Sober in the Country changing Australias casual alcoholism

[Music]

it is such an honor to be here at tedx

canberra

i’ve come all the way from northwestern

new south wales

and i’ve come here with a very specific

purpose and point in mind

i’ve come here because i need your help

and i’ve come here because i’ve got a

challenge

to throw down not just to you guys here

but to australia in general and

particularly to my favorite humans on

earth

that’s my family back in rural and

remote australia

typical to my own form i’ve picked a

really tricky topic

and a really tricky demographic

i want to bring a conversation into the

public

i’ve already been doing it and i want

your help

to get that conversation further and

wider

and to the breaches of our rural and

remote areas

it’s a conversation about modern day

addiction

and it’s a conversation about what i

call casual alcoholism

it’s a real thing and it’s impacting

people and it’s happening out west

this is not an imaginary epidemic and i

take this really seriously because i

love my country mates

and i’m pretty worried about them right

now as you can see

that’s what out west looks like at the

moment has anyone been for a drive into

regional or remote parts of the country

recently

yeah not that many of you which is

understandable it’s a long way to go

um it looks horrendous i’ve never seen

anything like the drought that we’re

experiencing right

now and i’m concerned because

the demographic that i want to speak to

my peers and professionals in remote

australia

are typically and historically a very

stoic tough bunch of people right

we don’t like to ask for help we don’t

like to admit when we’re doing it tough

and we we tend to just keep going and

going and going and being extraordinary

because that’s what country people do we

are pretty amazing i have to say

until we’re not so our it’s funny our

strength can also be our weakness

i want to just show you something for a

moment some statistics on alcohol

at the moment in australia every year

we’re spending about 36 billion dollars

on alcohol

related illness injury and death

at the moment about 6 000 people every

year are being

wiped out dead you know due to alcohol

related

injury or death and we’ve got about 156

000 hospitalizations going on annually

now those are really really frightening

statistics are they not

but what concerns me is it kind of means

nothing to the people i want to talk to

because we look okay

we sound okay we’re pretty intelligent

people with mortgages and cars and good

haircuts and

you know kids in fancy schools and all

that sort of thing

and these statistics don’t tend to

penetrate

because we think we’re immune and

there’s a few there’s a few issues in

this area

because we’re obviously not immune we’re

not immune

at all to being part of these statistics

but high functioning people are what

concern me the most

and when we look at these numbers

and i think about my mates i think about

me

i get really frightened because where i

come from

we measure a bloke by how many beers he

can drink

where i come from if a lady is embracing

and worshiping one o’clock that’s the

done thing

and i know that’s not reserved solely

for rural or remote

australia but we’ve got about half a

million people

in rural and remote australia who cannot

access information

or support in this area and if push ever

comes to shove

in that demo demographic and someone

needs to reach out and ask for help

there really often is no help to be had

now i’m sure some of you are sitting

right there going but hold on a minute

who are you

to speak about these things are you a

politician

are you an economist no i’m obviously

neither of those things i’m just a girl

from the country

but what i bring is something

that hasn’t really been done before i’m

a small town girl

with a history of living all over rural

and regional australia

i’ve been doing that for 44 odd years i

know

i know this area i know this demographic

and i know these people

and i love love love being a country

girl

but it also is a challenging challenging

space

it’s a very challenging space to dwell

in because

we are prone to doing things our way

and not acknowledging when we’re not

okay and i was a person

exactly like that so i speak

from a small town lived experience point

of view

and i don’t think anyone’s done that yet

because everyone tells me i’m bloody mad

for starters to be doing it but i’m so

glad i’m doing it

i would change nothing about this you

see

four years ago i had what you call i

believe in the media

a rock bottom experience four years ago

i i was at my absolute end

i was oh i should have died i did want

to die

i did want to take my own life

but i’m standing here

when that was all going on for me in my

life

i was in such a state of denial because

i looked okay

i sounded okay i had a really successful

career doing photography and traveling

and speaking

i just i refused flatly when people

suggested i might be an alcoholic to

even take that on board because thanks

very much i never drank

