|
|
SOS Sobriety Toolkit:
Pick
a tool/suggestion announce the number and read it aloud share your thoughts
on that tool ask others in the group for comments
- No matter what there is no valid reason on earth to drink again.
- Heres sobriety theres everything else separate and prioritize sobriety.
- Seriousness this is nothing less than life or death.
- Determination there is no turning back, especially if it gets rough. Youve gotten another chance at life. How many really have that chance? Sobriety doesnt fix everything, but it makes it possible.
- Information retrain your brain; stimulate it with things related to alcoholism: books, audiotapes, videotapes, movies, pamphlets, brochures, meetings, plays, television and radio, newspapers and magazine articles, etc.
- People human contact is powerful. Try to meet people, at least one, and be sure to meet other alcoholics. Interaction fights the old patterns of isolation.
- Honesty this is the time to get things into the open. Get rid of the shadows and darknesses of the past. Put light on the dark things and they lose their power. Things can be dealt with reasonably when theyre seen as they truly are.
- Listening especially to people with long-term sobriety.
- Take notes anytime; but especially in early sobriety when memory can be tricky.
- Meetings be with people who want better lives and are taking actions to get what they want. Meetings are a good place to establish or re-establish social skills in a supportive environment. There is a lot to learn and feel in a meeting. You are not alone. You have not done the worst or been the most; there are always those who have bettered you. Think about what you hear and see, but better yet is to feel what you hear and see at meetings.
- Folk wisdom and slogans dont underestimate them.
- Commitments if you make them, keep them. You show yourself and others a lot by doing so.
- Personal program develop your own recovery process from what you hear and see. It has to be what works for you, not anybody else.
- Sharing surprisingly therapeutic when done honestly. Free yourself from holding things in.
- Phones get plenty of phone numbers of other alcoholics and use them.
- Willingness allow yourself to change. You have nothing to lose.
- Openness Dont reject ideas without at least considering them.
- Approachability isolation can be deadly.
- Ask questions no matter how foolish you think they seem. Never be afraid to ask other alcoholics about things.
- Nutrition improve it any way you can.
- Exercise however little, even just moving around.
- Help other alcoholics you really can keep it by giving it away.
- Joy its great to be alive and sober.
- Perceptions its all real, not diluted or distorted. A keen, rich mind versus a drugged, limited mind.
- Easily obtainable goals success breeds more success. Reach for the moon later.
- Call-up remember, visualize, and image behaviors and incidents from your drinking days that are repellent and associated with alcohol. Replace alcohol good with alcohol bad. This is especially useful when you feel seduced by alcohol or cocksure about sobriety.
- Live in the present visits to the past are okay, but dont freeze your life there.
- Abstinence the only sure way to stay sober. Any statement to the contrary is hypothesis or commentary. Dont drink, no matter what.
- Avoid slippery places, people and things reinforce alcohol bad by avoiding the places, people and things you associate with alcohol good. If you cant avoid, you must be aware that they are dangerous to your sobriety and proceed with caution.
- Safeguard your sobriety dont be concerned with what others think of how you do it. Dont be embarrassed if what you need to do to stay sober is un-adult, uncool, weak, or stupid in the opinion of others. You are rebuilding and recreating yourself. You want to own your life, not be a slave to alcohol. Its your life and your sobriety. Try to avoid things like homicide and robbery as tools to keep you sober, but be as flexible as you can in using whatever it takes to safeguard your sobriety. Be aware.
- Acceptance of your alcoholism. Think of the things you used to do that were related to alcohol and the need to drink. Were they normal? Does anyone but an alcoholic do these things? Know that you are an alcoholic like someone with diabetes or allergies knows his or her reality. Dont be ashamed, be aware.
- Fear use it if you get it. Dont live in fear, but use it. The same goes for horror, shame, regret or any other negative thoughts or feelings that may come when you think about your drinking days. Dont stifle or deny these states of mind. Use them as tools to reinforce yourself, not stumbling blocks.
- Watch for tools everything can be a tool to help maintain sobriety. Train your mind to see and hear tools. Dont doublethink yourself. If it works for you, use it. If you feel it may work for you, try it. You are fighting for your life, nothing less. You are the owner of your life. You are responsible for the caretaking of your life and you have decided to find better ways to live. Other people have gone before you and put together their own tool kits. Ask them to share.
- Do it now procrastination is an anti-tool, feeding the negative and working against self-esteem.
- Credit yourself for your attainment and maintenance of sobriety. Others may have helped, but you did it.
- Enjoy life you can be dead any time. Drinking is slow suicide. Life is a banquet. Depth, complexity, the full fabric of life is yours to experience. The blinders and mufflers are off. Think of yourself as a child occasionally. Experience wonder and intensity.
- Its right when you are sober, you feel in your spine that it is right. Believe your guts on this when the feeling comes.
- Care about yourself things you do for yourself tell you at a gut level that you care about yourself. You have the option to make things bad or good for yourself.
- Alcohol is not a tool everything you were able to do under alcohols influence came from between your ears. Dont think you are less creative, a lousy dancer, etc.
- Remind yourself even when you think you have got it, remind yourself. Never again. Keep it fresh.
- Imagery for example, be mad at alcohol. Hate it for what it has done to you and those you care about. Being free of a horrible nightmare, knowing you are sober, is far better than the relief of waking from a bad dream. You were running on empty; as your drinking progressed, you were getting closer to the end of your life.
- Make concepts real if you are having a bad day, start it over, anytime, any number of times.
- Visualize for example, drunk living is wimp living.
- Expect good things they happen when we expect them. Mindset in a positive light gets us to perceive positive, helpful things rather than negative, destructive things.
- Interrupt negative thoughts identify them as drinking thinking or some such. Change them, turn them around, obliterate them.
- Look at drunks especially when they are trying to pass as sober. Listen to what they are saying. Is that a wonderful life?
- Action no matter how small it seems.
|