Addiction & Recovery
Related: About this forumIt's the holidays again. Yay.
I have a lot of time off work this week and next. It makes me very anxious to have that much free time. Its like a big, yawning black hole ahead of me, laying in wait.
We were closed yesterday (Saturday, one of my usual 10-12 hour work days), and are closed tomorrow and Tuesday for our usual weekend. Then, I have 4 days off in a row next week (Sat, Sun, Mon, Tues.) Ugh. My coworkers are all thrilled for the time off to spend with their families. Im at a loss for what to do. So anxious just thinking about it. Not to mention the loss of income.
I used to wonder why so many people disliked the holidays. Since Ive been sober, it has occurred to me that I used to love them because of all the parties. I stayed drunk and high the whole time and didnt carry around this huge load of guilt and shame. Dealing with my family is a lot more difficult without the numbing buffer.
Ill muddle through. I just hate feeling like this.
Skittles
(159,372 posts)fun times can be had without drugs or alcohol....
do you like reading, for example.....get a good book and make some cocoa and RELAX
if you get super anxious, take a long hot bubble bath.....start thinking about what you have instead of what you can't have....remind yourself what a great accomplishment sobriety is
if you ever, EVER feel like you are falling off the wagon talk to us here on DU, someone is always here
happybird
(5,117 posts)Ill be all right, I just dont like this big of a change to my schedule/structured week, especially when combined with mandatory family time. Its a double whammy.
I think in the past few years the 25th didnt fall a day or two before out usual weekend days, so I didnt have such a long stretch of days off. I love my family very much, but preferably in small doses. Weve already seen a lot of each other the past couple weeks, and under stressful (finance related) circumstances.
When Im working I feel good and useful. Productive. And I like that my boss and coworkers trust and depend on me. Im not so great at managing time when left to my own devices. No danger of relapse, more a danger of getting too far inside my own head. Then feeling guilty because I didnt get a damn thing done except lay around with the cats reading and messing around online. The cats will be very happy though, lol!
Skittles
(159,372 posts)I have noticed that when I work I don't have the time to dwell on my issues - for whatever reason, they just get put on the back burner, because I take pride in doing a good job. So what we have to do is find ways that help take our minds off our issues when we are NOT working. I find that exercise helps - taking a really long walk, for example. And never forget that days spent doing nothing but surfing and hanging out with cats can be very therapeutic too! I keep a list of things I need to get done and if I skip stuff on a "lazy day" I add another chore to the next day.
RainCaster
(11,545 posts)So that the regular chair can spend it with family. My family is rather messed up right now, so I am helping others instead.
This is a good time to focus on others; find a meeting, help a food bank, take an armload of blankets to a homeless camp. You get the idea. You will put a smile on someone else, and the diversion will be good for you.
multigraincracker
(34,075 posts)Run, walk or crawl. Spend time on any or all of your healty passions. Turn off the tv and listen to the radio, at least you can still keep moving. I've been retired for 20 years and that keeps me going and growing. Every day is a weekend or holiday for me.
GPV
(73,036 posts)a hobby, but its triggering because of the perfectionism.
Heres to all of us getting through and finding joy somehow.
bif
(24,002 posts)Either from your local library or on line. It's a nice, therapeutic diversion to keep you from thinking about drinking (or your drug of choice). Hang in there!