by Brad Bollenbach

Update (Sep 4, 2010): Due to the overwhelming, and ongoing popularity of this post (over 22,000 comments and counting!), I’ve recently started working on a new tool to make tracking and sharing your progress quitting drinking a whole lot easier and more fun.

It’s called Quitfest. Please feel free to check it out!

Lonely Drunk

There are better things in life than alcohol, but alcohol makes up for not having them.

– Terry Pratchett

My maternal grandparents were both alcoholics. It’s for this reason that I can’t remember my grandpa’s funeral: I was only four. This is also why my grandma has meticulously avoided alcohol for over 20 years. If there’s anything to the rumours about alcoholism being influenced by heredity, I’m probably tagged.

My own consumption patterns change. Sometimes I’ll go through periods of several months having three or four drinks, three to five times a week. Sometimes I’ll restrict my consumption to social occasions. For about five months starting last December, in my quest to master the art of talking to strangers, my social life became two full-time jobs. I was constantly going out to social events, clubs, bars, museum parties, and everything in between. Despite temptation, I rarely drank.

Last month, I quit drinking alcohol again. I’d like to tell you that it was a struggle. I’d like to pretend that it’s almost impossible to stay sober at a social occasion where everyone else is burping bubbles. I’d like to imagine myself as more determined and disciplined than all the rest, and that’s what pulled me through.

But the truth is that I’m ruthlessly normal. And if you want to end your relationship with alcohol, right here, right now, It’s Not That Hard.

I’m guessing that most people who choose to quit drinking are not alcoholics. My intent is to offer here an action plan that anyone can apply, whether you’re nursing an addiction or just want to enjoy the benefits of uninterrupted sobriety.

Why Stop Drinking?

The long-term effects of bad habits are rarely sufficient to motivate people to change their lives. The near-term benefits of giving up alcohol are much more useful and interesting anyway. Here are the changes I experienced:

  • Productive socializing. Talking to strangers is a great way to build character, but its benefits are greatly reduced when you’re drunk. The alcohol represses much of the social anxiety, which inhibits lasting change. But the only thing more terrifyingly fun than getting drunk and meeting a bunch of new people is staying sober and meeting a bunch of new people.
  • Avoid the McPilgrimage. Clearly, there’s a conspiracy between the fast food industry and the liquor industry. Free will collapses under the weight of insobriety and convenience. With enough alcohol in your system, even the most wretched burger joint becomes an irresistible sanctuary.
  • Reclaim lost time. Let’s say you have a few drinks around the house, three times a week, and that light touch of drunkenness costs you three hours of productive thinking each time. Within one year, you’ll have shaved about one full month off your life. That’s a lot of lost CPU time that could have been put towards reading a book, writing a speech, playing a sport, or even starting a business. And this doesn’t even count the time lost waiting for your brain to resolidify the morning after a night on the town.
  • Get rich quickly. You don’t have to party that hard to spend $100-$150/week or more on alcohol and related expenses. If you quit drinking today, you could reasonably expect to convert that choice into a bankroll for backpacking around the world in about six months.
  • Become an early riser. I’m currently readjusting my sleep schedule to wake up at 5:30 AM, seven days a week. Alcohol, and the lifestyle that often accompanies it, work against this process. Alcohol makes me feel tired when I want to feel energetic and awake. Ironically, it also increases wakefulness during sleep.

You can probably think of other instantly gratifying benefits to life beyond the bottle. The important thing is to actually have a reason that is important enough to you.

Make It Priority Number One

Giving up alcohol is one of the easiest and hardest changes you can make in your life.

It’s easy once you’ve established the right rules, configured your environment to support you, and set up useful boundaries of pain and pleasure to help direct you towards your goal. The hard parts are the social implications and fighting off the One Man Army that is your ego, with its barrage of self-limiting beliefs and drink requests.

Giving up alcohol must be made priority number one in your life. A partial commitment is a commitment to failure. Even if you already don’t drink that often, it will be tempting to break your own rules when your friends call you up and invite you out. You’ve got to be willing to prioritize this decision in every situation where it’s relevant, even when that means Just Saying No to pub night.