every day and i never drank during the

day and i wasn’t a homeless guy in the

gutter

so how rude how could someone dare

suggest that to me

funny isn’t it how how we love to kid

ourselves and i guess

what was going on all around me was a

lot of people saying no you’re right

shane you’ve just had a crap life

you’ve had a few tricky things happen to

you and i have

and i did but in in as much as i was in

denial

i think my mates were in denial with me

because it’s a really uncomfortable

weird space to be in

contemplating where you’re at but in the

true nature of a stoic country person

i just kept going i just kept going i

just kept going

and uh i should have gotten help a lot

sooner than what i did

but i refused to admit as i said

acknowledge it or admit where i was at

now i’ve had a wonderful life of

privilege and something people often ask

me is hang on well

if you had a supportive family and

you’ve got a loving husband how did

things get to this like what’s the go

with that

so i’ll take you for a little step

backwards into my past if you like

and when i was a young very fresh-faced

very naive country kid and i was

about as socially inept as you could

possibly get

my family weren’t big on socialising i

wasn’t exposed to a vast you know array

of

social situations but holy moly i knew i

loved to socialise

and when my gap year came i sprinted out

the front gate i couldn’t i couldn’t go

out there

into the world of adult english quickly

adoptingly

into the world of adulting quickly

enough

i couldn’t i was just beside myself i

thought oh this is going to be great

but unfortunately for me it wasn’t great

my gap year was an utter disaster

and i don’t need to go into the details

but it was a story as old of time as a

good kid

young kid naive add some alcohol

add some country parties had some blokes

who probably should have known

better than what they did and a few

ordinary things happened to me that year

that set me

on a path to self-destruction

self doubt fear shame

guilt and the events of that year would

really alter the trajectory of my life

in a big way

i was shattered but i did what we do

in the country and i forged on i kept

rolling

i kept going and i didn’t ask for help

and i think to be really honest had i

even asked for help would it have been

there

i doubt it because that’s what i’ve

learned about what’s going on in the

bush

come back into the future a step or two

and 38 year old me

still doing okay i look all right on

paper i’ve got a beautiful husband

best bloke in australia sorry ladies

but i’m not so great i’m still that

little wounded kid inside

and i still haven’t had support or

treatment

i always cry when i get to this bit we

found out when i was about 38 that it

was unlikely we were going to be able to

have children and then that seemed like

a certainty

and the truth of that utterly

crushed me i had spent all my life just

wanting to be a mum

i loved kids kids loved me and it’s just

what i had lined up for my future and

for my husband because he’s an amazing

bloke

and when when that was obviously not

going to happen

i uh i took this destructive

relationship that i had with alcohol

i took it to a whole new level my

passionate love for wine o’clock became

an utter

self-destructive cycle of blackout

drinking

and all the while i looked pretty normal

somewhat attractive perhaps if you look

at

vaseline on the glass you know i looked

like a normal person the whole time

i kept the facade going but i was

falling apart

in increments and it nearly killed me

and you know what happened i’m so glad

it nearly killed me because i finally

desperately reached out for help and i

was put onto a lady

who was a recovered alcoholic in the

country

and i met her and i sat with her and she

told me her story

and for the first time in my entire

entire

life i saw that i was not alone in this

in one hour of talking to a woman who’d

been there and done that and who was a

normal

functioning regular looking human my

eyes were just opened wide and i went

what how did i how have i not been given

access to this information

this kind of real honest talk how how

have i never been

my mind was just blown i thank god for

that girl you know

i went home and i just put everything to

one side and i worked harder than i’ve

ever worked in my whole life

to become a 100 sober australian country

person

i studied it like it was a university

degree

and i made it i recovered completely and

i do call that a miracle because plenty

of people don’t

and i have a really big problem with

that

because if we dug deep

as a rural community and started having

better chats with our mates

about the truth of addiction and the

reality of casual alcoholism

we would be able to change the course of

the lives of

countless shannas out there and i

remember i was a couple of years into my

sobriety and i had this little light

bulb moment and i turned around to my

husband and i said

sweetheart i think i’m going to be the

girl who does that bit but on a bigger

scale

and he went that’s nice darling one step

