Happiful – September 2019

(Wang) #1

After years of misery and loneliness, Brian finally


acknowledged that drink was slowly killing him. Now –
after rehab, and with a renewed passion for friends, dance,
and art – life has never been better

N


o one sets
out to be an
alcoholic. It
creeps up on
you until you reach the
point where you cross the
line, and you are hooked.
Then it destroys your
life – physically, mentally,
and spiritually. But you
can recover.
For me it was a very
slow process. I drank
every day for 25 years,
and was probably hooked
after about eight. But
it was only in the three
years before I stopped
that it started to take over
my life.
Alcoholism is a
progressive illness, and
as long as I continued
to drink my situation
only got worse. As it
progressed, it became
more and more of an
obsession. All I did was
go to work (to pay for the
booze), come home and
drink until I went to bed,
pass out, then get up and
do it all again.

Writing | Brian Parker

I beat alcoholism and


made a new me


It was slowly leeching
my life away. By the end,
I had no social life and
I stopped doing all the
things that make life
worthwhile, like dancing,
making art, and being
with people. It was a sad
and miserable existence.
Then one Friday I came
home from work, and had
a nervous breakdown.
This was partly because
of the drink, and partly
because I was over-
worked at my job. I was
stressed and getting to my
wits end. But this turned
out to be my moment of
clarity, and it made me
seek professional help for
the first time in my life.
My doctor sent me to
rehab at the Priory. They
convinced me that I was
an alcoholic, and that the
solution was complete
abstinence. They also
explained that if I
wanted to stop drinking,
I couldn’t remain the
person I was; that person
drank. I had to change

into someone who didn’t
drink, and who was
happy about that.
For me it looked like a
way to get my life back. I
remember thinking: “If
I could only get back to
feeling like how I felt in
my 20s.”

Well, I can tell you, it’s
turned out much more
than that. In my 20s I
never realised my full
potential, or made proper
use of my talents.
For the first four years
of my life without drink,

I concentrated solely
on recovery and getting
better. At the start it felt
like I’d had the stuffing
kicked out of me. I had
almost no spirit left, and
I seemed to be living in a
befuddled fog.
So I set about changing,
although it wasn’t easy.
To get anywhere, I had to
make a continuous effort
every day. But slowly it
worked. My joie de vivre
began to return, and I
started to become the
person that perhaps I was
always meant to be.
After the first four years,
I started to look outward
and began engaging with
the rest of the world. I’d
always been a dancer –
not someone who just
gets up and dances now
and then, but someone
who is defined by the
word ‘dancer’.
So I started dancing
again, in performing
arts festivals and clubs.
I made friends. Through
them, I discovered

All I did was go


to work (to pay


for the booze),


come home and


drink until I went


to bed, pass out,


then get up and


do it all again


>>>

Photography | Svetlana Pochatun



  • BARBARA JANUSZKIEWICZ



Photography | Tyler Nix

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