Motivational speaker Christine Wright's battle with alcohol and how saving a man in crisis changed her life - Business d'Or

 

Alcohol overshadowed much of her life, and her breakthrough came when she helped save a man in crisis. She pulled him off the edge of Morley’s leg, shook him until the ambulance arrived, and heard his sobs.

“It was like a mirror image of everything I’ve been through in my life,” she said. “I was an alcoholic and I was in a bad relationship, he lost his brother and I lost my father. I thought I’d be him if I wasn’t careful again.

When she first started drinking as a teenager, her father took issue with Christine drinking to solve her problems and the parties she went to to escape her busy home life. He gave her her ultimatum: change or leave the house.

Christina moved in with her mom, but soon her mom’s boyfriend issued the same ultimatum. Kristin and her mom ended up at her boarding house as she was trying to pass her GCSE exams. Now she was surrounded by alcohol more than ever.

At a house party over the Christmas holidays, 17-year-old Christine was raped by a man. “I didn’t report it,” she said. “I was considered a party girl. Who would have believed me? I had to drop out of school, so I went to college. But again everything revolved around alcohol.

From my part-time job in hospitality, my whole world is connected to alcohol. Kristin did a one-year internship in Cyprus, where her alcoholism was further encouraged. “I went to work at 5:30 or 6 and was still completely filthy from the night before,” she recalls.

It’s been a while since I got pregnant in my final year of college. After her son was born, she reverted to her old habits, despite what she calls a “drinking gray area.” Sometimes she had a glass of wine at night.

Her 2007 discovery that her then-husband had been cheating on her relived all the trauma of her parents’ divorce. Cristina, who was also experiencing a miscarriage at the time, said: Point, I felt unable to function. I attempted suicide.

By this time, Christine was raising two sons and was in the flower business when she was diagnosed with autoimmune liver disease. Despite her health, that moment on the bridge in 2019 Only this truly made her stop and reflect:

“People say I was an angel to his earth, but he was my angel,” she says. It was Danny who saved me, and the rest is history.”

Christine contacted her doctor about her drinking habits and was put on a three-month waiting list for the program.

Enrolled in a retreat in Bali to learn how to build an online business to help people, the organization she currently runs, Habit Breaker, focuses on women and teenage girls, including conversations about self-confidence, image, and toxic relationships. .. she said.

I want to wake them up and tell them that if you control and understand alcohol, it will let you live your life. It won’t lead you down that destructive path.”

Kristin, who still lives in Leeds, says she’s working on herself. “I’m a big believer in self-forgiveness,” she said. “I’m not ashamed of what happened not.

I am sinless and have had to heal a lot especially for my children. Obviously because they suffered. I didn’t know until I sobered up, so I was in therapy for three years and it took me three years to really get to know who I was.”

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Originally published at https://businessdor.com on February 20, 2023.


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