at a time

but you know it was a light bulb moment

and i hung onto that little kernel

and down the track when i knew i was

going to make it i knew i knew for sure

i was going to make it i can’t explain

how that is

but i knew and i started studying

and i started sharing the odd thing on

my social media

and the long story short is that over

time that little share became a blog

became a conversation became this became

that became

something bigger than i ever anticipated

and i went

holy moly this is going really well

wow this is working i mean i wasn’t

surprised but i was

i was so encouraged that i thought i

better brand this thing

and so i did i changed my page and i

called it

well hang on one moment came up with

this funky little logo

sober in the country that’s me a little

bit skinnier and my dog and my husband

i wanted to brand it and i wanted to

create a virtual place where other rural

people

could come and chat and be part of this

conversation

no i had no intentions no goals no

nothing in mind i just wanted people to

know

that they weren’t alone that’s all i had

in mind but it’s blown my mind and gone

far above and beyond that

and in two years of me doing what i do

which is talk a lot

often this has reached the far corners

of rural australia

into the hardest hardest toughest aussie

blokes of all

and women people who are not supposed to

be able to talk about these things are

talking about it

it is mind-blowing and it is beautiful

and it is the most humbling thing

i get emotional it’s the most humbling

beautiful thing i’ve ever been a part of

because we are

changing lives and we’re saving lives

and we’re giving people a place to go

and you know what drives me really crazy

about this whole thing

in the country we will sit there and we

will stand next to our mates and we will

slap them on the back

and tell them to have another drink and

we will laugh when they get full down

drunk in public

time and time again that’s fine that’s

not a problem

but when someone is brave enough to

stand up and step out and say

uh i think i might have a problem here i

need some help we cannot cope

we either tell them to wake up to

themselves and have another drink

or we isolate them by telling them to go

off and be

anonymous and what i’m doing is

challenging that paradigm utterly as

ineffective in every

single way in rural and regional

communities

we are all about connection we’re all

about supporting each other

we’re all about being together and

lifting our mates and baking things and

delivering things and picking up dogs

and babysitting kids

so how do we ever think isolating

someone

and telling them to be anonymous in

their struggle is going to work

it strikes me as the cruelest paradox of

all

and that is one of the reasons i blew my

anonymity sky high and said no way

this doesn’t work we’ve got to treat our

mates

with alcoholism the same way we treat

our mates with cancer

it doesn’t matter what the disease is

everyone

in our country towns is just as

important as the next girl or the next

guy

and we need to start talking about this

we need to

look at prevention rather than waiting

until someone’s got a diagnosis that’s

terrifying and life-ending

i often joke to my mates and say my

purpose is to be enough of a pain in the

bum

and to have this conversation publicly

enough times

that i’m going to start infiltrating

this sector

with information so that

maybe one day joe blow standing at the

pub with his best mate

watching him get full over drunk and

drink drive home to his wife and kids

again

might just say mate do you reckon do you

reckon maybe we should talk about your

drinking

you know i’m not here to demonize people

who drink it’s never been about that

i’m just here to raise this conversation

so that those of our mates

so that our mates who do recognize as an

issue and step up

have got access to information and

they’re less afraid

and so that those of us who don’t have a

problem understand we’ve got to go

gently

we’ve got to look after our mates and do

what we do best in australia

and support our friends you know it’s

not a big stretch

so my challenge to my friends to rural

australia and in fact australia as a

whole is

let’s get real let’s get honest let’s

get authentic in our chats

let’s take this further you know one day

my my goal hopefully next year is to get

funding and support so i can actually

get programs in place

to support people because the power of

this conversation and the realness of it

and how far and wide that’s going

is proving again and again and again

that people want this conversation

and they need it it’s become like a me

too movement

for people who are sick of our boozy

alcohol worshiping culture

it’s like a little me too movement going

on and it’s so

amazing and it’s got legs and it’s got

merit and it’s happening

and it’s just one girl with a laptop he

started a yarn

how incredible is that i want to leave

you with a thought which is that

alcoholism does not discriminate

so why should we

you so much

you

[音乐]