It’s Not a Big Deal

Ever notice how some people act as though the end of their relationship is the end of the world? It’s as if there’s no point in living if they can’t be with that person any longer. Yet other people come along and date that person who left them, eventually break up with them, and see it as hardly more than a blip on the radar.

You may feel that it’s pretty easy to give up drinking. Or you may feel that it’s an addiction with a stranglehold on your life. Either way, there is no inherent magnitude to this task. It’s as big or as small as you make it.

No matter how much you want to tell yourself how hard it is, nobody’s ever going to claim that learned helplessness was the secret to their success. The most effective way forward is to not only make quitting drinking a top priority, but to think, talk, and act like it can be done.

Become the Impartial Spectator

Whether you view it as a spiritual separation, or merely conceptual, we all have more than one self. There’s the “Mmmmm…beeeer…” self, and the impartial spectator that can detach from and observe this desire.

Let the latter voice be your authority. You’re allowed to want a drink as much as you’re allowed to choose not to have one. There’s tremendous power in observing your thoughts as a third party. The impartial spectator can feel the heat without getting burned.

When in doubt, let it be there. No matter how bad the storm seems, it will pass.

Commit to 30 Days

If you’ve never done it before, it can be hard to think of giving up drinking forever. It’s discouraging to commit to permanent change, only to back out a few days or weeks into it. Some people will face social friction and lifestyle changes for which they’re unprepared.

But life is a laboratory. It’s an adventure that takes shape through hypothesis and experimentation, and most decisions can be reverted. When it comes to making big changes like this, live before you leap. Promise yourself that you will commit to this 100%, but only for 30 days, and see how it goes.

This is exactly what I did last month. I promised myself that November would be alcohol-free, and it was. Truth be told, I had a few drinks on day 31. But I broke the negative pattern that was creeping up on me and gained back the energy to spend on more important activities. And I’ve repeatedly proven to myself that I can give up alcohol whenever I feel like, whenever it seems like the right thing to do.

Dump Your Existing Stash

Any goal that’s important to you is important enough to start on right now. My 30-day challenge to give up alcohol started at about 3:00 AM on a Saturday morning. I had just gotten back from a post-nightclub McPilgrimage with some friends. I had a great time. I met lots of people. I even ended up dating a girl I met that night.

But I was really annoyed by how much I’d poured into me that night, at succumbing to the resulting Big Mac temptation, and at how much I was going to regret the hangover. As soon as I got home, the challenge was on. I had one last beer in my fridge, which I ceremoniously poured down the kitchen sink.

If you’re serious about doing this, get rid of your alcohol. If you’ve got $300 worth of spirits in your cabinet and you’re not yet sure if you want to empty it all down the drain, only to change your mind in 30 days, then store it at a friend’s place during your probation period. Preferably a friend that doesn’t drink.

Advertise Your Decision

I told most of my friends about what I was doing. Not only only does this add accountability to your goal, it also drops the hint that if your friends are planning on going out and getting wasted, you’re probably not interested.

Of course, you don’t have to avoid social situations where you’ll be the only one not drinking. I’ve gone out stone sober many times–even on my own–and met loads of people. Once you get used to social skydiving, you no longer need alcohol’s permission to talk to strangers and have a good time. You can get to that place by either getting hammered out of your face, or by learning to just not care what other people think. Frankly, the latter is way more fun.

Fire Your Drinking Buddies

Alcohol may be so tightly integrated into your social life that it seems almost impossible to go an entire weekend without drinking. If the only thing you have in common with your friends is that you like the same lagers, you might want to consider finding new friends.

I’ve let go of people in my social circle before and I know it’s not easy–but that doesn’t make it unnecessary. This might be the hardest thing you do in choosing a life without alcohol. The key is to remember that friends are an abundant resource. Having a strong social circle is purely a function of the effort you invest into it. That includes choosing to associate only with people who are aligned with your purpose, while avoiding the energy vampires.

This is another benefit of a 30-day commitment. Instead of permanently downsizing your social life, you can choose to be busy only for the next few weeks. Observe how it affects you when you stop spending time with your beer buddies. Join a local user group for something you’re interested in to bring yourself into contact with people with whom you share more than just a bar tab.

