Last year, I wrote for Mamamia about how alcohol almost killed me.
About how, I'd pour my first glass of wine immediately after the school run, and how that would be followed by many, many more.
About how my health deteriorated so badly, I genuinely didn't know if I was going to make it. But that somehow I did, going completely sober at the age of 39.
As I turned 40, even though I was on the right path, the decade ahead looked bleak and dark. The idea of turning 50 was depressing and, quite frankly, unsightly.
Watch: Here are just some of the effects after one year without drinking alcohol. Post continues after video.
But now, 10 years sober, I have been able to grow, reconnect with myself, and replenish the youthfulness that I had suffocated through self-medicating. Now I'm about to turn 50 and I'm filled with joy. Here are some of the lessons I've learned along the way.
Happiness is an inside job.
Through social conditioning and influence, I was led to believe that in order to be happy, we need 'something' or for me, that 'someone'. The dark-haired, tall, handsome prince who rides in on his white horse and saves you from a life of poverty and despair. Because, god forbid, we can't live happily ever after on our own.
For as long as I can remember, I had an underlying reliance on a relationship to give me a sense of purpose and self-worth. I believed that if 'he' loves me and cares for me, then I must be valuable. From a teen through to at least my early 40s, my happiness was largely based on the state of my relationships.