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I can't forgive myself for drunk mistake

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Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
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  • #107223
    Afraid
    Participant

    Hi, I’m new to this. I’ve been in a relationship for a year now. It’s the best thing that’s ever happened to me, I’m so happy and we’ve been going from strength to strength. I can honestly say that no part of me wants to be with anyone else. It’s weird – people always say that being in a relationship doesn’t stop you from being attracted to other people. Not that I expect this feeling to last forever, I’m so in love that I honestly don’t think of anyone that way other than my boyfriend right now, I suppose I’m still infatuated.

    Anyway this weekend I went out without my boyfriend. And I drank a lot at once. I’m quite small and alcohol has a varied effect on me. I am no stranger to blackouts, but I’ve never really had one since the start of my relationship. On this occasion, I completely blacked out for about two hours. I don’t know what happened, but someone told me they thought I might have kissed someone else, at any rate I was way too friendly with someone. Nothing was seen, but a comment was made, and I’ve been so afraid. I’m freaked out – I have absolutely no desire to do anything like that, but I know before when I was single and had blackouts my friends would tell me I had kissed someone and I’d have no memory of it, so I know it can happen, but back then I had no responsibility to anyone but myself.

    I know I’m not a bad person. I love my boyfriend so much and would never, ever consider betraying him while aware of my actions. But this little part of me that might have surfaced freaks me out, was I so intoxicated that I completely forgot about him? That I was just driven to kiss some random person whose name or appearance I don’t even know? I have high standards for myself, and not meeting them makes me feel sick.

    I’ve been completely honest with my boyfriend. I’ve told him everything, exactly what I’ve heard, exactly what I can remember, that it’s a possibility that something happened, that I don’t think I could do something like it, but that it’s certainly possible. He has forgiven me whether it happened or not, has said he trusts me and knows if I did that that I wasn’t truly me at the moment in time, and that we will just assume nothing happened. He forgives me, but I can’t forgive myself. I’ve been going crazy running through it over the last few days. I know time will heal everything, but right now I feel terrible and pained. 🙁

    #107224
    Afraid
    Participant

    For the record, I absolutely know that I have to stop drinking heavily. I know it’s such an unhealthy habit, that it doesn’t go down well with me. I’m going to limit myself hugely from now on – drinking slowly, missing rounds and steering clear of spirits. This has been a massive wake-up call, and I suppose if I can learn at least one thing from it, let it be this lesson that will last my whole life.

    #107228
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi afraidofeveryone,

    Of course people let their inhibitions down when they’re drunk! In fact, expect it.

    That’s not what worries me. What worries me are:

    1. Driving while intoxicated
    2. You getting hurt (falling in a pool, off a balcony, etc.)
    3. Getting alcohol poisoning and being taken to the hospital
    4. Someone taking advantage of you (slipping something in your drink ~ or not!)

    My dear, the first two happened to me and the last almost happened. And I’m a moderate person!

    Have no more than one drink an hour and only have, say, three.

    For you the light weight I would say: Have your friends look out for you and tell the bartender to cut you off at *your* limit!

    Blessings,

    Inky

    #107239
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear afaidofeveryone:

    As to your second post, regarding your resolution about drinking, I would like to suggest an adjustment to it: no going out at all without your boyfriend to a bar or an establishment where alcohol is served and where hookup possibilities exist.

    It is a good thing your boyfriend forgave you and trusts you. It is not your fault that you kissed a man that night, if you did. It is your fault that you drank that night in a place where hookups are part of the scene, knowing you have blackout experiences where in the past you were not aware of what happened.

    Your resolution to limit your drinking wouldn’t satisfy me, if I was your boyfriend.

    anita

    #107258
    Afraid
    Participant

    To be honest Anita, much as I appreciate your input, I am not sure I agree with it? He has said he forgives me, we know blackouts happen when I drink spirits and too quickly, I’m absolutely not going to let it happen again. If I can’t go out without my boyfriend to bars or clubs, I don’t think that would be a healthy relationship for either of us, nor would I have the same relationships with my friends as a result. I believe in my resolution, and he believes in it too, I know this is a wake-up call for me, the stakes have never been higher to be honest. I just want to find some way inside me to move on because the whole incident still hurts me so much.

    #107260
    Eris
    Participant

    Hey afraidofeveryone

    Making mistakes is part of life and doing things you regret is part of living. Feeling bad about them is good to a certain extent – to stop you from continuing to make those mistakes and continuing to do the same things that you regret. It is only not learning and stopping those behaviors that is the real failure.