很荣幸来到 tedx

canberra

我从新南威尔士州西北部一路

来到这里,我带着一个非常具体的

目的和想法

来到这里,因为我需要你的 帮助

,我来这里是因为我

面临挑战

,不仅要向这里的你们,

还要向整个澳大利亚,

特别是向地球上我最喜欢的人类,

这是我在农村和偏远澳大利亚的家人,这是

我自己的典型形式 我选择了一个

非常棘手的话题

和一个非常棘手的人口统计

我想将对话

公之于众

我已经这样做了,我希望

您的

帮助使对话更深入

更广泛,

并突破我们的农村和

偏远地区 领域

这是关于现代

成瘾的对话,是关于我

所说的随意酗酒的对话,

这是真实的,它正在影响

人们,它正在西部发生,

这不是想象中的流行病,我

非常认真地对待这件事,因为我

爱我的乡下人

,我现在很担心他们,

正如你所

看到的,这就是西部目前的样子

最近有没有人开车去

该国的偏远地区 是的

,你们中没有那么多

可以理解,还有很长的路要走,

嗯,看起来

很可怕 从历史上看,是一群非常

坚忍的坚强的人,对

我们不喜欢寻求帮助我们不

喜欢承认当我们遇到困难时

,我们倾向于继续前进,

不断前进,变得非凡,

因为那是 我们是什么国家的人 我们

非常了不起 我不得不说,

直到我们不再如此 我们这很有趣 我们的

优势也可能是我们的弱点

我只想向您展示一些东西 澳大利亚

目前的一些酒精统计数据

e 每年

我们在

与酒精相关的疾病伤害和死亡

上花费了大约 360 亿美元,目前每年大约有 6000 人

因酒精

相关的

伤害或死亡而死亡,你知道,我们有大约 156000

人住院 现在每年

这些数据真的很可怕

你知道在高档学校的孩子和所有

类似的事情

,这些统计数据往往不会

渗透,

因为我们认为我们是免疫的,而且

有一些在这个领域存在一些问题,

因为我们显然不能免疫,我们是

完全不能幸免

于成为这些统计数据的一部分,

但高功能的人是

我最关心的问题

,当我们看到这些数字时

,我想到我的伙伴,我想到

我,

我真的很害怕 d 因为我

来自哪里,

我们衡量一个男人可以喝多少啤酒

,我来自哪里,如果一位女士正在拥抱

和崇拜一个点钟,这是已经

完成的事情

,我知道这不仅仅是

为澳大利亚农村或偏远地区保留的,

但我们 '

