As told to Shona Hendley.
Recently I’ve noticed more and more articles about women who have stopped drinking, how doing so changed their life, how drinking was ruining their life and how they turned it all around.
While I'm happy for them, reading these stories generates feelings of failure in me.
The stories and the alcohol-free lifestyle that’s gaining popularity makes me feel anxious, even though I know it's a positive thing overall.
Watch: Your Body After 1 Year Without Alcohol. Post continues below.
It fuels my worry and sets up an unattainable expectation for me to achieve. While this is all pressure I'm putting on myself, it doesn’t make how I'm feeling any easier.
The truth is, I have been dependent on alcohol for around twenty years.
Announcing that makes me feel embarrassment, shame and absolute frustration at myself for allowing it to get to this point.
If you looked at me from the outside, you’d never know. My drinking isn’t a physical scar I bear or even a habit or behaviour that impacts multiple aspects of my life. It is a way that I manage, and I do manage — well.