A Young Man Drinks Excessively, Gets Motivated to Get Treatment for Alcohol Addiction and Depression, and Improves Upon His Life
June 1, 2010 by admin
Filed under Uncategorized
Stanley started drinking abusively when he was in the eighth grade. Fortunately for him, even though he drank hazardously and excessively when he was a teenager and a young adult, when he got beyond the age of thirty he almost always drank in moderation.
After he completed his education he eventually found employment at a local brewery where he applied himself and worked his way up from stock person, to office assistant, to purchasing assistant, to purchasing agent. Unlike his other positions, as the purchasing agent he frequently took potential vendors and existing vendors to lunch and to various sporting events.
Though it was not an official part of his job description, meeting with existing vendors and potential vendors repeatedly involved circumstances in which alcohol was present. In actual fact, over the past fifteen months, Stanley had begun to appreciably increase his work related and his social drinking. This has led to a predicament. More specifically, the more successful he became as a purchasing agent, the more heavily he began to drink.
His Increasing Bouts of Depression Also Made Him Wonder Whether He Was Becoming an Alcohol Addicted Person
In actual fact, it didn’t take very long before Stanley’s careless and hazardous drinking started to negatively affect his work efficiency, his health, his relationships, his mental health, and the money in his savings account. At one point, Stanley, in actual fact, began to get anxious about his excessive and irresponsible drinking and wondered if his alcohol related issues were alcoholism signs. What is more, his almost constant feelings of depression also made him wonder if he was becoming alcohol dependent. In a word, Stanley clearly needed to learn more about the facts about alcohol abuse and alcoholism.
Stanley Needs Alcohol Detox and Alcohol Rehab For His Alcohol Dependency and a Medical Evaluation Regarding His Depression
So Stanley used his intelligence, called his physician, and scheduled an appointment for a physical examination. The next week when he saw his physician, Stanley unfortunately was told that he was addicted to alcohol. His healthcare practitioner told Stanley that he needed to get alcohol detox and alcohol rehabilitation for his alcohol addiction and that he also needed to get treatment for his depression. In short, Stanley needed treatment for his alcoholism and depression.
Fortunately After His Treatment For Depression and For Alcoholism, He Felt Like a Different Person
His doctor suggested to Stanley that he take a 60-day leave of absence from work and get registered into a quality in-patient alcohol rehab clinic where his depression could also be assessed and treated. This is exactly what Stanley did. Fortunately after his treatment for alcoholism and for depression, he felt like a new individual. In fact, now that he was living an alcohol-free life he rarely got depressed and he now understood how to more efficiently and successfully manage his job, his health, his relationships, and his finances.
To no one’s disbelief, the biggest “test” Stanley came across was at the office. More specifically, he still took his existing vendors and potential vendors to lunch and to various sporting events, but after his alcohol treatment he managed to refrain from drinking while entertaining his clients.
It can be stressed that Stanley also learned that none of his existing vendors or potential vendors thought any less of him because of his non-alcoholic lifestyle. Instead, he found out that his potential vendors and existing vendors respected him for staying strong to his convictions.
After Stanley went through alcohol rehabilitation, however, he learned that he was a person who, for whatever reason, couldn’t drink in moderation. In fact he learned the hard way that if he said “no” to drinking, all of the other meaningful parts of his life would be enhanced. Every once-in-a-while, Stanley missed drinking, but the better work performance, health, finances, and the better relationships he experienced more than compensated for his love of drinking.