在澳大利亚农村和偏远地区有大约 50 万人无法

获得

该地区的信息或支持,如果

在该演示人口中出现压力,并且有人

需要伸出援手并寻求帮助,

那么真的常常无济于事

现在我确定你们中的一些人正

坐在那里,但等一下

,你们

是谁来谈论这些事情的,你是

政治家吗?你是经济学家吗?不,我显然

不是这些事情,我只是一个

来自乡下的女孩,

但我带来的是

在我还是一个小镇女孩之前从未真正做过的事情

这个地区我知道这个民主党 图形

,我认识这些人

,我爱爱爱做一个乡村

女孩,

但这也是一个具有挑战性的挑战

空间,

这是一个非常具有挑战性的居住空间

,因为

我们倾向于以自己的方式做事,

并且当我们不正常时不承认

我是一个

完全一样的人,所以我

从一个小镇生活经验

的角度说

,我认为还没有人这样做,

因为每个人都告诉我,我

为初学者这样做而疯狂,但我很

高兴 我正在这样做

我不会改变这一切 你

四年前我有你所说的我

相信媒体

四年前的一次谷底经历

我已经到了绝对的尽头

我是哦我应该死我确实

想要 死了,

我确实想结束自己的生命,

但是

当这一切发生在我的生活中时,我站在这里,

我处于一种否认的状态,因为

我看起来不错,

听起来不错,我

在摄影方面的事业非常成功,并且 旅行

和说话

我只是我拒绝了 当人们

建议我可能是个酒鬼时,我

什至把它带上飞机,因为

非常感谢我从来没有每天喝酒

,我白天也从来没有喝酒,

而且我不是阴沟里的无家可归的人,

所以有人敢建议怎么粗鲁

这对我来说

很有趣,这不是我们喜欢

自欺欺人的方式

吗?我猜我周围发生的事情是

很多人说不,你是对的,

肖恩,你刚刚过着糟糕的生活

很少有棘手的事情发生在

你身上,我有

,我也做过,但在我

否认的情况下,

我认为我的伙伴们否认我,

因为这是一个非常不舒服的

奇怪空间,

让你思考你在哪里,但在

一个坚忍的乡下人的本性

我一直在继续

我有一个美好的

特权生活和人们经常问

我的事情

如果你有一个支持你的家庭,

你有一个爱你的丈夫,那就坚持

下去吧,事情是怎么发展到这个

地步的 是一个非常年轻的

非常天真的乡下孩子,我的

社交能力是你

可能得到的那样

我的家人不擅长社交

我没有接触过你知道的大量

社交场合,但是我知道我知道 我

喜欢社交

,当我的间隔年到来时,

我冲出前门

我自己我

想哦,这会很棒,

但不幸的是,这对我来说不是很好,

我的间隔年是一场彻底的灾难

,我不需要详细说明,

但这是一个像一个好孩子一样古老的故事

年轻的孩子天真添加一些酒精

添加一些乡村聚会有一些

家伙 可能应该

比他们所做的更清楚

,那一年发生在我身上的一些普通事情让我

走上了自我毁灭的道路

自我怀疑害怕羞耻

内疚,那一年的事件

真的会改变我的生活轨迹

我很崩溃,但我做了我们

在这个国家

所做的事情,我继续前进

我对此表示怀疑,因为这就是我所

了解到的关于丛林中正在发生的

事情 回到未来一

两步 38 岁的我

仍然过得很好 我在纸上看起来还不错

我有一个漂亮的丈夫

最好的男人 澳大利亚 对不起女士们,

但我不是

那么好 我们将能够

生孩子,然后似乎 ed 就像

一个

确定性的事实,这

让我彻底崩溃了我一生都只是

想成为一个妈妈

当这显然

不会发生时,

我呃

,我把我与酒精的这种破坏性关系

提升到了一个全新的水平,我

对葡萄酒的热爱变成

了一个彻底的

自我毁灭

循环 虽然我看起来很正常,但

有点吸引人,如果你看看

玻璃上的凡士林,你就会知道我一直看起来

像个

正常人 我很高兴

它几乎要了我的命,因为我终于

拼命寻求帮助,我

被安置

在一位在乡下戒酒的女士身上

,我遇到了她,我和她坐在一起,她

告诉我她的故事

在我一生中第一次

看到我不是一个人

在一个小时内与一个

曾经在那里做过那件事的女人交谈,她是一个

正常运作的普通人我的

眼睛刚刚睁大了 我去了

什么我怎么没有

获得这些信息的机会

这种真正诚实的谈话我怎么

从来没有

想过我只是被吹了我感谢上帝给了

那个女孩你知道

我回家了,我只是把所有东西都放了

一方面,我比我一生中

任何时候都更努力地工作,