Bribe Yourself

I haven’t used this specific technique for giving up alcohol, but I have used it with much success in bulldozing my way through a wall of social anxiety.

Associate massive pain to backing out. To create that pain, visit your nearest bank machine. Withdraw an amount of money that you’d feel uncomfortable losing. Give it to a friend you trust. Tell them that you get your money back if, and only if, you don’t have a drop of alcohol until your 30 days are up. You’ll be surprised at how even the most difficult tasks become doable when you associate massive pain to breaking your own rules. Money can be a great way to make it hurt. If you can think of an even better form of self-bribery, go for it.

The stronger you feel that alcohol is a part of your life, the more of these techniques you may want to apply. My most recent alcohol-free challenge didn’t require bribery or letting go of any friends. But I did find it extremely useful to limit the challenge to 30 days, to give myself permission to live the lifestyle before leaping to a permanent decision.

I also think that making this a top priority is key, no matter what your current consumption habits. It’s so easy to let yourself slip for just one night, and then feel guilty about breaching your own contract later on.



Comments
  1. dodger says:

    Dee, and all

    My greatest fear comes when I read others comments like Dee’s about how you quit ones summer and now you are confronted again with the same problem. What made you go back then?

    I am still unsure if forever is what I need, but I do believe I could do forever… do I want to? Or is that just rationalization for drinking. I do miss it, but less and less every day. It is almost fun being the quy who was smart enough to know when to quit. (Never worrying about a cop on the road is nice too )

    I have a 54 yr old brother who was a corp professional up until 12 months ago when his liver shut down. He is now on a list for a transplant, and lives a retired life like a man 20 yrs his elder. If that isn’t motivation for me, I dont know what is. Everytime the phone rings from back east, I fear the worst.

    Gotta run… keep up the sucess all.

  2. Dee says:

    I had my first black out and I got scared. I had just separated from the kids father and had 101 issues as big as the universe so I thought… I started drinking..funny he started me drinking…

    I got so scared when i blacked out that the next day I went to AA..for a summer I was free of alcohol…. I started back again when I started back hanging out. I thought ok I can control it..I did for awhile that was 2001 until about 2 or 3 rys ago.

    I am feeling good today that I have not picked it up again…

    like I say I will go as far as my will will take me..

    I am smiling this am

    and hope that everyone else is too

  3. j says:

    i feel very uncomfortable even posting this…but this blog may well save me from myself…as a heavy drinker for the past 4 years, i am finally sick of the toll it is taking on my life…i am only 29…today is day 4 of my 30 (and hopefully longer) days…

    just reading other people’s posts will help me get through each day…this is the hardest thing i have ever done…

  4. dodger says:

    J…

    You will get through this with flying colors. Fact is, if you did not want to suceed, you would not be here. That being said, that fact that you do want to suceed is all you need to do so. One day at a time, is all it takes.

    we will be pulling for you, and be sure to check in. It’s nice to know we are not alone in our process.

    Dodger

  5. Dee says:

    JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ

    welcome…

    hang in there…

    please post anytime u want… and u can email me for support too… I find that these posts help a lot…

    I go back and re read them to stay sane.. and know that u are not aloneeeeeeeeeee

    Dee

  6. Jebadiah says:

    Good day ladies and Gents..

    I have a particular problem.. I work out of town currently and have done so throughout my habitual abusive period. So like dodger said, it’s remove yourself from the situation. There’s a bar right down the hall and some 20 right across town, but I havent gone to any in 3 days. It’s always been easy to go there for wing night cause your sucked in for 5 cent wings. (yeah its really true, and they are pretty good) So it’s been food in the room for me.. Not take out but pickup or store bought.. All is cool. I just stated a new job and my head is clear as can be.. Picking stuff up and motivated to make it better. Not to mention I have a relationship that is half in the dirt that i’m attempting to salvage..

    Chickie!

  7. Jebadiah says:

    I forgot to add something that is kind of Sad.. Umm.. Last year when I quit for a short period of time just because I wanted to try it out.. I was used to waking up at 5-6 AM and suffering through a hangover that was soon to be dreaded being a blue collar outdoor worker. I was used to it and that first Saturday when I wasnt working it was drink all night and wake up late..