    If when you drink you have blackouts and do things you wouldn’t consider doing as a ‘normal drunk person’ then that is really unsafe and scary. And you are realizing you just aren’t able to drink like some other people. Its just something that makes you uniquely you, a part of your make up, like having an allergy or an intolerance, that you have to work with in order to have a great life.

    Congrats on your relationship, he sounds like a balanced guy not freaking out about something you may or may not have done and well done for being honest with him about it. That cant have been easy.

    Forgive yourself for getting into that situation (which I think might be why you can’t get over it because its not about the maybe kissing someone) and don’t put yourself in that situation again, which I recognise might be hard if there is a big drinking culture where you are but for your own safety and your relationship its not worth it for a night you can’t even remember!

    hugs
    Eris

    #107264
    Afraid
    Participant

    Thank you Eris, and indeed to everyone. You’ve all given some great advice. You know, he really is a balanced guy, and I am so lucky for that. I know people have broken up over less. The fact that he’s so good, so willing to forget about it and move on (he literally brushed it off in a few minutes after I explained myself, and he isn’t the type at all to drag these things up again) I suppose he has forgiven me, and I will forgive myself although it might take a little more time. I think a little part of me is absolutely terrified of ending up in that situation again, you know. The thoughts of it make me feel sick. Your words made me realise this, Eris, and have made me so much more motivated to stop this unhealthy drinking habit. You are indeed right that there is a drinking culture around me, heck me and my boyfriend get drunk together all the time but it’s always fun and safe, we spend the night together and we wake up together laughing about it. But I think I’ll have to limit myself in all situations. In the past, after a bad experience, I was good for a while and then slipped into old ways of overdoing it. I can’t slip again. And I won’t. I’m 21 and I think this is a good age to hopefully gain some maturity. 🙂

    #107302
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear afraidofeveryone:

    I read your reply to me, seems like I misunderstood you in my first post to you: I wrongly assumed your resolution following your predicament was to continue to go to bars/ pick up or hookup places like bars without your boyfriend but to drink there less or more slowly. So my response was: not a good idea. But now I understand I assumed wrong. Well, then, your resolution is fine and dandy, I believe and I hope too that indeed you forgive yourself for what was a mistake. You may not repeat this exact mistakes but there will be other mistakes.

    We all make mistakes and we never stop making mistakes. Same for your boyfriend. So when he makes a mistake (not an act of cruelty, just a ..mistake) you will pay his generosity back and forgive him.

    Learn to live with the reality that there will be more mistakes on your part and on his… and on my part (my very misunderstanding of your post).

    anita

    #107391
    Bill
    Participant

    Hey,
    I completely respect your choice to drink, however it has been the root to this stress and problem. personally i don’t drink and i’m fine with anyone that does. the intoxication that it has over you sounds pretty scary. These blackout stages leave you completely out of the drivers seat and as you’ve said you have to rely on people telling you if anything happened. this leaves you skeptical of whether you’ve done anything or not. i think a lot of people widely find it funny to ridicule people for getting drunk. i think this is horrible because when drunk, people sometimes don’t think or act as orderly as they would like to. although it is scary and stressful for you to piece together events (probably told differently from person to person) at the end of the day if you believe you wouldn’t kiss another person (also regarding that your relationship is very strong) that same strength of love would have made an impact on your decisions when drunk. what i’m saying here is that even when blacked out, you as a committed girlfriend would have still had the rationality in whatever situation to make the right choice. maybe in the future decide on something other than alcohol to enjoy a good time while also keeping track of your actions.

    #107652
    Elizabeth Erfert
    Participant

    Hi, afraid–rather than keep beating yourself up about your “drunk mistake” (can’t change the past), I think it might be a better use of your energy to get some help for the drinking problem. Blackouts are NOT normal. Whether you are small or not, it is NOT normal to drink to blackout–and it sounds as if you’ve pretty much convinced yourself that it IS normal, or at least not that big a deal.

    I suspect this may not be your first go-round with trying to control your alcohol intake via “missing rounds” and so on. From where I stand, this looks like alcoholism, or at the very least, alcoholism in the making.

    You can easily find more info about alcoholism on line, and I hope you do look into it. Getting help now will save you a lifetime of pain and regrets.

    My wishes for strength and clarity.

    #107755
    Elizabeth Erfert
    Participant

    I neglected to mention yesterday that a blackout only means the drinker cannot REMEMBER his/her actions. It does NOT mean they are not aware of what they are doing.

    Please do some research on blackouts. There is a ton of info out there. This is nothing to mess around with.

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