TDA in Mexico

by The Discovering Alcoholic on July 28, 2010

My apologies for the recent idleness of the site, I have always taken pride in the fact that TDA remains constantly updated. I have been traveling in Mexico since Sunday on business matters and the combination of free time and available connectivity have not coincided on enough occasions for new posting. Usually I would arrange in advance for guest posting and pre-written items, but my wife’s health has taken priority as it should.

Considering my travel and the increased family stress, I thought it might be appropriate to feature a story from the archives- a post on the importance of being anchored to one’s recovery while abroad.

An Anchor to Keep from Drifting

Most alcoholics find safe harbor in their recovery routines and comfortable surroundings. The support of friends and family, familiar meeting places, and yes, having those that know of our plight helping to assure our accountability all add a measure of safety and help staying sober at home an easier task. But what about those that travel or who are called away unexpectedly, especially for emotional issues like a death in the family or severe business trouble.

Nothing but strangers around, a lonely hotel room, and only the company of one’s thoughts can be a recipe for disaster for an alcoholic with no anchor to keep from drifting.

Click “Read more” to continue…

Many people do relapse when away from familiar surroundings because it is all too easy to fall back into addictive thinking when one begins to search for something “settling”. Unfortunately familiar to us all is a hotel bar or airport lounge.

I travel for a living staying away from my home office more often than not and keep these dangerous scenarios in mind even though I rarely feel the pull these days. One of the reasons I don’t get the urge is because I have developed not one, but many anchors that hold me steady in my recovery.

The easiest to deploy and the most important anchor of all for me is a nightly call home to my wife, but there are many other things. Books, a continuous story that I follow from home, to plane, to hotel and back is helpful. Good hygiene, yeah I know that sounds weird but ironing and shaving my head cue ball-bald every morning is a very grounding experience. And of course there is my blog.

It doesn’t really matter what your anchors are as long you don’t sit alone in a hotel room just listening to your thoughts… always dangerous for an alcoholic. So call the wife or a friend. Go to the hotel fitness center. Work on an impossible cross puzzle.

Just make sure you drop anchor.

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