alcoholism

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The Search is On

Are any of y’all looking for a job? I am, and let me tell you what a giant pain in the ass it is.

First you have to reconcile yourself to the fact that you’ve got experience in one area – a career where you can easily make money and get good health benefits – and, although it isn’t your heart’s desire, it is probably the best way to go. So after you are in acceptance mode, then you have to go about compiling a resume and networking with people with whom you haven’t talked in years just to get your foot back in the door. Every once in a while, someone gives you sage advice like, “Think about what you love to do, and then find a way to make money doing it.” This kicks you back into unacceptance mode, until you realize that only independently wealthy people ever speak such nonsense, and then you start over with the reconciliation process again.

The last time I wrote about finding a job, I could hardly speak the word. It wasn’t my Target addiction that did me in as much as my need for health insurance. I won’t go into all the details, but I’ll share some information just in case you find yourself in a similar situation:
IF you ever decide to be treated for substance abuse, and IF you quit your crappy corporate job that made you drink in the first place, and IF you let your COBRA insurance lapse, and IF you look down on your husband’s company’s insurance plan and are convinced you can do better on your own, and then IF you apply for said insurance on your own….you will be denied. By everyone. Substance abuse is a pre-existing condition no one will touch. Of course, this will go away in 2014 when the new healthcare laws will enforce insurance companies to accept people with pre-existing conditions. But what till then?

Hence, the need for a job. One near my home with flexible hours and casual dress, please. Or at least one that isn’t in a highrise downtown and requires me to wear pantyhose. That is my one absolute criteria – NO PANTYHOSE. I really think that should be listed under “Job Requirements” on job postings so I don’t waste my time applying for pantyhose positions. I would sooner mow lawns (no, I don’t know how to mow a lawn, but I could learn) than wear pantyhose. (As a side note, I used to date someone who hated the word “panties”, so I was never allowed to say “pantyhose”, only “hose”. That is why I revel in saying “PANTYHOSE” as many times I like in this post. PANTYHOSEPANTYHOSEPANTYHOSE.)

With my professionalism and maturity level, this should be a snap. Heh.

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Some days I don’t drink because I’m an alcoholic in recovery and I know that to have a drink would be to miss my daughter’s childhood, to wreck my marriage, to lose everything that is important to me. (Maybe not the first drink, but who knows if I’d be able to stop once I got going again?) Other days, like today, I don’t drink because I won’t let myself leave the house. I know when I’m in this state of mind that just going to the grocery store – the store where I could buy the wine that would help me breathe right now – is a challenge and a risk for me. At some point, an alcoholic has to get on with her life and face her fears. I suppose.
Everybody says I’m doing great. People are proud of me. Most days I’m proud of myself. But then there are days like today when I don’t think I’m good for anything and I get so frustrated and scared that it’s always going to be like this, that I will always be beating back the crazy ME from taking over the sane ME again.
I should get a job. I need to quit hankering with this book idea and just go back to work. But an intense fear grips me every time I think of going back to an office job. Just because I had a bad experience in the past doesn’t mean I’ll have another breakdown. I mean, I was successful for many years before going over the edge and, even then, my coworkers never knew anything about it. My work was never compromised, my commitments were always met. No one suspected I was cracking from the inside out. God, just thinking about it makes me tense up.
I thought I’d figured out what I wanted to do with my life when I began writing. I really thought I could help other women like myself. But there is always the small voice asking, “But what if nobody cares?” and “What if I’m not good enough?” and “Who appointed you to save the world?” and then I get scared, scared, scared.
I’ve lived with fear my whole life, most often letting it make my decisions for me. It was easier when I could medicate it. Now the only thing I can have for an anxiety attack is a paper bag. Most days I am fine to face the fear armed with only my brown paper bag. But just not today.

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“We’ve become a nation of 13 million authors, each of whom will have 36 readers — and half of those will be blood relatives.” That’s what Garrison Keillor said at the annual Author’s Guild benefit a couple of days ago.  Thanks a lot, Garrison. Like I wasn’t discouraged enough. Even more depressing is that I couldn’t scrounge up 18 blood relatives who would be willing to read my crap if my life depended on it.

Sometimes people ask me why I blog. I usually tell them that I’m actually sending secret spy codes to the Russians, but I recently learned that the Cold War is over so I’ll have to come up with a better explanation. One good reason is because all of my friends and husbands and people in surrounding cities have heard my stories ad nauseum, so I’ve taken to the internet to gain a new audience. (Although you guys totally miss out on my gesturing, which is really the best part.)

I recently reviewed a personality profile I had done a few years ago. One of my strengths is a sense of “connectedness”, meaning I believe everyone has a purpose and we should all hold hands, share our toys, and make the world a better place. Really, is that too much to ask? No wonder I became an alcoholic. Since my highest strengths are “achiever” and “responsibility”, it can be pretty damn depressing trying to save the world when you can’t develop metrics and pretty Powerpoint slides to show how effective you’ve been. That could be why my altruism sometimes blows up in my face.

