I'm a Lenten Loser!

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I feel so bad. I gave up alcohol for Lent because I thought perhaps I had been relying on drink too much-- I’m a mother of 4 very young children, and I homeschool, and I have been babysitting my 4 month old nephew for free 4 days a week. I’m so stressed!! I really don’t drink THAT much, but a glass or 2 of wine in the evening really helps me unwind. I had gotten to the point of drinking a couple glasses of wine probably 3-4 times a week, and I just felt like I was relying on it too much. So I gave it up for Lent. I drank some wine a couple of times on Sundays at the beginning, since I’ve heard and read that Sundays are “free days” during Lent. Then… I drank on a Saturday night. Then… I had some leftover wine on Monday, so I drank a couple of glasses on Monday. I feel like a big loser! I also thought I would try to cut back on sweets… and then as a family we decided to give up eating out at restaurants to save money for almsgiving. Same thing. Little by little-- we ended up just eating out as much as always!!

Am I the only one who has done this?
 
I feel so bad. I gave up alcohol for Lent because I thought perhaps I had been relying on drink too much-- I’m a mother of 4 very young children, and I homeschool, and I have been babysitting my 4 month old nephew for free 4 days a week. I’m so stressed!! I really don’t drink THAT much, but a glass or 2 of wine in the evening really helps me unwind. I had gotten to the point of drinking a couple glasses of wine probably 3-4 times a week, and I just felt like I was relying on it too much. So I gave it up for Lent. I drank some wine a couple of times on Sundays at the beginning, since I’ve heard and read that Sundays are “free days” during Lent. Then… I drank on a Saturday night. Then… I had some leftover wine on Monday, so I drank a couple of glasses on Monday. I feel like a big loser! I also thought I would try to cut back on sweets… and then as a family we decided to give up eating out at restaurants to save money for almsgiving. Same thing. Little by little-- we ended up just eating out as much as always!!

Am I the only one who has done this?
You’re not the only one who has broken their Lenten resolution. However, from what you described, I’m more concerned over your addiction to wine, which suggest that there might be a deeper problem. I’m not saying you’re an alcoholic, but there does seem to be an addiction there. Only you can evaluate the situation yourself.

Also, if you can’t stay away from it for more than a week, I would suggest not keeping any wine in the house.

I too gave up wine, and I did have a couple glasses with dinner on Sunday, but I haven’t drank any during the week, despite having several bottles in the house.

Jim
 
2 glasses of wine 3-4 times a week is not alcoholism. It’s a pleasant and healthy habit. Would you be so concerned about a person who ate at McDonald’s several times a week? A high fat, high sugar diet is a far more destructive habit, healthwise.

If her habits start to dramatically increase, that’s the time to worry. But, her slip up is no worse that a chocolate lover who gives up chocolate, then slips up.
 
Jim–

Come live in my house for a couple of days, and I promise you, you will be guzzling that wine from the bottle! 😃
 
Why are you babysitting your nephew for free four days a week? I would never do that, plus homeschool and take care of my four. I have four children too, my oldest is 12. I would never have added to my stress like that.
 
I feel so bad. I gave up alcohol for Lent because I thought perhaps I had been relying on drink too much-- I’m a mother of 4 very young children, and I homeschool, and I have been babysitting my 4 month old nephew for free 4 days a week. I’m so stressed!! I really don’t drink THAT much, but a glass or 2 of wine in the evening really helps me unwind. I had gotten to the point of drinking a couple glasses of wine probably 3-4 times a week, and I just felt like I was relying on it too much. So I gave it up for Lent. I drank some wine a couple of times on Sundays at the beginning, since I’ve heard and read that Sundays are “free days” during Lent. Then… I drank on a Saturday night. Then… I had some leftover wine on Monday, so I drank a couple of glasses on Monday. I feel like a big loser! I also thought I would try to cut back on sweets… and then as a family we decided to give up eating out at restaurants to save money for almsgiving. Same thing. Little by little-- we ended up just eating out as much as always!!

Am I the only one who has done this?
No you will not be alone in this.