    That first saturday I had when I was not drinking, I woke up.. Looked at my girl (which doesnt happen when your trowing on clothes with a headache).. and said out loud.. Holy shit.. I feel good.. it was early and i probably made breakfast.. But that’s a good feeling that noone realizes would be good. Party on fridays is a rule evidently and I followed that religiously.

    But a year later.. I still remember that saturday!

    Try it! I did sit at the bar and drink coke while my girlfriend drank, many of times during that period. So it’s possible.

    For those of you TRYING the 30 days.. I was three weeks into my mission and I said.. I am going to try to drink some beers.. I sat on the couch and drank a 6 pack.. I then stopped on the feeling to reflect upon it.. I felt like my eyes were obviously a bit blurred and my mind was muffled..
    I did not start drinking again after that for a while.. and was back on the wagon..

    So if your doing well.. your better off not doing it.. or you’ll just end up here again.

    Jed

  8. dodger says:

    Last night we took a first place in our race, and as you can imagine the party was huge for us. My crew was dancing in the aisles. (figuratively not literally) Ironically, other than that initial desire to rase a toast to the crew, it was no big deal without alcohol. People have come to understand and no longer push or suggest I have a drink.

    Made it through another big test.

  9. brian says:

    I’ve drinking twice to three times a week for the past 10 years pretty much . Everytime I drink i get completly wasted . I want to quit drinking very badly but i am never able to do it . My lady of 5 years is inches away from leaving me due to excessive drinking and im close to losing a good job over it . All of your comments have helped me alot . I just dont know how to do this . Im stuck

  10. dodger says:

    Brian,

    I have a suggestion. SInce you say you drink only 2-3 time a week ( yet in excess ) I suggest you make a commitment to go 1 week with any drinks. Thats all, 1 week, 7 days. That would be only 2-3 times missed. After that week, see how you feel. See if you can go another week, maybe even two.

    You will find that the idea of quiting entirely, or for an extended period of time is alot more intimidating right now, than it will be in a few weeks of not drinking. If you can go a week or two, it will help you look at it more clearly.

    Can you make that much of a commitment. 1 week?

    Dodger

  11. brian says:

    Yes i think I can make it a full week

    Whats happens and I’m sure this is for most people is BOREDOM!! . I work a 6 – 230pm job and after work theres this local bar a block from me and I’m in a situation where I pay for pretty much nothing .. All the bartenders are my friends or girlfriends to my friends so it’s very convenient to just go there and stay way too long and stumble my worthless ass home

    I need some new hobbies to take up my time or something

    I will try 7 days first like you said and keep you posted on the results . I dont remember the last time i went a full seven days with no booze ..yikes

  12. Norm says:

    With my drinking I’ll probably be dead soon. I once had a wonderful wife I married when I was 35 and she was 24. I was her night and shining armor as a successful business owner. Heck, I was once a very good looking guy, when I worked out 4 to 5 times weekly, did all sorts of outdoor sports and watched my eating 24-7. I had it all. A young beautiful wife, nice home in the suburbs, wonderful family and friends. Then it happened. My older brother Don killed himself. The best friend I ever had. Don intrigued everyone he met. His charm, caring nature and incredible mind meant the world to me and a lot of other people. Yet, nobody knew Don suffered from severe depression and he took is own life. I blame myself for not seeing his cry for help. I just don’t understand why and it has driven me to the bottle ever since. I tried counseling, depression pills, everything. The only way I can cope is to drink a 12 pack of beers or more every night with a bottle of jack. My once shredded body of 6% bodyfat has turned to all flab. My wife is gone and I don’t blame her. I’d get so drunk at night I could no longer make love to her. I yelled at her for dumb things. I’m losing my business. My family has called me a loser. I went from a $450,000 home to living in a studio apartment in a slum area of Boston. Don’t let this happen to you – PLEASE! It may be too late for me. But I hope this message can save at least one person. I love you Don.