My friend Pam is a fellow wannabe do-gooder, and she gets me into all kinds of messes. Together we are like Laverne & Shirley. Several years ago, she asked me to help with this gala Jane Fonda was throwing to benefit the prevention of eating disorders. I volunteered to work at the benefit, and got assigned to the coat closet. Taking people’s coats on a 70 degree evening wasn’t exactly challenging work. Some of the guests tried to give me tips, but I declined by saying, “No, no; I’m a volunteer!” in a kind of chuckling voice that I hope implied, “Don’t you dare pity me, I’m doing God’s work here!”

It wasn’t until some of them began to ask me how long I’d been in the eating disorder program that I became incensed enough to accept tips. (I know I shouldn’t have gotten mad about that. I was young and scrawny, after all. But an eating disorder is one of the few maladies from which I don’t suffer, so I kind of get ticked off when people make those assumptions.) I think it was at that point that I took a bottle of wine off one of the tables and brought it in the coat closet with me, and then had the brilliant idea that I’d actually be doing God’s work better if I took the tips and then handed them over to the organization. So I sucked my cheeks in a little and started asking folks if I looked fat in what I was wearing, and if that doesn’t get me into heaven, I don’t know what will. The good news is that Pam got assigned to the wait staff and worked her ass off all night while I guarded a handful of coats and drank a bottle of wine. Neither of us ever got to meet Jane. I turned in my tips and never looked back.

Shortly after we finished our graduate work (and were feeling pretty brainy), Pam and I decided we should be Junior Achievement ambassadors to teach our youth about International Business. We got assigned to this 6th grade class in a school adjacent to one of the amphitheaters in town, where everybody parks in the school lot and smokes pot/guzzles beer before going in to concerts and smoking pot/guzzling more expensive beer. (God has a sense of humor, I swear.) So we showed up wearing our best Corporate/Uptight/I-Am-Smarter-Than-You suits and met our new students. No one told us we would be teaching the remedial kids. Not that there’s anything wrong with remedial students, but we’d prepared to teach the future barons of industry, and some of these children couldn’t speak English*. So we had to scale it waaay back. We chunked the lesson plans J.A. supplied us and kind of made it up as we went along. We were fish out of water, though. One day we asked the kids what popular things we could sell. I don’t remember everything they mentioned, but we didn’t know what half of them were. And the ones we thought we knew, we didn’t. For example, when one kid said, “Low riders”, Pam and I ran with it. “Yeah! Low riders, that’s a good one. Where do you get your low riders? I get mine at the Gap!” we enthused, until their regular teacher interrupted to tell us that a low rider is a car, not a pair of jeans. Huh. After that, Pam and I felt seriously unhip and decided we needed to watch more MTV, yo.

We worked all semester to teach the kids the difference between “goods” and “services”. When the class gave us a thank you card on the last day, I think one kid’s comment summed it up the best: “Thank you for wasting your time teaching us.”

So maybe ole Garrison (the big fat buzz killer) is right and Subourbon Wife (the book) will only be read by 36 people once I rip the band-aid and self-publish the bitch. And maybe I’m wasting my time trying to tell people about alcoholism and self-esteem problems and pubic hair dilemmas. (And perhaps Pam and I should hold back on our projects – you should see the elementary school cafeteria we painted one year. I’m pretty sure Hands-On Atlanta never wants to see our helpful faces again.) But I can’t help all of this – I have a high need to save the world, and the personality profile to prove it.

*This is not intended to imply non-English speakers can’t or won’t be barons/baronesses of industry. Also, Garrison Keillor is neither big nor fat. (When did you start to take my words so literally, anyway?)

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Is it me, or is it that everyone I know is totally effing insane? I swear I have people in my life who would criticize even my suicide note (if I ever wrote one) and be mad that I didn’t have the forethought to remove my pearls before pulling the trigger. (Not that I would ever shoot myself. M doesn’t know how to remove stains and my blood would be hanging around the house for the next 50 years or so, making it really awkward when G wants to have friends over.)

I guess I’ve had a bad couple of days. The latest insult was this morning. With the help of a friend, whom I will call Jane, I summoned the courage to go back to my old treatment center for alumni weekend. Jane and I planned to meet in the parking lot prior to today’s workshop so neither of us had to walk into that place alone. I didn’t see Jane when I got there, but I saw my old therapist who was speaking at the event and we walked in together. Who better to have by your side when you’re having a panic attack than your therapist, right? Anyway, I immediately noticed all the “We [heart] Our Nurses!” banners, and wondered what the hell that was all about. I walked up to the registration table and asked a counselor about it. “Hey, I remember you from a few years ago!” he said. Yes, of course you do. I freaking lived here for, like, EVER. I inquired about the nursing signs, and since when do nurses get all the love? He responded by telling me that today’s workshop is for professionals only. (Thinking back on it, I do recall seeing the word “professional” in the brochure. But hellloooooo, have you met me? I can do professional in my sleep, and I’ve got a closet full of old Kasper suits to prove it.)
“Are you trying to get free therapy?” he teased me.
“No, I think I left my sweater here and I was just stopping in to see if anyone found it.” (Don’t be a smart-ass with me, as I am a master.)
He said I was welcome to stay and listen. I told him that I’d already paid beaucoups bucks to the therapist speaker, so I’m pretty sure he wouldn’t mind.
I tried to call Jane to tell her not to come, but her phone was turned off. Strange, since the program was about to begin. Instead, I called M and told him I would be home at lunchtime, not the late afternoon as I’d planned.
“Why? Isn’t it all about addiction and recovery? Can’t you benefit from it even if you’re not a nurse?”
“I’m not invited. I don’t know anybody here and I feel like I don’t belong. What if they ask nurse-y questions or something?
“Just stay. It’ll be good.”
“YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT I’M GOING THROUGH JUST BEING HERE! DON’T TELL ME WHAT I SHOULD DO!” (Okay, maybe a little dramatic, but come on. This took me back to the first day I was there when I was on hiatus from Crazytown.)
“You’re right. Do whatever you want.” (That’s more like it.)