成为一个 100 清醒的澳大利亚乡村

的人不这样做

,我对此有一个很大的问题

因为如果我们深入挖掘

农村社区并开始

与我们的伙伴

就成瘾的真相和

偶然酗酒的现实进行更好的聊天,

我们将能够改变路线 的

无数莎娜的生活在那里,我

记得我清醒了几年

,我有这个小

灯泡的时刻,我转身对我的

丈夫说,

亲爱的,我想我会成为

那个这样做的女孩 有点,但在更大的

范围内

,他一步一步地走了,亲爱的

但你知道这是一个灯泡时刻

当我知道我会成功时,我抓住那个小内核并沿着轨道

走下去,我知道我知道 我肯定

会成功,我无法

解释这是怎么回事,

但我知道,我开始学习

,我开始在我的社交媒体上分享奇怪的东西

,长话短说,随着

时间的推移,这个小小的分享变成了一个博客

一次谈话变成了这变成

了比我预期的更大的事情

,我去了

圣洁的莫莉,这进展得非常

好哇,这很有效,我的意思是我并不

感到惊讶,但

我很受鼓舞,以至于我认为我

更好地为这个东西打上烙印

所以我改变了我的页面 我

说得

很好 来聊天,参与这次

谈话

不,我没有意图,没有目标,没有

任何想法,我只是想让人们

知道他们并不孤单,这就是我的全部

想法,但这让我大吃一惊,

远远超出了这一点

在我做我经常说的事情的两年里,

这已经到达了

澳大利亚农村的偏远角落,

成为所有人中最难对付的最难对付的

澳大利亚人,而那些不

应该谈论这些事情的女性是

谈论

它是令人兴奋的,它是美丽的

,这是我最激动的事情,这是

我参与过的最令人谦卑的

美丽事情,

因为我们正在

改变生活,我们正在拯救生命

,我们 雷吉 给人们一个可以去的地方

,你知道是什么让我

对这个国家的整个事情感到非常疯狂,

我们会坐在那里,我们

会站在我们的伙伴旁边,我们会

拍他们的背

,告诉他们再喝一杯,

我们 当他们一次又一次地在公共场合喝得酩酊大醉时会笑,

这很好,这

不是问题,

但是当有人勇敢地

站起来走出来说

呃,我想我在这里可能有问题,我

需要一些我们无法应付的帮助

我们要么告诉他们醒来

并再喝一杯,

要么我们通过告诉他们离开并保持匿名来隔离他们,

而我正在做的是

挑战这种范式,

在农村和地区

社区中以各种方式完全无效 所有关于联系我们都是

关于相互支持

我们都是关于在一起,

举起我们的伙伴,烘烤东西,

送东西,捡狗

和照顾孩子,

所以我们怎么会认为孤立

som 一个

人告诉他们在

他们的斗争中保持匿名是行得通的

对待酗酒的伙伴就像对待

患有癌症的伙伴

一样不管是什么病

在我们乡下城镇的每个人都

和下一个女孩或下一个男人一样重要

,我们需要开始谈论这个

我们需要

着眼于预防而不是

等到有人得到

可怕的和生命终结的诊断

我经常和我的伙伴开玩笑说我的

目的是让流浪汉感到痛苦

并公开进行足够多次的谈话

打算开始用信息渗透到

这个领域

,这样

也许有一天 joe blow

和他最好的伙伴站在酒吧里

看着他喝得酩酊大醉,

再次酒后驾车回家给他的妻子和孩子

可能只会说伙计,你认为吗 你

认为也许我们应该谈论你的

饮酒

你知道我不是来妖魔化

喝酒的人从来没有关于

我只是来提出这个话题

以便我们的伙伴们

让我们的伙伴们承认自己是一个

问题和加强

可以获取信息,

他们不那么害怕

,所以我们这些没有

问题的人明白我们必须温和地走,

我们必须照顾我们的伙伴,

做我们所做的 澳大利亚最好的

,支持我们的朋友,你知道这

不是一个很大的

挑战,所以我对我的朋友们对澳大利亚农村的挑战

,事实上整个澳大利亚是

让我们变得真实让我们诚实让

我们在聊天中变得真实

让我们更进一步你知道的 那一天,

我希望明年的目标是获得

资金和支持,这样我就可以

制定计划

来支持人们,因为

这种对话的力量和它的真实性以及它

的发展范围和范围

一次又一次地证明了

这一点 人们想要这种对话

,他们需要它

对于那些厌倦了我们酗酒崇拜文化的人来说,它变得像我一样的运动

它就像一个小我太运动

正在进行,它是如此

惊人,它有腿,它有

优点,它正在发生

这只是一个拿着笔记本电脑的女孩,他

开始了

一段故事,我想给

你留下一个想法,那就是

酗酒不歧视,

所以我们为什么

要这么多