  13. brian says:

    I am very glad i ran into this aite . I think that this will help me through my problem . Im not the type of person that can bring myself to AA meetings because the majority of the people inthose meanings are wackos . I cant be around that kind of environment (no offence to any1 attending these meetings it could just be the local AA meetings in my town) This is my new online AA meeting . Im gonna check this site everyday and if any1 has any kind of advice to help me it is greatly appreciated . Thanks dodger im starting this 7 day thing today . Wish me luck .

    Norm im very sorry for your loss and your current situation . I hope to god that doesnt happen to me but reading what you wrote really opened my eyes of the road im going down . Good luck buddy

    brian

  14. brian says:

    (can not bring myself )

    (Meetings)

    spelt those 2 things wrong

  15. dodger says:

    Norm,

    Never too late for anyone. You can change your life starting today. Rebuilding what you once had ( provided that actually made YOU happy ) is so much easier than doing for the first time. I am in my mid 40’s,.. If I knew then what I know now, I couldbe a millionaire by teh time I was 30.

    Just take charge of your life. It’s your for teh asking. Commit to 30 days, 14 days.. hell 72 hours. Just start and see where it gets you.

    You know what they say, most people don’t fail because they aim too high and miss… most people fail becasue they aim too low and hit.

    Dodger

  16. dodger says:

    Brian,

    Glad to hear you commit. Have fun with it. Watch the shock in peoples faces when you say, no thanks… I’m not drinking for a week, or I’m giving my liver a week off, or what ever else you are comfortable with.
    Personally, I just said, I’m not gonna drink any alcohol for the next 30 days… they always say what happens in 30 days? My response has been, I am either gonna throw one hell of a party or take another 30 days off, and I’m not gonna decide that until the 30 days has come.
    Good luck, and check in often…

  17. dodger says:

    Dee,

    How are you doing?

  18. Nene says:

    Hello,
    I discovered this website a little over a month ago and couldn’t bring myself to talk on it. I was actually looking for answers on alcoholism, which I couldn’t find. I’m sure something is out there but I just wanted to know improvements I will see in my physical appearance if I can get off the booze. For example when you go on a diet and you notice things getting tighter, the needle going down on the scale, more daily energy and ect. I figured if I was going to make it through rehab, then I needed something more then my liver and body isn’t dieing. If I gave a shit about that I would have stopped this years ago. Anyway I guess I should introduce myself. I will call myself Nene and I started drinking when I was 12 years of age. I liked to binge drink when I was under 18 but I guess that was bc it was harder to get my hands on alcohol everyday. At 18 I joined the Military and the fun began. As fate would have it I was stationed at the largest drinking places in the service. Its funny that I say “fate” bc I have notice that I always have a place to point the blame and its not my fault. Of course at the time I didn’t realize the downward spiral I was headed to. I worked myself up to 2-3 bottles of wine or over a half a bottle of 80% vodka, a night but no beer. I don’t like beer. It makes me fill full so I can’t drink as much. I can’t stand the smell of Jack but that is bc of past experiences. I guess that could be another chapter in my adolescent life if anyone is interested but I doubt it. I feel stupid talking about this bc as I say “everyone has a story”. I convinced myself that I’m not really drinking that much. In most confession alcoholics say they drink at least a bottle of liquor a night so I am not a alcoholic. Whatever I could come up with that day to believe that I wasn’t wrong and that would also give me an excuse to be able to drink that night. After reading some of yours I thought I would try to share mine. Anyway that is all I will write for now. I can feel myself getting the inch by talking about this, so I will go. I wish everyone luck as their long foggy morning begins and depending on when they have to head to work their lonely night soon becomes to an end. We sure do make the best out of it don’t we? In my world of delusion I am rocken on! and everything is better than I will accept. I guess I’m babbling so I won’t torcher you anymore. I apologize if anything I wrote offends anyone. I’m not saying what I have convinced myself is true. I am merely trying to enplan to myself my world of denial. I guess it helps if I write this stuff down. I don’t feel like I am talking to the voices in my head trying to tell me the truth.

