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    What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

    I know I have asked this before, I never really got a clear answer, or maybe I did but I just didn't want to hear it, I know I am never EVER going to drink alcohol again but I can't seem to define myself as an alcoholic. I can't tell my son in 16 years time "Yes son, I was asked to leave the house because I was an alcoholic".

    I had a drink problem, I abused alcohol from time to time, which was a mistake - but an alcoholic, one that depends on alcohol, Here is an extract I got from this site, are they right?

    Not everyone who drinks alcohol heavily is considered an alcoholic. People who drink regularly enough to affect their family or work responsibilities and who drink in a way that puts them in dangerous situations (for example, behind the wheel of a car while intoxicated) are said to abuse alcohol. Although they use alcohol in an unhealthy way, people who suffer from alcohol abuse do not necessarily develop a physical dependence upon alcohol.

    Alcoholics, on the other hand, have a chronic disease. They are physically dependent upon alcohol. They feel a need to drink, almost in the same way that most people feel the need to eat. And once alcoholics start drinking, they are unable to stop. They develop a tolerance to alcohol, requiring more and more drinks to feel the same effects. When an alcoholic tries to cut down or stop drinking, he or she experiences the symptoms of withdrawal: sweating, nausea, shakiness, anxiety and delirium tremens (seeing images, severe shaking, confusion).

    I have never had this or felt this, my withdrawals were simply cravings which are gone now after day 3 or 4 I think.

    Opinions?
    :thanks:

    #2
    What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

    wanna change,

    i feel the same as i dont get withdrawals either, just cravings that pass. i could agree with the fact i abuse alcohol, but an alcoholic? i'm not so sure. if that's what i am that's fine, but i too feel there is a difference. it's so hard to put yourself in that 'box' isn't it?

    i have so many symptoms of a binge drinker or heavy drinker, but not that many of an alcoholic. either way i have a problem and deal with it i must!

    even if i don't fit under the label alcoholic, i have enough of an issue to know i can't just take one drink or mod x
    The mind will intellectualize it, the heart will emotionalize it, yet the gut never lies.

    https://www.mywayout.org/community/f9/girly-wirly-s-toolbox-2-45452.html

    Comment


      #3
      What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

      It's not as important to have, or worry about, a label, as it is to understand how OUR drinking affects US. There are many good sites that have information (see below), but whatever category we fall into, we can't be complacent that our abuse won't escalate. Even at low levels, there are life threatening possibilities. After you reach a certain point, trust me, there are irreversable consiquences. Don't worry about the name, be concerned with the FACT that it is causing a problem now in your life.
      ALCOHOL’S DAMAGING EFFECTS ON THE BRAIN
      Difficulty walking, blurred vision, slurred speech, slowed reaction times, impaired memory: Clearly, alcohol affects the brain. Some of these impairments are detectable after only one or two drinks and quickly resolve when drinking stops. On the other hand, a person who drinks heavily over a long period of time may have brain deficits that persist well after he or she achieves sobriety. Exactly how alcohol affects the brain and the likelihood of reversing the impact of heavy drinking on the brain remain hot topics in alcohol research today.

      We do know that heavy drinking may have extensive and far–reaching effects on the brain, ranging from simple “slips” in memory to permanent and debilitating conditions that require lifetime custodial care. And even moderate drinking leads to short–term impairment, as shown by extensive research on the impact of drinking on driving.

      A number of factors influence how and to what extent alcohol affects the brain (1), including

      how much and how often a person drinks;
      the age at which he or she first began drinking, and how long he or she has been drinking;
      the person’s age, level of education, gender, genetic background, and family history of alcoholism;
      whether he or she is at risk as a result of prenatal alcohol exposure; and
      his or her general health status.
      This Alcohol Alert reviews some common disorders associated with alcohol–related brain damage and the people at greatest risk for impairment. It looks at traditional as well as emerging therapies for the treatment and prevention of alcohol–related disorders and includes a brief look at the high–tech tools that are helping scientists to better understand the effects of alcohol.
      pubs.niaaa.nih.gov
      sigpic
      Never look down on a person unless you are offering them a hand up.
      awprint: RUBY Imagine yourself doing What you love and loving What you do, Being happy From the inside Out, experiencing your Dreams wide awake, Being creative, being Unique, being you - changing things to the way YOU know they can BE - Living the Life you Always imagined.awprint:

      Comment


        #4
        What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

        My own opinion for what it is worth is rather simplistic, what does it matter what we label ourselves? If we have a problem with alcohol and have an abusive relationship with it, which has led us to find our way here. Just as one person drinks two bottles of whiskey in one day then doesnt drink for two weeks, to the person who drinks 3 glasses of wine or beer every day for years on end. It doesnt really matter in my eyes what we call it the end result is the same and we are all here to change that relationship. I dont really like being labeled anything but if push came to shove I would say I abused AL big time and then it abused me back.
        Ethanol is a toxic chemical, why would I drink it?