I honestly don’t think that it is important that you had the drink when you made an intentional effort to give it up for Lent. What I think is important is that you intended to give it up and had every good intention of doing that.

I believe that God looks at the intent and the love in the heart more than He looks at the outcome or a set of rules and laws. I am not knocking the Laws of the Church and we all profess to believe in them and believe in them we do, but we are also all sinners and we all break the laws in some way, shape or form.

You had a good intent; you still do.

Here’s what I did, I knew that I would have difficulty in giving two things up, one being chocolate and the other being wine. I know I am weak and I know I need God’s grace to do all things. So I decided this Lent to give up chocolate, which is a biggy for me, I find it comforting at certain times of the month if you know what I mean!🙂 . I didn’t want to not endure so I gave up chocolate bars. So far so good, but in giving up chocolate bars I didn’t feel the pressure not have any chocolate at all. The reason I am telling you all this is that because I made a narrow margin of error I have left the option of having a little chocolate on sweets and perhaps on a buscuit, but it has strengthened my will to mostly go without chocolate at all.

We all like to think big and think we can do a great big thing for God, when actually we cannot do anything great at all. So make it simple and you will find you can do more. Decide not to have a drink for five days a week and on the other two limit what you do have, this will be your Lenten promise, you will find this workable and you may even find you do more than this. The pressure of Lent can get to us so don’t make any pressure!🙂 Afterall who are we trying to impress with big goals? ourselves? God? others? No-one is impressed, but in the secret of our hearts between God and ourselves the love of God within the intention is what God finds impressive and loves.

This will make you laugh:
My mother gave up drinking inside the house one year for Lent. I looked outside late one evening and saw the outside light on. I went outside to look and found my mother standing in her night wear with an umberella up drinking a glass of wine stood ‘outside’ of the house in the pouring rain! My mother is a moderate drinker, very measured in all things. I laughed myself silly at her and I am sure Jesus raised a smile at that one!

Don’t be hard on yourself. See the humour in it and realise that God knows all the workload you have and that you need to relax.

I honestly thought that on Easter Sunday I’d buy a family bar of chocolate and eat the lot to myself, but after this small attempt I am glad I have cut back on chocolate and will hope to keep cutback on it for good by God’s grace and that is what Lent is about; preparation and change.

I think it is far more important to do more than to give things up. You already do a great deal to please God in your care and love of those beautiful children, perhaps for something extra make a little special time for you and your husband…like the saying goes ‘Emphasise the positives, minimise the negatives’ Change the way you view yourself and this will give you more confidence.

You sound to me to be lovely.

The love of Jesus to you and your family.🙂
 
2 glasses of wine 3-4 times a week is not alcoholism. It’s a pleasant and healthy habit. Would you be so concerned about a person who ate at McDonald’s several times a week? A high fat, high sugar diet is a far more destructive habit, healthwise.

If her habits start to dramatically increase, that’s the time to worry. But, her slip up is no worse that a chocolate lover who gives up chocolate, then slips up.
I have to disagree. With alcohol or caffeine, it is possible to develop a serious addiction without needing to get drunk every night. Not all alcoholics drink until they pass out.

To live in such a way that you have to alter your brain chemistry with substances in order to cope with the daily stresses of life is not healthy. It is also not living joyfully in the reality that God has created for us. Trust in Him, not in the bottle.

There are better ways of getting out of ourselves than using alcohol.
matttalbotretreats.org/what_is.html
 
I have to disagree. With alcohol or caffeine, it is possible to develop a serious addiction without needing to get drunk every night. Not all alcoholics drink until they pass out.

To live in such a way that you have to alter your brain chemistry with substances in order to cope with the daily stresses of life is not healthy. It is also not living joyfully in the reality that God has created for us. Trust in Him, not in the bottle.

