podsnomo
Bluelighter
So good to hear that positivity coming from you K187. I'm 7 days clean now. I still can feel the restless legs coming on at night and now instead of taking a a double-recommended dose 2x/day I just take it a couple of hours before bed. It takes a LONG time to work. I remember that from once when I was trying a CT quit from the pods (hell) and I slugged down about 400mg of DXM. I fell asleep waiting for it to come on. And when I woke up, WTF!. I was trippin a little, but felt better. That CT attempt didn't work though.
Anyhow man, you're not afraid of the God thing, whatever god is. I really recommend you attend some 12 step meetings. AA, NA, whatever. We have a lot of people who identify as addicts in AA meetings where I live.
Cautionary advice though, once you get clean, it takes a lot of work to stay sober. 12 steps are the key. The fellowship of those groups is awesome too, but that alone won't keep you sober. The AA way of life is to truly LIVE. This book is awesome and has helped me immensely: Recovery--the Sacred Art: The Twelve Steps As Spiritual Practice (Art of Spiritual Living)
There's the AA "big book", the "12&12", and those are vital, but the book I mention above is much less centered in a Western sort of God-in-the-sky-pointing-his-finger kind of way.
I'll keep logging in as I am able and seeing how you're doing. You need people to be accountable to. I'll volunteer. But I encourage to tell all the people you feel comfortable telling. And, BTW, you can find hundreds and hundreds of them at AA/NA meetings.
And the last word in your post is KEY. ACTION. It is ften said in AA that it doesn't matter as much what we think/feel/believe; it's all about what you do.
Stay with it. I'll leave you with this about faith vs belief.
Belief is clinging, faith is letting go. Belief holds on to something, and it can turn into holding tightly enough that we try to control. Trying to control life is playing God. We are not God, but we are, as we are each and all part of God. We cannot control life. Though our present actions influence the future, life happens no matter what we say or do.
Because I cannot control the ocean does not mean I cannot learn to swim in it. Because I cannot control the wind does mean I cannot tap into its power. And because I cannot control life does not mean I cannot learn to live with justice, kindness, compassion, humility and serenity.
When you swim, you cannot stay afloat by grabbing the water. Indeed, you cannot grab the water. You must let go of it and float. You must interact. You must respond to your environment to stay alive. This is faith. Letting go.
Love to all,
pods (no more!)
Anyhow man, you're not afraid of the God thing, whatever god is. I really recommend you attend some 12 step meetings. AA, NA, whatever. We have a lot of people who identify as addicts in AA meetings where I live.
Cautionary advice though, once you get clean, it takes a lot of work to stay sober. 12 steps are the key. The fellowship of those groups is awesome too, but that alone won't keep you sober. The AA way of life is to truly LIVE. This book is awesome and has helped me immensely: Recovery--the Sacred Art: The Twelve Steps As Spiritual Practice (Art of Spiritual Living)
There's the AA "big book", the "12&12", and those are vital, but the book I mention above is much less centered in a Western sort of God-in-the-sky-pointing-his-finger kind of way.
I'll keep logging in as I am able and seeing how you're doing. You need people to be accountable to. I'll volunteer. But I encourage to tell all the people you feel comfortable telling. And, BTW, you can find hundreds and hundreds of them at AA/NA meetings.

And the last word in your post is KEY. ACTION. It is ften said in AA that it doesn't matter as much what we think/feel/believe; it's all about what you do.
Stay with it. I'll leave you with this about faith vs belief.
Belief is clinging, faith is letting go. Belief holds on to something, and it can turn into holding tightly enough that we try to control. Trying to control life is playing God. We are not God, but we are, as we are each and all part of God. We cannot control life. Though our present actions influence the future, life happens no matter what we say or do.
Because I cannot control the ocean does not mean I cannot learn to swim in it. Because I cannot control the wind does mean I cannot tap into its power. And because I cannot control life does not mean I cannot learn to live with justice, kindness, compassion, humility and serenity.
When you swim, you cannot stay afloat by grabbing the water. Indeed, you cannot grab the water. You must let go of it and float. You must interact. You must respond to your environment to stay alive. This is faith. Letting go.
Love to all,
pods (no more!)