against my ballooning liver and causing all of this reactionary physical terror. Now I am not even close to a doctor, and perhaps some with more knowledge of what actually goes on down there to cause the discomfort will speak up, but again, don't panic about your liver because again, in time it shouldn't have a problem growing back into a healthier version of itself.
I know it's nerve-wrecking, and the elevated anxiety/stress/obsessive-compulsiveness/depression/terror that constant alcohol consumption leads to (apart from those shrinking windows where you actually have a good buzz going on). But get out of that while you can. Because the physical side-effects, those convincing you that your organs and bodily functions are slowly decaying, will only get worse, and the time-windows when you feel "drunk" in a good way shrink, and then shrink some. And man, it will get to a point where the shit stressing you out in real life that you don't think you could ever handle sober, that really becomes comparatively A LOT easier.
No need to scare you, but as someone who has abused several different drugs, when alcoholism gets back, it's up there with the absolute worst of them.
I am very happy to hear that you've considered the doctor's visit. I challenge you to get that scheduled tomorrow! Be sure to swallow any pride and be 100% honest with him about intake, side-effects, psychological fears surrounding sobriety, and anything in-between. Doctors can give you meds to help with the cravings, the side-effects, regulating your sleep, minimizing your anxiety, and overall a medical taper can be almost painless. And even though you may not go to a rehab or closed-community like that, you should borrow their structure in that for the first week or even couple of weeks, keep either to yourself or around a solid support group so that triggers and things that could get you worked up emotionally can be kept at minimum, and you have all the time in the world to get used to sleeping sober, coping with bad news sober, managing anxiety sober and taking on any difficulties I missed in a "trial setting" before you're ready to take over your complete real life.
I don't mean to ramble on, but you remind me a lot of myself back in that stage of my life. So if I can be a friend for you through this, feel free to PM me about anything from the actual process of quitting drinking to anything stressing you out that might make you reach for the bottle, for an outsider's advice/perspective. We're all in this together.
I had all kinds of physical problems when I was boozing hard that I was convinced were related to my liver. The pain on the right side of my body. The weird tingling all over and brain zaps when I ate too much or from another reason, felt like my other internal organs were rubbing up against my ballooning liver and causing all of this reactionary physical terror. Now I am not even close to a doctor, and perhaps some with more knowledge of what actually goes on down there to cause the discomfort will speak up, but again, don't panic about your liver because again, in time it shouldn't have a problem growing back into a healthier version of itself.
I know it's nerve-wrecking, and the elevated anxiety/stress/obsessive-compulsiveness/depression/terror that constant alcohol consumption leads to (apart from those shrinking windows where you actually have a good buzz going on). But get out of that while you can. Because the physical side-effects, those convincing you that your organs and bodily functions are slowly decaying, will only get worse, and the time-windows when you feel "drunk" in a good way shrink, and then shrink some. And man, it will get to a point where the shit stressing you out in real life that you don't think you could ever handle sober, that really becomes comparatively A LOT easier.
No need to scare you, but as someone who has abused several different drugs, when alcoholism gets back, it's up there with the absolute worst of them.
I am very happy to hear that you've considered the doctor's visit. I challenge you to get that scheduled tomorrow! Be sure to swallow any pride and be 100% honest with him about intake, side-effects, psychological fears surrounding sobriety, and anything in-between. Doctors can give you meds to help with the cravings, the side-effects, regulating your sleep, minimizing your anxiety, and overall a medical taper can be almost painless. And even though you may not go to a rehab or closed-community like that, you should borrow their structure in that for the first week or even couple of weeks, keep either to yourself or around a solid support group so that triggers and things that could get you worked up emotionally can be kept at minimum, and you have all the time in the world to get used to sleeping sober, coping with bad news sober, managing anxiety sober and taking on any difficulties I missed in a "trial setting" before you're ready to take over your complete real life.
I don't mean to ramble on, but you remind me a lot of myself back in that stage of my life. So if I can be a friend for you through this, feel free to PM me about anything from the actual process of quitting drinking to anything stressing you out that might make you reach for the bottle, for an outsider's advice/perspective. We're all in this together.

