A Young Woman Faces Her Depression, Gets Alcohol Rehab For Her Abusive And Excessive Drinking, And Enhances Her Self Esteem

 
Emily was a forty-two-year-old financial analyst who was tired of feeling depressed everyday and fed up with her excessive and abusive drinking behavior. Stated simply, she was angry with herself for spending her hard-earned money on a worthless habit, she was tired of going through broken relationship after broken relationship due to her irresponsible drinking, she was sick of feeling tired every morning, she hated the hangovers she went through on a regular basis, and she missed her old drive for doing various things she enjoyed.

Besides the observable alcohol-related health problems she was going through, in all probability the most troublesome part of her drinking routine was the unreliable and conniving person she had become. In her heart she knew that she had been deceitful about her drinking activities with friends, family, and relatives and she also knew she had been less than truthful with herself about the "positive" outcomes of drinking. Not only this but she justified gulping two or three alcoholic beverages before going to social activities and she also rationalized needing several drinks as soon as she awakened so that she could cope with the "pressures" at her job. Stated briefly, Emily got to the point in her life when she realized that she hit the bottom of the barrel in her life and was now prepared to begin the slow road to health.

One of the fundamental ways that Emily put her "plan" into operation was by asking for a transfer at her place of employment. When her request was granted, she moved 250 miles away to a different part of the United States. If nothing else, this absolutely made making new pals and distancing herself from her old friends and buddies much simpler. Then she contacted a healthcare practitioner in her new city and made an appointment for a complete psychological and physical exam.

After meeting with the doctor and going through a number of laboratory tests, it was decided that Emily had made the transition from alcohol abuse to alcoholism and consequently, needed alcohol rehabilitation and alcohol detoxification. At this difficult time, the physician made it a point to underscore the various alcoholic symptoms and the common symptoms of alcoholism. In addition to spending a lot of time focusing on Emily's alcoholism symptoms, the healthcare practitioner also told Emily that her mental health assessment revealed that she was clinically depressed and in need of treatment for this medical condition.

Due to her enthusiasm for following through with the therapy program, after nine weeks of inpatient treatment, Emily was ready to initiate rehab on an outpatient basis. At this point, she started working at her new job and over a period of several weeks began fortifying her body by eating nutritious foods, working out, drinking distilled water, taking vitamins, and living an alcohol-free lifestyle.

After roughly nine weeks of outpatient rehab during which time she never suffered through an alcohol relapse, Emily stopped going to alcohol rehab and instead began going twice per week to local AA meetings. Going to these meetings helped Emily continue her alcohol-free way of life, they provided her with the support she needed, and they served as a frequent reminder of the destructive consequences that are associated with excessive and unhealthy drinking. Compared with her life just a few short months ago, life was now worthwhile and full of potential that she could have never hoped for or fulfilled while while she was troubled with abusive and hazardous drinking behavior.

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