There are better ways of getting out of ourselves than using alcohol.
matttalbotretreats.org/what_is.html
Jesus enjoyed a drink, He didn’t get reeling drunk, but He did enjoy a drink and did so regularly with every meal. We are not puritans and the lady who has posted originally is exercising, from what she has stated, a moderate intake of drink on some evenings. There is nothing wrong with that, not everyone who enjoys a drink is an alcoholic in the making and to suggest that is the case isn’t logical.
 
My suggestion is to pray a Rosary whenever you want to drink. It will give you the same relief and none of the guilt. You can do that while watching kids; but you’ll have to involve them for it to work. You can do this by going on a Rosary Walk, where you all walk together to the park or around the house, or whatever. If one needs to be in a stroller, have another kid push the stroller, and make sure to have everyone join in the Rosary.

Of course, if you are breast feeding, make sure to pump milk for a couple days, and store it before you drink. That will help party reduce some of the damage of the alcohol to your child.
 
You can always have a good Lent. Simply start again. Lent is like any other time in our lives, in that we should always be looking to grow in holiness and love of God. So just like at any other time of year if you made a resolution to say, read a chapter of Scripture each night, and you fell asleep before you could a few nights when you were really tired you’d just try again the next night. So it is during Lent. Simply start again.

Personally, I find that when I want to make a sacrifice of a type of food or other treat like that, it is better to simply stop keeping it in the house. Or perhaps if you want some for Sunday dinner, buy a smaller bottle.

All our Lenten disciplines (except no meat of Fridays and fasting on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday) are voluntary, which means we can make up the rules about them. So we can allow ourselves to break the ‘fast’ on Sundays or not. Perhaps it would be better for you next year if you picked just one thing to give up and did it all through Lent without allowing it on Sundays. Or try to add something to your routine instead like extra prayers or Scripture reading.

As for the wine, only you can decide if your indulgence was just falling back into a pleasant habit or a sign that you need to be worried. Perhaps stop having wine with dinner again and try a cup of herbal tea in the evenings to help you relax. Celestial Seasonings makes something called Tension Tamer which I find very nice.
I feel so bad. I gave up alcohol for Lent because I thought perhaps I had been relying on drink too much-- I’m a mother of 4 very young children, and I homeschool, and I have been babysitting my 4 month old nephew for free 4 days a week. I’m so stressed!! I really don’t drink THAT much, but a glass or 2 of wine in the evening really helps me unwind. I had gotten to the point of drinking a couple glasses of wine probably 3-4 times a week, and I just felt like I was relying on it too much. So I gave it up for Lent. I drank some wine a couple of times on Sundays at the beginning, since I’ve heard and read that Sundays are “free days” during Lent. Then… I drank on a Saturday night. Then… I had some leftover wine on Monday, so I drank a couple of glasses on Monday. I feel like a big loser! I also thought I would try to cut back on sweets… and then as a family we decided to give up eating out at restaurants to save money for almsgiving. Same thing. Little by little-- we ended up just eating out as much as always!!

Am I the only one who has done this?
 
Just to ease everyone’s mind… I’m not an alcoholic! I understand the concern though. I do admit a problem that I have, and that is to self-medicate. If I don’t drink a glass of wine, I will eat a pint of Ben & Jerry’s. It is something I need to, and am, working on. But I really don’t think I have an addiction. What I do have is an extremely stressful life, which I do love, but it is stressful. I tell myself it is either wine, ice cream, or prozac, so I guess I’m picking my poison. LOL. What I wanted to do this Lent was to NOT self-medicate, but to put my dependence in Christ instead. Guess it’s an ongoing battle in life, but I had very high hopes and just feel like I let myself and God down. I really enjoyed blessedstar’s post and it had some good things for me to ponder (as did other posts as well).

About the babysitting… I have an issue here too. (I think I need to find a spiritual director-- I always seem to have issues! HA!) But my BIL is in school for one more year, my SIL (dh’s sister) got pregnant trying NFP (not Catholic but learned the principals of NFP and wanted to implement in their new marriage)… They are very broke and can’t afford childcare and she has to work. Initially the plan was for me to keep him and she was going to pay me, which I knew would still be hard, but I was going to do it to help them, and the extra money of course would help too. When they realized their finacial plight, I agreed to keep him 3 afternoons and 1 full day during the week, and she agreed to babysit for us on the weekends so my husband and I could have a date. So it’s not totally free, although definitely an uneven exchange!