        Comment


          #5
          What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

          I don't know what I would have "labeled" myself as. All I know is I drank in such an unhealthy way, that no matter what it's called, it wasn't good. When I quit, my body did go through slight withdrawals, nothing major. But I know that when I was in the throes of heavy drinking, I just felt soaked in beer, I could taste it, smell it....I'm sure if I had given blood they would have said "This isn't blood, it's Bud Light!".

          So whatever it was I was doing, being an alcoholic, or an alcoholic abuser, I'm glad it's over.

          xoxo
          K9
          :heart:I love my daughter more than alcohol:heart:

          Believe in yourself. You are stronger than you think.

          Comment


            #6
            What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

            As others have said already it doesent really matter what label you decide to put on it, but Keeping sober is the most important thing in my life,The most important decision i ever made was my decision to give up drinking, I am convinced that my whole life now depends on me not taking that first drink, Nothing in the world is as important to me as my own sobriety, Everything i have depends on that one thing,And if that makes me an alcoholic i can live with that.


            :congratulatory: Clean & Sober since 13/01/2009 :congratulatory:

            Until one is committed there is always hesitant thoughts.
            I know enough to know that I don't know enough.

            This signature has been typed in front of a live studio audience.

            Comment


              #7
              What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

              Yes I was half expecting these answers, its easy being labelled an alcoholic on a forum, shucks I am even doing it, but to be labelled, as I was, by a judge in court as an alcoholic when I had a drink problem is an issue for me, to be told that in front of other people, my wife, it took time to sink in, yes I have a drink problem, I abused alcohol, but I was not an alcoholic, this I am sure of.
              I don't mind being one, its not that, its just I don't like being accused of something I am not and my whole life taken away based on a whim by an overgrown ignoramus with a wig who knows nothing about the factors or the difference between the two who only wanted a rushed hearing because his dinner was getting cold.

              Yes I have a problem with drinking, that is why I am here and I will always be here - no getting rid of me now lads sorry, but I think I need to study this topic a little bit more because little lives depend on it.

              So label me what you like here, online, on an anonymous forum, but live in a public court, in newspapers, in front of family... that's a different story.

              What sounds better?

              Mr Wannachange, I have no doubt that you are an alcoholic.
              Or
              Mr Wannachange, I have no doubt you have a problem with drinking.

              Any further insight into the topic would be greatly appreciated.
              :thanks:

              Comment


                #8
                What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                I think the problem comes with the negative stigma of a drinking problem which all seems to come to a concentration in the word 'Alcoholic'. I do think that we live in different times and that these stigmas change as we understand more about the condition. Alcoholic to me is a word that I used to be familiar with as a youth to label people almost as you would label someone that has a drug problem as junkie. It is judgemental and hurtful at times in that context.
                I agree that labels don't matter and shouldn't. If it comes to you having to admit you have a problem just call it by the name. You have a drinking problem.
                AF since 15th March 2010

                The journey is the goal. As long as you're fighting the good fight and you're not giving up on giving up, you're winning. It's not about how often you get knocked down, it's about how often you get up again. Sobriety the goal for sure. But striving to get to that goal is what it's about. Not getting there. Because the journey never ends. The journey is the goal.

                Comment


                  #9
                  What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                  Wanna, it's just WRONG to label anyone, especially in the situation you described. As I said, and I wholly believe, alcohol causes huge problems, but like so many other things each person is different. I was called, in court, by a police officer, disgusting. Now, there were many other factors, he really wanted to win his case, and he is presently under arrest for spousal abuse. But if we go back to what we learned in kindergarten, calling names is never right.
                  sigpic
                  Never look down on a person unless you are offering them a hand up.
                  awprint: RUBY Imagine yourself doing What you love and loving What you do, Being happy From the inside Out, experiencing your Dreams wide awake, Being creative, being Unique, being you - changing things to the way YOU know they can BE - Living the Life you Always imagined.awprint:

                  Comment


                    #10
                    What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                    Hi, my name is Tippy. I'm an alcoholic.

                    It was hell to hear myself admit it for the 1st time (one week after becoming AF, to my wife). Almost 9 months later, I'm still an alcoholic and will remain so for the rest of my life. Not the only way in which I define myself, but it is part of who I am. I have come to accept it. I don't shout it from the rooftops, because there is an enormous stigma attached to it. But I can admit it here and to my loved ones.

                    If I were to be labeled in public, however, I would rant and rave...

                    But that's just me.

                    If you've examined your life and can honestly say that the shoe doesn't fit, you have so much to be grateful for. Treasure it, and make sure it stays that way. Regardless of what people might have said.

                    Good luck to all of us on our respective journeys
                    I'll do whatever it takes
                    AF 21/08/2009

                    Comment


                      #11
                      What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                      Sometimes the terminology used when talking about alcohol problems can be quite unhelpful.

                      In fact, when using the terms ‘alcoholism’ or ‘alcoholic’ (which everyone does, including this site), the emphasis can be that the problem is with the alcohol itself.

