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Sunday, October 25, 2015
Friday, September 11, 2015
Day counts, heart pills
Dad is at 109 days and I have reached 88.
At the hospital, they took dad off his heart medicine. He has had an arythmia his entire life, but when they were testing his heart at NYP, they wanted baseline results and never saw a reason to put him back on the meds. After his release, he went back on them because he worried.
We have a cardiologist appointment soon, so we are taking a 24-hour ekg with no meds for his doctor to examine.
Day counts, heart pills
Dad is at 109 days and I have reached 88.
At the hospital, they took dad off his heart medicine. He has had an arythmia his entire life, but when they were testing his heart at NYP, they wanted baseline results and never saw a reason to put him back on the meds. After his release, he went back on them because he worried.
We have a cardiologist appointment soon, so we are taking a 24-hour ekg with no meds for his doctor to examine.
Friday, September 4, 2015
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Rock, I mean Walk around the clock, wait... Block
Today dad and I went on our usual exersize walk. We went further than normal: once around the block and 3/4 of a second rotation. He continues to strengthen and his memory is doing well. We have an ENT test scheduled for friday to check his hearing.
71 days sober for Robert, 50 for Peter.
Saturday, July 25, 2015
42
My mom emailed me, after I posted about my dad's status, asking about my day count. Just an update, if anyone else was wonder.
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Just two sober guys...
...enjoying some Japanese food. Dad had sushi and I enjoyed teriyaki chicken.
Day 39 for Peter, day 58 for Robert.
Friday, July 3, 2015
Another Day, Another Meeting
Today dad had a visit from the son and daughter-in-law! We came by in the afternoon in time for his podiatrist appointment. Dad's nails need pro-trimming skills, so he has an appointment every other month. His extended medical vacation meant he had to skip a visit.
Yesterday, I filled dad's pill containers and he is doing well on remembering to take them. He wasn't very hungry today, and we are all concerned about that.
He didn't have breakfast or lunch, though he did eat a moderate dinner. I will bring this up with his GP next week.
After dinner we went to A.A. All in all, a good day!
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Second Day Home
Today was dad's second day back at the Schwab House. I picked up all of his prescriptions and filled his pill day planners. We went to Fairway to get some groceries. The walk home was testing Robert, but he powered through.
Today was also our second A.A. Meeting together. Dad enjoyed the meeting and picked up some literature. He has stayed sober since coming home and I'm very proud of him.
Day by day! Today is day 18 for me and day 37 for Robert.
Contact info update: call dad's cell phone. 917-975-8151. Feel free to email dad, even though he hasn't been using his computer. I have been checking his email and will print out any correspondence for him to read.
Thursday, June 18, 2015
(insert metaphor about six in a row here)
Today was my sixth A.A. This makes six days sober. This was a different type of meeting I had not been to before: an Anniversary Meeting. This meeting allows those celebrating a milestone period of time sober a time to speak and they are alloted more time than in regular meetings.
All meetings that I have attended, besides this one, have a nearly identical format. The meeting starts by describing the purpose of A.A. (helping people stay sober), the fees due (none), the requirements to join (a desire to stop drinking) and a speaker is introduced. This speaker tells of some of his experiences, troubles, and how A.A. has helped him.
The floor is then opened up to short, usually two to five minute, times for any member to speak. No topics are off-limits as long as it relates to drinking, desire to drink, or stopping drinking. People talk about family, friends, A.A., food, vacations, depression, suicidal thoughts, and any other topic imaginable. The members are either chosen by raising ones hand, or a round-robin starts at some point in the circle. If round-robin is the method, the last fifteen to twenty minutes are held aside for someone who wants to speak but was missed.
The meeting ends with words from a founder of A.A. being read and the whole group holding hands and saying "Live and let Live" together.
It may sound hokey. People who have done 12-step may say "where is your highest power," "when do you study the steps," "who is your sponsor," "where is your chip," or a half dozen other questions. My answer is "This is working for me. This is helping me."
I didn't slip yesterday. I haven't slipped yet today. I'll worry about tomorrow tomorrow.
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Like Carl Lewis at the Long Jump
Today was my fourth consecutive AA meeting and my fourth or fifth day of sobriety. It depends on how you count: do I start on Saturday, the first day beginning at 12:00am where I didn't have a drink, or Friday, when I didn't have a drink after I woke up (my last drink was at somewhere around 3AM. Understandably I am a little fuzzy on the exact time)? For ease of counting, I may just call it four AA meetings and four days of sobriety.
My days are not the hard part. I spend them with my dad or my wife. I help Robert at the Jewish Home, walk with him, keep him company in a strange environment and run whatever errands he may need. Joycelyn and I watch TV, cook dinner (that's more her than me. You would understand if you ate a meal made by both of us as to why), and enjoy married life in a city as wonderful as New York. I attend my AA meeting in the evening. I watched the NBA Finals and enjoyed the game quite a lot.
I, generally, wasn't a daytime drinker. That was one of my innumerable excuses as to why I couldn't be an alcoholic. It is very hard to explain to someone without an addiction problem the rationalization process that goes on in your mind to convince yourself everything is OK, but the following may give you some insight.
