Tag: depression

  • The Coward’s Price For Sobriety

    Six months.  31.5 times six.   93 days?   I’m not particularly mathematically adept at this time.

    Nevertheless and irregardless– off the wagon.

    First, it was the party for a friend of my lover.   Strong through an hour, maybe two.  Then anxious.  Then was asked to get a drink for her.   Hers were weak.  I nod and smile.  To the bar.  Drop a twenty.   “Double vodka.”

    It was downhill from there.  Down into “Proud Mary in the style of Ike and Tina Turner” at some dive called “Longneckers”.  Down to a $100 cab ride two turns north and west because, apparently, I slurred “Spring St” into “Springville”.  At least I didn’t drive.

    But the next morning, with the special lady’s car an hour’s traffic south in Depew?  The shower handle breaks off.  I’m driving down Transit (the reverse route the cab driver should have taken) in oppressive Sunday morning heat, wondering if the {jury,jerry}-rigged hose was still attached to the drain, or if my apartment was (once again) flooded.

    We made it back.  It was a good day in the end.   I topped off the proverbial, but it was good.  In my philosophy of sobriety, a stumble doesn’t necessarily cripple.

    A rough week later, after kilobytes of text too tawdry to re-late, the lover and I were back on terms of endearment.  We just wanted to *be* together.  We did.

    I picked up a four-pack of Ommegang Rare Vos before “we did”.

    I could barely finish the first.   Half of the second, the rest down the drain.   It’s a pathetic ABV, anyway.

    Next week, things are much worse.   I “dialed” a number with three digits.  Wasn’t pretty.  Swore I’d never do that to someone, but I did.

    Gotta swear off swearing.

    375mL of … New Amsterdam?   I walked for it.  To “Liquor Store” on Main in Williamsville.  Very somber in the shop.  I always play a role.  This was the role of the reluctant reprise of an alcoholic.  (No, not *that* disease-implicative term, but let’s use the word for expedience before I lose interest in this post.)  Took it home.  Maybe three shots in three separate talls of Sodastream tonics.  Just enough for a buzz, and the remainder went down the drain.

    Last night.

    Another 375.  Sobieski.  My old friend.

    Downed half that one.

    It was enough to conjure the breath of the dragon.  It was enough to steer me off and leave me waking to a head full of webs and wisps.  It was enough to make me regret.

    And?   Tonight.

    Six-pack of Commodore Perry.  I’m experimenting, see?  I’m working out what quantity might bring the quality that keeps me from coming home every goddamned night and going straight to bed.  I’m figuring what might be enough to erase the mistakes I’ve forced out of recall’s range and be content with myself for an evening.

    To the credit of the experiment, I have spilt some admirable word combinations this night.

    But.

    But … is it worth it?

    I can’t be a drunk again.  Not a “modern drunkard”.  Not an “alcoholic”.  Not … not what I said I wouldn’t be.

    Am I weak?  Am I paralyzed with a fear of being alone with my self?

    Maybe every chance ticked itself off the availables on Memorial Day in 2011.   Can I only choose one role?  If I fail at it, am I doomed to spiral, grasping, down into nothing?

    What was I before this?

    Will I ever be him again?

    Do I want to be?

    Fuck it.

    TUSK.

     

  • And Now For Something Obliquely Different

    My evening begins with Tinder.

    Ron right? r you free to hook

    up for coffee sometime? u

    seem like my kinda guy. 2

    many weirdos on here tho so

    im gonna delete.  Anyway u

    should text me at 123 456 7890

    Spokeo is my friend.

    Pittsburgh burner, registered to a

    male.  Multiple priors.  At least

    you’re a fellow Pennsyltuckian.

     

    Yeah, too many weirdos.

