I felt fine after just a week of sobriety. But by fine I mean back to normal, the normal I am used to before I started experimenting with drugs.
And by my normal, yes, it means severe social anxiety since age 13, moderate generalized anxiety, severe depression and a little OCD sprinkled in with insomnia during summer and a divorce to spice things up.
Something people who haven't experienced addiction before fail to understand is that sobriety comes with facing all the things you were trying to escape. I'd say that's even harder than overcoming withdrawals (which is also hell.)
I'm so sorry you're going through this. Divorce is tough and relapse is common during it. It happened to my mom.
Nothing really working, nothing as calming as a few shots of rum or half an oxy pill. And that is the problem right there. My brain now knows where to go.
One thing I took away from group therapy is that addiction is basically a brain rewiring. It reshapes your reward circuits. It's an issue with associative learning. Your brain associates certain things with reward (drugs) and that makes the pull of cravings so irresistible.
Learning what my triggers are and how to manage them was literally the only way I was able to stay clean. It meant blocking tons of people and changing my lifestyle and routine for me. Once I began to benefit from sobriety things got easier for me, and that took about three months.
I don't think I will ever be fully "healed" from cravings until my mental health is fixed.
I gave up on being fully healed from cravings and have just accepted they are inevitable. Learning to cope with them is the more attainable goal for me.
So basically I give up. The final solution is to fully end my brain and nervous system, getting rid of both mental illnesses and addictive pathways for good. No more struggle.
I'm sorry it's come to this, but I hope you find freedom from your mental illness and addiction. It's a hell I'd not wish on anyone.
It's clear you've tried very hard so no one can say you haven't. Finding effective mental health treatment is difficult, and therapy and meds aren't the magic cure people make them out to be.
Have you tried other therapies? Honestly cbt wasn't particularly my jam. I got more benefits from dbt and act myself. You can always try online support groups or discord servers if you've given up on paying for professionals. Workbooks too.
Honestly, I try to be sober and heal as much as possible only so I can try moderation eventually. The cravings simply don't disappear. It's not physical craving but more a sadness that I lost the ability and right to drink or use moderately.
I really used to struggle with this. Honestly, sometimes I still do. I'm very fortunate in that I have a job I love and was forced to get clean to keep it. I was so miserable, and tried to moderate, but it became clear I can't use my DOC and keep my job. It interferes with it too much.
I've come to the conclusion I'm just a cooler person when I'm not wasted or high on speed. Sure, sometimes I wish I could be normal, but I'm not, and I'm finally ok with that. Sobriety is the better trade off than being able to drink or use. I no longer care if I seem weird or like a square. Again, it took time to get there and it's not as if I never long for the ability to moderate, but sobriety is just really worth it to me.
I totally relate to what you have to say though. Again I think I'm just lucky.