Current:Home > NewsGetting sober saved my life. And helped me understand my identity as a transgender woman. -Wealth Evolution Experts
Getting sober saved my life. And helped me understand my identity as a transgender woman.
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:40:53
I’m a sober transgender woman. How are those two attributes connected? For me, they are intertwined like the strands of the double helix. I don’t believe I could have discovered who I am without getting sober first.
And it works the other way. Being a woman is now one of the central facts of my existence and has, in turn, become one of a number of miraculous developments in my life that motivates me to stay sober each day.
We observed on Thursday the annual National Sober Day, which aims to promote sobriety and celebrate people who have chosen to lead sober lives. It’s a good time for alcoholics like me to reflect on the nature of our sobriety.
Alcoholism is insidious and deadly. According to the National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics, 10% of Americans over the age of 12 abuse alcohol and in a typical year about 140,000 Americans die from the effects of alcohol.
Alcoholics rationalize their drinking. For me, every day must be National Sober Day.
While these are harrowing statistics, take it from an alcoholic: When you are in the throes of excessive usage, these numbers mean nothing. Like everything else that argues against excessive booze usage – damaged health, broken relationships and lackluster work performance – alcoholics simply rationalize it all away, telling themselves that they are different.
Once an alcoholic gets and stays sober, the opposite becomes true and startling revelations and self-discovery can occur. That’s what happened to me, which has convinced me alcoholics can only know their true selves once they stop poisoning themselves with a steady diet of drugs or alcohol.
I was an active alcoholic for most of my life and drank excessively on and off for nearly 40 years. In a not uncommon pattern, my drinking career was characterized by escalation, starting with beer in high school, binge drinking in college and shifting to everyday drinking in my 30s.
Then the real damage began in my 40s, when I sometimes devolved into a morning and daytime drinker, which eventually led to an arrest for drunken driving and a protective order.
LGBTQ politicians fight for equality.We'll keep winning despite vile attacks.
My drinking career was capped by a suicide attempt, which in retrospect was the deep bottom I needed to finally decide to live and get sober.
For me, every day must be National Sober Day because if I put alcohol in my body, my pattern of escalation will lead to only one place: death. That reality is certainly a great motivator for me to stay sober, but alcoholics in recovery can do with as many incentives as possible to keep drinks away from their mouths.
Alcohol suppresses who we are. Getting sober helped me understand my gender identity.
I believe it is no coincidence that I had my first conscious conception that I was transgender nine months after I got sober in January 2018. When I look back at my life through the lens of sobriety and my gender identity, there were certainly signs that I might have been transgender, chief among them being the fact I detested everything male about myself.
But I never had a chance and I believe nobody has a chance to know who they are at a deep level while they are pouring drugs and alcohol into their bodies. There is no Maeve without sobriety. I’d either be dead or a ruined miserable drunk trapped in the dark, fearful ring of Dante’s hell from which there is no escape.
Employees deserve gender-affirming care:Starbucks gave trans employees a lifeline. Then they put our health care at risk.
Alcohol and drugs suppress who we are as human beings. For many of us, there are initial benefits to using. In my case, I heard voices for much of my life telling me I was a rotten human being, and in my early drinking days, booze made those voices fainter.
Of course, it’s ultimately a mirage and as long as we are drinking excessively, we remain in the desert fruitlessly searching for the oasis that will save us. I drank immoderately because I’m an alcoholic, but I also think booze helped keep at bay this gnawing sense that I wasn’t who I thought I was, which must have, on some level, been repugnant to me.
To get sober, you have to want to do it for yourself, and there are many benefits. Physical and mental health, clear-headedness, happiness and fullness of life are just a few that come to mind. Add to that the potential of jump-starting a process of self-discovery and self-actualization, and the calculus becomes even more compelling.
Sober is so cool.
Maeve DuVally, an LGBTQ+ advocate and communications and diversity & inclusion consultant, is author of the book "MAEVE RISING: Coming Out Trans in Corporate America."
veryGood! (1911)
Related
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Meet Thermonator, a flame-throwing robot dog with 30-foot range being sold by Ohio company
- NFL draft best available players: Ranking top 125 entering Round 1
- Connecticut Senate passes wide-ranging bill to regulate AI. But its fate remains uncertain
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Medical plane crashes in North Carolina, injuring pilot and doctor on board
- The Essentials: Mindy Kaling spills on running to Beyoncé, her favorite Sharpie and success
- Beyoncé surprises 2-year-old fan with sweet gift after viral TikTok: 'I see your halo, Tyler'
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Trump Media asks lawmakers to investigate possible unlawful trading activity in its DJT stock
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Arkansas panel bans electronic signatures on voter registration forms
- Man falls 300 feet to his death while hiking with wife along Oregon coast
- House speaker calls for Columbia University president's resignation amid ongoing protests
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- NFL draft trade candidates: Which teams look primed to trade up or down in first round?
- Bear cub pulled from tree for selfie 'doing very well,' no charges filed in case
- Woman wins $1M in Oregon lottery raffle, credits $1.3B Powerball winner for reminder
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
'Call Her Daddy' host Alex Cooper marries Matt Kaplan in destination wedding
The 15 Best After-Sun Products That'll Help Soothe and Hydrate Your Sunburnt Skin
Bird flu outbreak is driving up egg prices — again
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Vermont House passes measure meant to crack down on so-called ghost guns
Woman wins $1M in Oregon lottery raffle, credits $1.3B Powerball winner for reminder
Tennessee would criminalize helping minors get abortions under bill heading to governor