    Tried to get taxes done tonight.  Found out the 401k (early-withdrawal due to previous employer closing its doors and the split with the divorce) still haunts me.  Probably didn’t withhold enough for federal, let alone state.   Appointment was at 7PM.  Waited til 7:10, then told the cute receptionist I still needed my 8332’s from my ex-wife, and wasn’t sure I’d brought a credit card with any digital money on it, and I’d reschedule.

    Forgive the missing entries of late.   I haven’t returned to the comfortable numb of potent potables.

    I won’t.

    Started a new playthrough of Dragon Age: Inquisition last night.  Female Qunari Mage, Nightmare Difficulty, w/Friendly-Fire.  Don’t expect it will hold my interest long, but I did destroy the Pride Demon in the first major rift-closing battle with nary a casualty.

    I’ve been drinking SodaStream tonic mix, slightly past its freshness date.   Kinda like liquor– if I drink it while spinning madly in place like an autistic child raised by Oompa Loompas.  Maybe it’ll ferment.

    I’ll be getting a screening for the full array of social maladies tomorrow morning.  Making sure they include HSV this time.  Both of them.  All of them.  Every goddamned HSV in existence.  I’d rather have HIV.

    I don’t suspect any dirty creatures have taken up residence in my dark shadows, but it’s nice to pick up those papers without being asked to come into the doctor’s office for a private one-on-one.  If he doesn’t want to talk to you, it means you’re not afflicted.   Ignore the inscrutable measures and ratios, write “Great job!” in red ink on the cover sheet, slap on a few gold-star stickers, and frame it for mounting in the boudoir.

    My drug-doctor has some degree in “Sexology” hanging in his office.  Maybe I could be a “Sexographer”.

    Might spend a half-hour tonight applying for a loan from LendingClub.  Their denial responses are so polite.  It’s like a friend telling you to go fuck yourself for your own good.

    I’m tired.  Of everything.

    I see the girls this weekend.

    That’s all that matters.

     

     

  • A Moment of Clarity

    For an “alcoholic”, there is only one problem– alcohol.

    At that first AA meeting, when I raised my hand and said, “I’m Quinn and I’m an alcoholic”, I bargained with myself that it was some sort of truth.  Major regrettable events had transpired which, without alcohol, would have been mere forgettable incidents.  I have problems associated with alcohol, like a racist has problems associated with race.  So, I’m an alcoholic, right?

    No, I’m not– and I won’t call myself that again.

    I’ve never liked the term “racist”, either.

    This “alcoholic” thinking is dangerous.  Instead of calmly evaluating and confronting anxieties, one turns them into opportunities to triumph over this demon they’ve concocted as their nemesis.   That bottle of vodka is your Moriarty.   You dreamt that he beat your mother when you were a kid, or maybe he was a priest you remembered touching you in your private place.  Nevermind reality.  It’s a matter of degrees, and even then it’s inconsequential if you’re substituting fighting your real problems with defeating an imaginary enemy.

    I went to an SOS meeting today– day six of sobriety.  The longer I’m sober, the less I think it really matters.

    Surely, I lose control when drunk.  Surely, I make bad decisions.  With sex.  With driving.  Probably some other things I either can’t remember or on which I’m taking the Fifth (750ml), but many I recall slapping myself over in the shower the morning after.

    How could I have been so stupid?  Why would  I have risked that?  What was I thinking?

    I was stupid.  I was reckless.  I was not thinking.

    Being drunk cranked up the volume, but it was my tune, and it wasn’t booze singing it– it was me.

    Walking down the stairs of my empty office building tonight, going home late as has been lately, that “alcoholic thinking” popped into my head, and I had to shake it out in disgust.  I’ve got real problems.  A lot of them.  I don’t want to live.  If every cell in me wasn’t screaming to continue its miserable life and I could just flip an “off” switch, I’d be long gone by now.  Living without a will to live is a problem.   Not even wanting to want to live is a problem.  “High-functioning sociopathy”, “depersonalisation”,  “generalized anxiety”, “severe chronic depression”.

    Alcohol makes those problems worse, but alcohol ain’t my problem.