                      But the problem actually stems from the state of mind that the alcohol gives you, not from the chemical as such. The importance that this state of mind takes on for you, the preferability of it despite the huge costs to other parts of your life, that is actually where the problem lies.
                      The symptoms of the condition ‘alcoholism’ are generally agreed on as:

                      ? tolerance – the need to consume more in order to achieve the same effect,
                      ? withdrawal – the experience of unpleasant physical effects upon stopping drinking,
                      ? craving – a preoccupation or prolonged urge to have a drink,
                      ? loss of control – the inability to stop drinking at a sensible level once you have started.
                      You may have periods when you experience all four of these symptoms, and therefore you could be classified as an alcoholic. There may be other times when you’re not experiencing all of them, so you merely have ‘problems with alcohol’.
                      There are many different factors involved in an alcohol dependency, from genetic predispositions, or inherited behaviour from parents, perhaps learnt behaviour from society, to our beliefs about ourselves, our coping strategies, our self worth, our levels of anxiety and the stability or instability of our moods.
                      Different people will have different causes for their alcohol problems. The way to solve them is therefore to make yourself more aware of what factors are involved in your personal problem. Then you can go about making some changes to those underlying issues.


                      :congratulatory: Clean & Sober since 13/01/2009 :congratulatory:

                      Until one is committed there is always hesitant thoughts.
                      I know enough to know that I don't know enough.

                      This signature has been typed in front of a live studio audience.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                        Simple question for you Wanna, did that judge have the medical qualifications as well as his legal ones to pronounce somebody an alcoholic? No I didnt think so.
                        If someone has a broken leg it can be clinically proven, not sure there is a black and white test for alcoholism. Yes there are chemical changes within the brain which can be measured and questioneers that can be filled in but what does that tell us?
                        People talk about physical and mental addiction to alcohol, again where is the dividing line?
                        Even medical science can not agree whether it is a disease or not.
                        I would say the term Alcoholic is a term used by the general populous as an all encompassing description of somebody who doesnt have what would be a relationship with AL that falls within the socially acceptable boundaries. Only the person themselves really knows deep down if that relationship is one of abuse and how bad that abuse is.
                        Ethanol is a toxic chemical, why would I drink it?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                          Good points and taken aboard.

                          I prefer to tell my family I have an alcohol abuse problem because I abused alcohol, I was becoming an alcoholic, I may have become one if it were not for the judge labeling me as one and finding MWO.. who knows.. I had different views then which were somewhere in the lines of "woohooo skip hop dance out of the marriage so I can go to the pub and drink whenever I want" - yeah I was on the verge of becoming an alcoholic alright therefore would be ok to stand up and say this... instead I sent her a text... which was used in court.

                          Anyhow enough shite talk, I have a problem with alcohol no matter what I am labelled as but it does hurt to be called something you are not but one must remember what these camera court rooms are really like, I might have got off lightly!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                            KTAB;855133 wrote:
                            I would say the term Alcoholic is a term used by the general populous as an all encompassing description of somebody who doesnt have what would be a relationship with AL that falls within the socially acceptable boundaries. Only the person themselves really knows deep down if that relationship is one of abuse and how bad that abuse is.
                            I am writing this one down!! That's more or less what I was trying to say but you've put it into perfect words!
                            AF since 15th March 2010

                            The journey is the goal. As long as you're fighting the good fight and you're not giving up on giving up, you're winning. It's not about how often you get knocked down, it's about how often you get up again. Sobriety the goal for sure. But striving to get to that goal is what it's about. Not getting there. Because the journey never ends. The journey is the goal.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              What do you mean I am an alcoholic?

                              Right now for years and still now some people say I was never an alcoholic because I never went into the gutter, nor drank 24/7 - although at times I had a jolly good go. I also never had DT's shakes etc - well not apart from feeling a bit wobbly once and then a bit of a sort of 'fit' after I'd drank 5 days a week for 6 weeks (but did have days off during). I've managed 1-2, 5 weeks and even 3 months once without a drink.

                              I do classify myself as an alcoholic and am proud to say so. Believe it or not some people view alcoholics in recovery as folk who have achieved something amazing, and of course they tend to be more in touch with their feelings, emotions and behaviours than non-addicted persons.

                              So I'm not ashamed I had a terrible condition and eventually I found the way out of it.

                              These are some simple definitions:

                              Heavy Drinker - consumes alcohol most nights, may exhibit physical dependancy including the shakes and general negative health effects. May drink drive accidently because of consumation but any trouble he gets into is mostly ignorance. Can stop drinking without much struggle apart from the initial breaking the routine etc.

                              Alcoholic - consumes alcohol on daily, weekly or monthly basis. May or may not exhibit withdrawl symptoms. Drink driving and other negative consequences occur because he doesn't give a stuff - AL is more important and nothing else really matters, blackouts are also common. Has real trouble stopping drinking and this may take years involving many attempts plus relapse. Also has other addictive tendencies such as gambling, EDs, self-harming, other 'drugs including prescriptives or sexual behaviours.

                              So how I define a heavy drinker is in the ability to break away from AL i.e. they aren't 'dependent' on it to get them through the day - and that doesn't mean drinking the day either.

                              At some point heavy drinkers become alcoholics. Looking back at my drinking even when it was well within safe guidelines and infrequent I was experiencing blackouts at 17. It was laughed off as me enjoying myself but really I was a budding alcoholic then.

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