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'I was drinking three litres of vodka a day and was given just 24 hours to live'

01 July 2023 , 19:29
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Charlotte Durcan was told she had 24 hours to live
Charlotte Durcan was told she had 24 hours to live

A mum has shared how she was given just 24 hours to live at the height of her crippling alcohol addiction.

Charlotte Durcan considered herself a non-drinker just three years before her addiction reached its peak - but within 36 months she had spiralled out of control.

The 30-year-old began to suffer seizures and blackouts as a result of her drinking, finding that without alcohol she would start shaking and sweating, reports LancsLive.

At one stage, she was drinking a pint of vodka neat every morning just to stop her shaking, and would end up drinking around three litres of the spirit a day.

The mum-of-two from Colne, Lancashire said: "In the mornings, I would have to have a drink, just to level me out.

Michelle Heaton shares shocking pictures from her battle with alcohol addiction qhiukiqriuqprwMichelle Heaton shares shocking pictures from her battle with alcohol addiction
'I was drinking three litres of vodka a day and was given just 24 hours to live'The mum-of-two from Colne, Lancashire is now hoping to raise awareness of the different forms alcoholism can take

"It would be vodka and that would be a pint of vodka neat. That would be literally to stop me from shaking and stop me from being too sick and sweating - that'd work.

"From there, it would just carry on throughout the day, but obviously, when money went tight and things, I would try and get family to get me drink. I was using all my money up on drink, so they'd sometimes only be able to get me bottles of wine and things.

It was when Charlotte, from Colne, realised that she couldn't go without a drink that she knew the drinking had become a serious addiction.

After visiting hospital for the first time, she was kept in for a few days and returned home - but "went straight back to the drink" and ended up back in hospital again, with this pattern repeating itself three or four times.

Things reached their most serious point when Charlotte ended up in intensive care with multiple organ failure, and it was found her heart, liver and kidneys were all failing.

Doctors told her family she had only 24 hours left to live.

She said: "They had to take two litres of fluid from my lungs and I was in for three weeks, but I couldn't move, I couldn't speak, I couldn't talk.

"So I was in intensive care, I was on oxygen and they got all of my family in to say bye to me. I was literally on end of life care."

However, she says that somehow she "managed to pull through" and ended up going to rehab after recovering from her hospital visit.

Nowadays, the mum is celebrating 11 months of sobriety and is volunteering for Inspire Lancashire, a charity which recently launched their alcohol awareness campaign, Hidden in Plain Sight.

Simon Thomas shares harrowing alcohol struggle as he downed litre of vodka a daySimon Thomas shares harrowing alcohol struggle as he downed litre of vodka a day

The campaign focuses on people with addictions who are battling with their inner demons that can sometimes lead to fatalities.

Charlotte says that often, addiction is associated with people who have been struggling for years, but in her case, she was grappled by alcoholism quickly

Detailing how alcoholism doesn't always follow a familiar pattern, she explained: "My story is a lot different to other people

"I think people think that you have to be an alcoholic for so many years or start off as a drinker, then a binge drinker and then you're an alcoholic.

"Whereas, I'm trying to raise awareness that it can literally happen to you so quickly, without you even realising and then it can be too late for some people.

"I was close to dying, all of my family thought I was going to die, but I didn't have a clue because I was so out of it. That was my outcome after two years of drinking heavily."

Inspire Lancashire helped Charlotte to get into rehab when she was discharged from hospital, and her relationship with the service has remained strong ever since.

She says the team supported her to stop drinking gradually, as going 'cold turkey' would have most likely killed her.

The service is geared towards helping people tackling their drug and alcohol use by reducing or removing substances from people's lives.

For Charlotte, she's hoping to raise awareness of addiction and inspire others to ask for help if they're struggling with their own journeys.

Charlotte is now hoping to get to a year of sobriety, with a long-term goal of full-time employment.

Benedict Tetzlaff-Deas

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