I sat down in the auditorium and my therapist began to speak about anger. He said that our personalities were formed by the time we were 5, and then asked us what lessons we’d learned about anger back then. Um, that it’s okay for adults to be mad but not for kids? That it’s fine for adults to throw things at each other and scream and hit and use bad words, but not children? That we shouldn’t express anger? That we should withhold affection when we’re angry? That we should say horrible things about the person causing the anger? That we should be quiet and stay out of the way so people don’t get mad at us?

I started getting antsy with the topic because, well, it was making me angry. Since I have a black belt in suppressing anger, I began to look around the room and zeroed in on a lady sitting two rows in front of me. The back of her head had a bald center, and then big, frizzy tornado rolls pouring out every direction from there. It looked like a place a squirrel could call home. Or, do you remember that Captain Caveman cartoon? It looked like Cavey’s fur, and she could house any number of small appliances or other necessities in there. I thought about that lady’s hair for a while, and then realized I hadn’t been paying attention to all the anger talk.

I checked my phone and saw I’d missed a call from Jane. I stepped out to meet her in the parking lot. No Jane. I called her back and heard the words I knew were coming.
“I drank,” she said.
“I know.” It’s true; some part of me knew when her phone was off.
“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.”
“Don’t apologize to me.” I said this, but I don’t know if I meant it. Part of me wanted to be a brat and scream, ‘Do you know how hard it was for me to get up and come here today? Do you know I had to take deep breaths the entire 45-minute drive? Do you? DO YOU???” But I didn’t say those things, because I know she knows and I also know that saying those words won’t make anything better. Jane is an alcoholic, like me. Jane has good days and bad days. So do I.

I grabbed my bag and left. I called a girlfriend and she made me laugh my ass off, like she always does. When I got home, I went directly to the chocolate 2-bite cupcakes M got me on clearance yesterday. Today is their expiration date, but my husband clearly believes I’m up to the challenge of consuming a dozen cupcakes within a 24-hour period. I will not prove him wrong. After all, inhaling cupcakes is an excellent way to suppress anger.

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I have often said that I’m fortunate because I got my drinking under control before I suffered serious consequences.

I was wrong.

I suffer the terrible consequence of lost time. Every day that I knew I needed to do something but didn’t, every moment I wanted out of a snuggle with baby G so I could refill my wine glass, every morning I was cranky with a headache – these are hours and minutes and seconds I wasn’t entirely present, and I can never get them back.

Today was another example of an unknown consequence. Little G is transitioning to pre-K, and the school director told me she’d like to see her have more self-confidence. (Huh? Are we talking about the child who puts on stage shows for M and me every night and tells us how smart and strong she is?) Then the director began to stumble around for the right words, and I could tell she was trying to say something that would be difficult for me to hear. I wanted to scream at her, “Just say it!” the way Molly Ringwald does to Andrew McCarthy in “Pretty in Pink” when he tells her he’s not taking her to the prom. But I didn’t because that would have been the old me. Instead, I waited patiently for what came next.

“She was affected when you went to the hospital, but she’s coming out of it now. We’d like to see her gain some confidence, but it’s partially just her DNA.”

I am not going to cry. I am not going to cry. Please God, don’t let me cry in this woman’s office.

This is the first I’ve heard of my rehab stint affecting G negatively. She didn’t even ask where I was while I was gone. I thought I’d gotten help when she was young enough that she’d never know.

The DNA is something I can’t help, but I blame myself anyway. Please don’t let her be like me. Why can’t she be normal like M? Please let her be confident that she is smart and pretty and funny and talented and sweet and all those things I always wanted to be. Please don’t let her question her every move. She’s not even 4 yet, for crying out loud.

I am not going to obsess over this. If I hadn’t gotten help when I did, she could be Mommy-less today. I am a much better example now than I could have been at any other time in my life.

I love my little girl. All of you moms know what I’m talking about. The guilt I feel is endless, even though I realize that’s not a healthy or productive emotion. It sits in my throat and makes it hard for me to breathe.

Today I’m feeling the unforeseen consequences from the years I tried not to feel anything. I suppose this is another rung on the recovery ladder, but today it sucks.

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