My INTENTION, especially during Lent, was to do this as an act of mercy, but I feel like I’ve now griped about it so much (mostly just to dh) that I have taken away from this being an act of mercy! I truly want to do this and offer it up for my husband’s conversion and all of his an my family-- I’m a “Lone Catholic”, thus my name!! ARGGH! I feel soooo weak as a Christian…

sigh.
 
Bishop Sheen used to teach that if you wanted to stop doing something… beware, it was proobably not going to happen that simply.

He said that we need to replace, not just reject. Of course he was talking mostly of sin… If one wants to stop a particular sin in their lives, one needs to start doing something worthwhile in its place.

If your goal was to not have that glass of wine during Lent, perhaps you could use the time normally spent relaxing with a glass of wine to do something more spiritual… reading, prayer, walking with headphones/listening to some apologetics tapes etc.

just a thought
 
You sound very normal and very human. You also sound humble as you critique yourself honestly.

I, too, did an act of mercy for someone, driving them somewhere for a class on 3 separate days, and then griping about it because the person is extremely negative and very draining to be with. I ended up calling 2 different friends, who don’t personally know this woman, to tell them the whole story of what a negative bummer it was to spend these three days with the woman that I was so nobly helping. :rolleyes:

See, you’re not the only one! I also gave up red meat and chicken for Lent and we’ve been gorging on shrimp and salmon all Lent, not exactly austere living. 🤷
 
2 glasses of wine 3-4 times a week is not alcoholism. It’s a pleasant and healthy habit. Would you be so concerned about a person who ate at McDonald’s several times a week? A high fat, high sugar diet is a far more destructive habit, healthwise.

If her habits start to dramatically increase, that’s the time to worry. But, her slip up is no worse that a chocolate lover who gives up chocolate, then slips up.
Like I said, if you read all of my post, it’s something she has to evaluate.

Jim
 
I feel so bad. I gave up alcohol for Lent because I thought perhaps I had been relying on drink too much-- I’m a mother of 4 very young children, and I homeschool, and I have been babysitting my 4 month old nephew for free 4 days a week. I’m so stressed!! I really don’t drink THAT much, but a glass or 2 of wine in the evening really helps me unwind. I had gotten to the point of drinking a couple glasses of wine probably 3-4 times a week, and I just felt like I was relying on it too much. So I gave it up for Lent. I drank some wine a couple of times on Sundays at the beginning, since I’ve heard and read that Sundays are “free days” during Lent. Then… I drank on a Saturday night. Then… I had some leftover wine on Monday, so I drank a couple of glasses on Monday. I feel like a big loser! I also thought I would try to cut back on sweets… and then as a family we decided to give up eating out at restaurants to save money for almsgiving. Same thing. Little by little-- we ended up just eating out as much as always!!

Am I the only one who has done this?
You’re probably not the only one…but if the reasons you give for drinking are your true reasons, I suggest you give up alcohol for longer than Lent. It can be a real problem when you use alcohol like that. People don’t have a problem with alcoholism because they get drunk all the time (they may…but that isn’t the main problem)- it’s the glass of wine after work to calm you down- which can lead to more and more drinking, and cause problems (physical and emotional) without ever getting drunk.
 
Things happen. 😉 Learn the lesson, think about the influence of alcohol in your life if you see a problem, try again. 😉
 
I gave up pop.
But when you work in a restaurant and get unlimited amounts for free…its hard not to break
Oh I also gave up computer, but that was literally to impractical.🤷
 
…a person who ate at McDonald’s several times a week? A high fat, high sugar diet is a far more destructive habit, healthwise.
Ouch… I had KFC twice, McD twice the past one week. I need fast food most of the time, and these are the easiest to get near my school. 😃 I know, it’s just excuses… 😛

…And my lenten resolution is to abstain from fast food. LoL
 
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