I didn't get my first drink until the evening, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get "really" drunk every single day, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get hangovers all the time, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get as drunk as "real" alcoholics, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get blackout drunk all the time, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get into legal trouble, so I didn't have a problem.
I didn't get it.
Habits are hard to break and habits involving drugs are very hard to break. In New York City, a drink is never more than $1 and a couple of feet away. I'm very proud of what I have done and indescribably thankful to all that have helped me, but doesn't mean there won't be some times that are hard. I am an adult, and if I decide to drink, I can.
I must make the choice not to have a drink every minute of every day. Some days are harder than others and some minutes are harder than others. The last few hours, after the game ended, has been very hard for me. I even watched the post-game bullshit just to keep busy. This is because the hardest time for me is after Joycelyn has gone to sleep when I'm still home and not ready to go to sleep. I'd usually be three-quarters loaded by the time the NBA Championship was won. It's because I'm just here, essentially by myself, and wandering minds are dangerous. No one can watch over my shoulder 24-hours-a-day.
This is why every AA meeting I attend adds to my collection of phone numbers associated with first names and last initials. I get handed business cards with the personal cell phone numbers 60 minutes after being met by essentially a stranger. Some business cards have the person's name and the business they work for. I've had a card or two where the person's name is part of the business name like Meyers from Jacoby & Meyers. (This is alcoholics Anonymous, so NO I didn't meet Jacoby or Meyers! I would never out someone like that, but it's an example most can understand.)
I get a phone number and a name. And then I am told to call anytime. If I need to talk, if I am thinking about a drink, if I'm just lonely. It's for the dark times. I've been told some AAs spend as much of the day in meetings as they can for they feel safest there. It sounds strange to need to feel safe in this fashion, but AAs generally fear alcohol and what it will do to them if they slip. I face my fear every day when I visit Dad, but sometime those consequences seem distant and some booze would make the problems seem that much further away. Things seem so much easier when I'm drunk, despite how much harder they really are. All your cares are washed away as you make that horrible decision that, in reality, adds to those problems.
This post may have seemed to start out upbeat, and get progressively worse as I continued to write, but that is the furthest thing from the truth. When I started writing this post I really wanted a drink. I know I could have woken Joycelyn to keep me company, but I didn't need to. There is a reason this post actually got happier as it continued, despite sounding darker and darker:
I didn't slip today, and I'll worry about tomorrow tomorrow.
Monday, June 15, 2015
AA Meeting the Third
I didn't slip today, and I'll worry about tomorrow tomorrow.
The True Stairmaster and Guilt Worthy of the Best Yenta
Dad had a double physical therapy session today. (more likely physical and occupational, but meh) There was walking, standing, sitting and stairs!
This was incredible tiring and difficult for dad, but made it up and down a full flight. I reminded him how stairs are just like walking, but more stressful on the muscles and balance. I'm quite proud of the work he is putting in, not to end a sentence with a prepositional phrase, which I won't, Mom!
I informed dad I went to AA yesterday, how it went, what went on and that I thought it was helping me. I also told him I would be leaving from my visit early to make my Sunday meeting. I went over how important not drinking was to me and my loved ones. My reasons were: I didn't want to develop health issues, get memory loss or shorten my lifespan; reducing the time I get to spend on this Earth with those who care so much about me.
I can be a bastard sometimes, can't I?
Blog Name Change
AA LGBT Alphabet soup!
I went to another AA meeting today. There was just as much acceptance and support as the first one. I was a little worried about not being welcomed, I will admit, as this was a LGBT meeting. Breeders are encouraged to join, but there was some trepidation.
This proved to be totally unfounded. They were as caring, accepting and supportive as one could ask for.
I didn't slip today, and I'll worry about tomorrow tomorrow.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
My First AA Meeting
Yesterday I went to my first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. It was a small group, around ten or so, in the Art room of a community center. As Robert is, I am not much for religion and, this being something much featured in AA, I searched for a group that would better meet my father and my needs.
Enter Agnostic Alcoholics Anonymous of New York City. They are a collection of AA groups who put the emphasis on the twelve steps, downplaying the God part therein. They like to say the G.O.D. they have for a higher power, guiding light, spirit animal etc are the meetings themselves: Groups Of Drunks.
I found acceptance, trust, and a true willingness to help others. Like Planet Fitness spouts in their advertisements, this was truly a "Judgement Free Zone©". They listened to me tell some of my problems, my concern for my dad and my decision to join. It warms ones heart and provides a sense of self-belief when people who have been sober so long applaud my statement "Hi, my name is Peter. I am an alcoholic. I have been sober one day." I got the same applause as the person celebrating three years.
I would like to thank all who read this blog for the support and belief in Robert and I. Make no doubt: this is hard. But with the people around us: some I barely know, some people we love and some I haven't met yet, we have a chance!
I don't know if this is my magic bullet. I know myself and have no illusions: I might slip.
I didn't slip today, and I'll worry about tomorrow tomorrow.