I just had a great boogie at the school disco! Danced up a storm at the back door where I was on duty letting the cool air come in and no kids go out. The DJs (Dads) were playing all manner of brilliant cheesy hits and the kids were having a blast showing adults how to have fun without bending their brains. It was a lovely ending to a day which started sadly at the funeral of a friend's dad.
Home now, kids are in bed and I am lying on the sofa in my PJs watching TV and drinking chamomile tea.
I know there are loads of people who will be out and about this Friday night .. boozing it up merrily at bars and clubs in town. Or maybe creating their own private party at home with wines or some such (like I used to). I don't worry about that or feel like I'm missing out. I did that sort of thing for years and years. I know what it feels like.
I know what it feels like to get smashed with friends chatting and laughing and dancing the night away.
I know what it feels like to glug, glug, glug my way through the night with my foot to the floor, charging on all cylinders, necking booze like it's going out of fashion.
I know what it feels like to get hit with waves of nausea on the dance floor.
I know what it feels like to ask the taxi to stop so you can lean out the door and puke onto the road.
I know what it feels like to vomit in the front garden then lie down for a wee nap in the bushes.
I know what it feels like to check your bank account for late night transactions that you can't remember ("must've been another round of chocolate martinis").
I know what it feels like to wake with a pounding head, sick guts and a brain full of nerves and regret.
Been there, done that, got the T-shirt. Then said goodbye, traded in that life for a new one. Re-shaped my identity and became a sober woman.
I love living sober. Living sober means I front up to every experience in my life - whether it be sad or challenging or fun - and experience it 100%. Full throttle. Full noise. Full human experience all day every day. Love it. Love, love, love it.
I often say that I don't regret any of my drinking because what's the point in looking back (and a lot of it was fun let's be honest). But to say that I am grateful to have gotten booze out of my life and be experiencing a totally different way of living is an understatement.
I am so profoundly, deeply, overwhelmingly grateful to be sober. There is not one teeny tiny percent of me that wants to be anything else.
And that is a fantastic way to feel.
Love, Mrs D xxx
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