Quitting Alcohol

schmalzy

WKR
Joined
Oct 1, 2014
Messages
1,583
Congratulations on all of you that quit. I came from a long line of alcoholics on both sides of my family tree and have a couple of questions if you don’t mind.
For you guys who used to drink to much, did you drink because you liked the taste? Or was it just to feel the effects of alcohol?
Guess I been pretty lucky as I consider the taste to be disgusting except for maybe a couple of brands of beer. Even then if I drink a 8 ounce glass I can feel the effects.

Both.


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hunt1up

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2012
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1,790
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Central Illinois
27 months have come and gone. I may have mentioned it earlier in the thread, but shortly after I quit drinking I booked a Dall sheep hunt. It was something I never thought I'd do due to cost. But it was 2+ years in the future and I started taking the money I spent on alcohol and putting it into the hunting fund. The money I spent on alcohol has easily covered more than half the trip. That's next August, and it'll be 3 years sober the day before we depart, and a month before I turn 40. I look back on 20 years of drinking and I could have funded such a trip many times over. Crazy to think about.
 

BravoNovember

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 26, 2021
Messages
260
Location
Wisconsin
27 months have come and gone. I may have mentioned it earlier in the thread, but shortly after I quit drinking I booked a Dall sheep hunt. It was something I never thought I'd do due to cost. But it was 2+ years in the future and I started taking the money I spent on alcohol and putting it into the hunting fund. The money I spent on alcohol has easily covered more than half the trip. That's next August, and it'll be 3 years sober the day before we depart, and a month before I turn 40. I look back on 20 years of drinking and I could have funded such a trip many times over. Crazy to think about.
I’m hoping to do something very similar. It feels weird to “reward” myself for quitting something that I feel like I shouldn’t have been doing in the first place, but at the same time feels like I earned it. I don’t know if that makes sense or not
 

schmalzy

WKR
Joined
Oct 1, 2014
Messages
1,583
27 months have come and gone. I may have mentioned it earlier in the thread, but shortly after I quit drinking I booked a Dall sheep hunt. It was something I never thought I'd do due to cost. But it was 2+ years in the future and I started taking the money I spent on alcohol and putting it into the hunting fund. The money I spent on alcohol has easily covered more than half the trip. That's next August, and it'll be 3 years sober the day before we depart, and a month before I turn 40. I look back on 20 years of drinking and I could have funded such a trip many times over. Crazy to think about.

This is truly awesome. Pumped for you.


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Team4LongGun

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 4, 2019
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1,778
Location
NW MT
Good luck dude. My dad drank himself to death when he was 57. Growing up with a drunk parent is no fun at all.

Sorry to hear that. I am sure all of our experiences are vastly different and unique. While your comment was most likely not referring to me, I should state I'm not a drunk parent. My kids are our world. I fall into the beers with buddies/mowing the lawn/fixing stuff category. I am quitting to better my health and hope to improve sleeping.
I notice as I get older it's tougher to recover from workouts, animal pack outs, small nagging injuries and get less sleep. This hopefully will improve on those, and maybe even cut back a few impulse purchases some evenings.
 

hunt1up

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2012
Messages
1,790
Location
Central Illinois
I’m hoping to do something very similar. It feels weird to “reward” myself for quitting something that I feel like I shouldn’t have been doing in the first place, but at the same time feels like I earned it. I don’t know if that makes sense or not
I know what you're saying. It's easy to look back and punish myself for stupid decisions, but at some point you gotta draw the line. I've accumulated enough regret for a lifetime, so at this point I view the "reward" as just a positive new reality that's now available.
 
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