A Woman Engages In Irresponsible And Abusive Drinking And Finds Excellent Help At An Alcohol Treatment Center For Alcohol Withdrawal Symptoms And Symptoms Of Alcoholism


Beth was the mother of five children. Beth had been feeling quite fretful lately and began to "medicate" herself by drinking three or four screwdrivers each night after she put her children to bed. After roughly ten weeks of this drinking routine, she eventually realized that rather than helping her "lighten up" and "manage" her issues, drinking alcohol made her feel more restless when she got up in the morning. This, consequently, made her feel even more tense all through the day.

After thinking about her "condition" for three or four weeks, Beth decided to "open up" about her drinking problem with her best friend. Indeed, just about thirty minutes into their conversation, Beth's best friend Danielle, told her about an extremely competent and experienced doctor at the local alcohol and drug treatment clinic. After talking to her best friend, Beth immediately got encouraged to call the rehabilitation facility and make an appointment.

Nine days later she eventually got to meet the physician her best friend had been talking about. After their brief introduction, Beth explained to the physician that ever since her former husband and she divorced one another, she has been having a difficult time psychologically, spiritually, and financially.

As Beth was talking to the psychiatrist, she highlighted the point that she truthfully believed that Robert and she waited long enough to know each other well enough before they got married. After the children started to arrive, however, their relationship appeared to get worse. To make matters worse, both Robert and she started to drink, and their abusive and excessive drinking adversely impacted their relationship, their love for one another, and their finances.

The doctor explained to Beth that the alcohol poisoning symptoms she has been experiencing are due to her irresponsible and hazardous drinking. The doctor also told Beth that her alcohol withdrawal symptoms are some of the more common symptoms of alcoholism and that the most effective solution for this is alcohol rehabilitation.

After spending three months in inpatient alcohol rehab, Beth was slowly but surely able to comprehend the fact that the main source of her tension and her depression was the fact that she had not gotten to the bottom of her acrimonious feelings she has expressed for her ex-husband who divorced her. In short, Beth let these feelings distress her to such an extent that she became an individual addicted to alcohol.

Armed with these insights and with the drugs her psychiatrist prescribed, she eventually quit drinking, she started to feel much less depressed, and she began making more time for social activities with her family and friends. Not only this but a few months after getting therapy from her psychiatrist, began to date once again.

It was apparent that Beth had come a long way. In fact, just about seven months after she terminated her rehab, she had finally laid the ghost of Robert, her ex-husband, to rest and was beginning to feel more self worth and more spiritually"alive" and psychologically "with it" than she had ever felt in her adult life.