Mummies’ Night Out – Booze Soaked World

New Zealand

 

I went out with a bunch of girlfriends last night. A big group of us mummies hitting the town for dinner and a comedy show. Pretty unusual for me to be out and about in town – let alone on a Wednesday night! – but yes it definitely happened.

 

Walking through town I was gobsmacked by all the people getting amongst it in the bars & restaurants along the main strip. I was astounded at how many places were packed full of people boozing and smoking. It was a familiar scene, one that bought back strong memories. I have spent hours and hours sitting in bars drinking. The dim lights. The dusky smells. The inebriation. The camaraderie. I’m a social being, but to be fair it was probably mostly about the inebriation. Boy did I love getting boozed.

 

Until I didn’t.

Something I Did, But Not Anymore…

I wasn’t sad or nostalgic last night watching all the people supping their beers and wines. I didn’t feel left out. I didn’t even feel superior for being out of that stupid alcohol trap. I just felt neutral, like it was something I used to do but don’t any more.

 

At our restaurant most of the other mummies had wine with dinner – one had a cocktail I think. One other woman and I ordered sparkling water. There’s always a little moment when I feel slightly self-conscious as discussions are being had around the table about what to drink (“shall we split a bottle of sauvignon?” “I think I’ll have a glass of red”) but I know now that the awkwardness is just in my head and no-one else gives a toss if I’m drinking or not. And it will pass quickly. I just have to hang tough through that brief moment and the rest of the evening usually plays out smoothly.

 

The comedy show was good, but boy there were a lot of jokes about hangovers and drinking. Everyone laughed (“ah yes the three-day hangover!”) and I did too. But I was hyper aware of alcohol being a regular topic amongst the jokes.

 

Overall the evening was fun but it really highlighted for me how counter-cultural it is to live sober. Alcohol is deeply entrenched into our worlds. It’s everywhere all the bloody time as evidenced by my simple Wednesday night out (full bars en route to the restaurant, friends all drinking during the meal, comedy show with numerous mentions of booze). To move around this world as a sober person and never touch any alcohol ever is revolutionary.

Reframing Ourselves as Sober People

Frankly I think this makes us sober people all the more brave and amazing. Not only do we have to do a huge amount of inner work when we take alcohol away – getting used to living with raw emotions and un-inebriated brains 24/7 – we also have the mammoth task of re-framing ourselves as sober people in a booze soaked world.

 

In my early days as a non-drinker I felt so uncomfortable and odd moving around without my drunken skin. My whole identity had shifted, I felt awkward, conspicuous, foreign – like I’d grown a third eye or something ridiculous. I was a stranger to myself. Who was I without my beloved wines? Was I still chatty and fun? Was I interesting or deathly dull? I didn’t feel chatty, fun or interesting. Mostly I just felt incredibly raw and vulnerable.

 

But I hung in there and slowly over time my new non-drinking persona became more comfortable. I got used to being the sober elephant in the room at family gatherings and parties (and started discovering not everyone was getting plastered every time they went out), I got used to the brief awkward moment at the beginning of meals when discussions were being had about what to drink, I got used to being a non-drinker.

 

I got comfortable being the real me – authentic me – with no alcohol in the way.

 

And so now on the odd occasions when I do go out into town and walk amongst the boozers or sit with my friends as they drink wine, I’m no longer that three-eyed monster feeling raw and vulnerable. I’m just me – chatty and fun – with no desire to muck up my newly discovered authenticity.

 

And I’m very happy with that.

3 eyed drunk monster

 

lotta dan
Lotta Dann drank alcohol steadily and heavily from the age of 15 to the age of 39. She stopped drinking only when her habit had reduced her to a sloppy, miserable mess and it became awfully apparent she had no control over her intake. She wrote her way sober with the help of an anonymous blog called ‘Mrs D Is Going Without’, which started out small but slowly turned into something incredibly large and powerful. Her memoir ‘Mrs D Is Going Without’ was published 3 years after she stopped drinking. Now happily sober, Lotta spends her days parenting and running a busy household, promoting recovery through her blogs and social media accounts, and managing the Living Sober website. She lives in Wellington, New Zealand with her husband, three sons and a Labrador puppy.

 

Mrs. D is the name Lotta Dann gave herself when she began anonymously blogging in 2011. Through her long-running blog, Mrs. D Is Going Without; Lotta discovered the incredible power of online support for people quitting drinking. Her best-selling memoir, telling the story of her recovery, was published in 2014, and later that same year, Living Sober was launched. Living Sober takes all of the powerful aspects Lotta discovered about online recovery and condenses it here into one space, making it readily accessible for thousands of people so that they can also turn their lives around