A Young Man Drinks Abusively, Gets Motivated to Get Treatment for Alcohol Addiction and Depression, and Experiences Enhanced Relationships in His Life

May 20, 2010 · Filed Under Uncategorized 

Stanley started drinking heavily when he was in the twelfth grade. From a positive perspective, although he drank excessively and hazardously when he was a teenager and a young adult, over the years he has been mostly a moderate drinker.

After he completed his education he eventually got a job at a local metal recycling plant where he worked his way up from stock person, to office assistant, to purchasing assistant, to purchasing manager. Unlike his other positions, as the purchasing agent he repeatedly took existing vendors and potential vendors to lunch and to various sporting events.

Alhough it was not written in concrete, meeting with existing vendors and potential vendors repeatedly involved circumstances in which alcohol was present. In fact, over the past seventeen months, Stanley had begun to extensively increase his work related and his social drinking. This has resulted in quite a predicament. To be more precise, the more successful he became as a purchasing agent, the more heavily he began to drink.

His Increasing Feelings of Depression Also Made Him Question if He Was Becoming an Alcohol Dependent Individual

Indeed, it didn’t take very long before Stanley’s excessive and abusive drinking started to adversely affect the money in his savings account, his relationships, his mental health, his work efficiency, and his health. At one point, Stanley, if truth be told, started to get nervous about his drinking problem and questioned if his alcohol related problems were alcoholism signs. Furthermore, his increasing feelings of depression also made him wonder if he was becoming addicted to alcohol. In a word, Stanley obviously needed to learn more about the facts about alcohol abuse and alcohol addiction.

Stanley Needs Alcohol Detoxification and Alcohol Rehabilitation For His Alcoholism and a Medical Evaluation Regarding His Depression

So Stanley used his reasoning skills, called his healthcare professional, and scheduled an appointment for a complete physical exam. The next week when he saw his physician, Stanley unfortunately found out that he was dependent on alcohol. His healthcare practitioner told Stanley that he needed to get alcohol detox and alcohol rehabilitation for his alcohol dependency and that he also needed to get treatment for his depression. In a word, Stanley needed treatment for his alcoholism and depression.

The Positive News is That After His Treatment For Depression and For Alcoholism, He Felt Like a New Individual

His physician recommended to Stanley that he request a 60 day leave of absence from work and get admitted into a quality in-patient alcohol rehabilitation clinic where he could also be treated for his depression. This is precisely what Stanley did. The good news is that after his treatment for depression and for alcohol addiction, he felt like a new person. In point of fact, now that he was sober he hardly ever got depressed and he now understood how to more successfully and productively manage his relationships, his health, his job, and his finances.

To no one’s astonishment, the most difficult “test” Stanley met was at the office. Simply put, he still took potential vendors and his existing vendors to various sporting events and to lunch, but after his alcohol rehab he managed to stay away from drinking while entertaining his clients.

Interestingly, Stanley also discovered that none of his potential vendors or his existing vendors thought any less of him because of his abstinence. To the contrary, he found out that his potential vendors and existing vendors respected him for maintaining his convictions.

Stanley’s Better Work Performance, Finances, Relationships, and the Better Health He Experienced More Than Made Up For His Love of Drinking

After Stanley went through alcohol rehab, however, he found out that he was a person who, for whatever reason, could not drink responsibly and in moderation. In actual 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 so often, Stanley missed drinking, but the better relationships, finances, work performance, and the better health he experienced more than offset his love of drinking.

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