Friday, October 7, 2016

Perverse Pleasure



If you asked me what I love about sobriety, I would say, the starkness and solitude of it. If I was going to paint a word picture of that starkness, it would be a shaft of winter sunlight piercing through a window with plain cotton curtains onto a weathered gray table with a centerpiece of fruit. Or, a still as a church, snow covered prairie with a lone tree stripped of its leaves and one lonely set of footprints.

For so long I feared that starkness, it is exactly what I didn't want. I wanted whirling lights and ringing laughter and the never ever alone-ness of drinking.

But then, the laughter became hollow and the lights dizzying and I found myself so many times alone in a crowd. At least I thought I was. Was I the only one that had begun to dread the life I thought I loved?  Was I the only one who kept drinking long after I wanted to stop?

Was I the only one scared to death to imagine a life stripped down and myself naked?

I received this comment the other day from a friend of mine who read my book:

"I didn't start reading your book because of my drinking, but you got me thinking
maybe I should be thinking about it. Your description of how you are
seeing the world sober, was an eye opening reminder for me. I have
never been one for New Years Eve partying because I take a perverse
pleasure in waking up with a clear head when the rest of the world has
a hangover."

I agree. There is a certain perverse pleasure in knowing I am one of a hardy but small population who is sober when the rest of the world seems to be gleefully drunk or not-so-gleefully hungover.

There is a special-ness. Even a superior-ness. As though I've been chosen. 

But I know that's not true, because I know everyone that suffers can make the choice. 

We are not chosen. 

We choose...

The perverse and seldom achieved pleasure.

We choose...

Serenity.

7 comments:

  1. Today I choose serenity, too!
    xo
    Wendy

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  2. I thought you might. Funny, most drinking people would probably think of serenity as boring, but I haven't got tired of it yet.

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  3. Beautifully written, and so true. Like you, I am shocked to realize I was avoiding life while I was drinking. The shaft of light you describe is piercing, and it can be lonely, but I love feeling that I'm not hiding from the world anymore. Big thanks to you for your words xo

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  4. Big Thanks back at ya for your words. It is wonderful to live starkly, isn't it?

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  5. Thank you. This has helped me. I am feeling very alone lately, my life has changed so much, after over 2 years sober. I will try and see the aloneness from another perspective instead of feeling rather hurt by it.

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  6. Woah this is just the best most timely thing I could have read right now. Thank you! I have felt very alone and feeling sorry for myself weekend. Your words are a good reminder that I choose this life, and for all the tricky thoughts and bumps in the road, I am living honestly, fully and starkly.

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  7. Amen.
    For me it is stillness and peace. Perhaps it is stark. But it is crystal clear and beautiful and I no longer feel lonely, not even when I am alone.

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