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Self Control

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  • #281301
    Ella
    Participant

    I’m 31. I went to college and couldn’t decide on a major. After much exploration I graduated with a Liberal Arts Degree. I’ve been a waitress and bartender for 10 years. I’m in a very happy relationship, although maybe not healthy at times. Working in the industry usually involves a lot of broken people and excessive drinking. I love my friends- I love that we can relate to each other in hard times. I do feel that I am ready to better myself. I still don’t know what I want to “be” but I want to give more to this world and I know I am capable. I have really bad self control and give in easily to drinking. I have masked my uncertainties with drugs and alcohol since I was 16 and never really had a solid sense of my self. When I see people living mostly sober, happy, and healthy- I want to be them. I lost control years ago and realize I’m in a hole. My partner is a bartender, but he is more grounded than me. He is comfortable with his lifestyle. I’m sad to think that if I changed to being healthy and living like a “normal person” we would drift apart. I guess there is balance, and not everything is black or white. Any advice on how to stand my ground and battle my lesser self? Thank you all.

    #281355
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Ella:

    I think of the “lesser self” you referred to is the part in each one of us that gets scared and rushes to do anything it takes to get rid of the fear. Some of us are more desperate than others, choosing ways that further harm us, taking in dangerous amounts of alcohol and other drugs, or food, and/ or over-exercising, injuring our bodies. Some will get together with other people, any other people, and do anything with another person just so to not be alone with the fear, to forget it.

    When we disapprove of what we do to get rid of the fear, we call that part of ourselves that does those things our lesser selves.

    It is very difficult to exercise self control when it comes to not doing what will take away the fear, even for a moment. Because fear is very powerful and so very unpleasant.

    It is about learning ways that are not dangerous to us, ways to calm that fear. For example, exercising but in moderation, attentively, so to not injure ourselves. It is about eating in moderation and drinking in moderation. And getting together with other people who we approve of and doing with them only what we approve of doing.

    But no matter what we do or don’t, we find ourselves eventually alone, afraid. No way to get rid of that fear. There comes the time that we have to say: here it is, this fear. How uncomfortable it feels, how very uncomfortable. But this fear will not kill me. As bad as it feels, if I don’t do anything dangerous, the feeling itself will not harm me. This way, we stop being afraid of the fear itself, and that means.. less fear.

    As we learn and persist in doing what doesn’t harm us, as a response to fear, we build the feeling of confidence in ourselves, a feeling that we are in charge, that too lessens the fear.

    No way to get rid of fear, but there are ways to lessen it, to be able to live effectively with the fear, to make sense of our lives even though afraid.

    anita

     

    #281453
    GL
    Participant

    Dear Ella,

    Addiction to anything is never an easy room that you can just open the door and leave. But that you want to leave means that you feel that it’s no longer serving you. It’s time to move forward.

    The beginning of any new development will be very difficult. You are stepping into new territory and that is terrifying because you don’t know what can or might happen. You have a goal, but that doesn’t make it easy to take one step further to fulfilling it. There will be hours of pain, there will be hours of suffering. The suffering will make you question yourself, it will make you want to quit what you’ve just started. You’ll feel defeated before you’ve even seen the summit of your victory. You’ll struggle because change take long hours of thinking and doing.

    But in all of that, remember the reason why you wanted to do so in the first. Remember that you change because you wish to change. And change is done for the sake of yourself, not anyone else.

    Your boyfriend might not see the need to change for himself, but if he really does have your best interest at heart, then he will give you his full support. You’ve enter into a relationship because you have affection for him and he you, right? And since the beginning, you’ve supported each other in various ways, right? So this shouldn’t be any different because you are asking for his support regarding something that is important to you. This is important to you. But in the event of him actually desecrating your effort for something that you genuinely want for yourself, is he then really worth your affection when he cannot give you the emotional support you need?

    Even then, change is a process that a person goes through alone. Change is the perception of self evolving into something different from what you’ve known of yourself. It is done inwardly then brought out to reality. No one can change for you, you are the one in charge of your evolution. So get comfortable to being uncomfortable. Change is not a bike ride in the park, it’s a roller coaster that goes up and down, sideway with many bumps, sometimes stalling then speeding a hundred miles per hour. Change is not easy, growth is not easy. But you decided for yourself that this is important to you so gather the courage to move forward. There will be days of struggles, but there will also be days of success because regardless of how many times you’ve given up, you haven’t truly given up. You continue trudging up the mountain, one step at a time, because you are doing this for yourself. Because you yourself is enough of a reason.

    Good luck.

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