  19. BRIAN says:

    Nene

    Whether you drink everynight or you drink 3 nights a week I dont think it really matters . Your an alcoholic and so am I . I cant drink consecutive days because i drink so much beer and jagar and whatever other shots are being passed around on that night that i cant even get out of bed for the whole next day . Im on my second day sober today and its the worst day of the week . Friday !! Payday !! These are the days i must stay strong and keep myself out of harms way . This is when im at my weakest . Hopefully I make it

    anyway im 32 years old and have been drinking since highschool .. These last 5 years its been a regular routine to be the drunkest person at any bar or party I go to . I am a happy drunk though most of the time though thats what makes it so hard for me .. I have alot of fun and get along with every1 very well whenim drinkin .. So anywho I dont even think i answered any questions or commented on anything you said but im just babblin away .. Alright well back to work ..

  20. Nene says:

    Thank you for replying. If you don’t mind me asking does you “Lady” know you are trying for 7 days? And have you prepared for this? What is your work schedule?

  21. Dee says:

    Dodgerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

    I am a pocketfull of sun shine this morning

    I am doing good and I am proud of myself…despite …

    I did not crave it this week like I have the past few weeks…

    Today is Friday and I am not even thinking about it as much as before. I quit resenting my partner for being able to drink..it isn’t her fault after all

    You know I see a difference in the color of my eyes too…

    they are yellowish, tirey looking eyes…

    they are white and filled with hope… feeels good

    today I am doing great… one day at a time…

    your advice helps a lot Dodger..thanks a bunchhhh off to read the new posts

  22. Dee says:

    Congrats on taking 1st Place Dodge… and for leaving the spirits alone..smile

  23. Dee says:

    Nene………

    As far as changes in your body….

    I have lost weight YESSSSSSS..gosh that was all I needed to do to loose that extra pound.. Quit drinking…

    well……

    I would say about 7 pounds… last time I cheked was 5….over a week and half ago…

    My eyes are yellow anymore… my energy is different specially when i am not being sad about my situation with alcohol…

    I can actually make sense of what I say, I haven’t argued like I use to after a night of drinking with my partner…

    As far as inside changes. I don’t know…hopefully my liver has restored itself back to normal…

    it just feels different.. I do get times when it is hard and i get sad..but the good moods over ride the bad ones.. the lovely feeling of weaking up and not having a hang over is beautifulll….

    Nene don’t apologize… thanks for posting and expressing yourself.. it starts somewhere…

    ur noticing..

    you posted what everyone else has said to themselves or thought of themselves etc…

    Dani

  24. Dee says:

    and that was THEY ARENT YELLOW AND TIREY ANYMORE..LOL

    spell check in need lol

  25. Dee says:

    Brian Hang in there……….

    congrats on your first few days..

    Dee

  26. Dee says:

    J and Je, shanan and Mitch everyone how are u all doing…?

    Dee

  27. Dee says:

    Dodger..How are u doing this week?

  28. Nene says:

    I’m doing better than I ever have. I couldn’t chat on this site because I couldn’t take hearing about drinking all the time. It made me want to drink. I have waited years to do this and was never really sure if I would. I quit my job of 12 yrs. I paid 6 months advance for an apartment away from the few people I haven’t pushed away. My significant other was sent off to school for 2 months. I bought all the alcohol I could before he left bc its rationed. Drank for days only pausing to pass out until it was gone. After indulging myself in that wonderful life filling experience I stopped. I am in a foreign country and the gas is more ridiculous than the states. So I drove it out of my car. This way I have to get out and move some. I haven’t spoke to my family or anyone until this site. My boyfriend has no idea this is happening. I am so proud of myself but I am becoming very lonely and I am scared of him coming home. I don’t really know how to act. I guess that sounds dumb and I know I’m the same person but I’m not. Thank you for your comments. I am in a strange place right now. I have no idea why I just want to cry. I should be happy.

  29. BRIAN says:

    nene

    No my lady doesnt know what im doing . I just told her im trying to change some things . It seems when i tell people what im doing i fail everytime so im just keeping it to myself . She wont believe me anyway . Ive failed over and over and over . It may be too late to save my relationship but as far as I go i know what i need to do to save myself . So this will be my first sober weekend in years . Im nervous and feel very weak right now but im gonna go home after work and hit the weights and try and wear myself out so im too tired to leave my house . Kinda sad right?

  30. dodger says:

    Brian,

    NOT SAD AT ALL… Sad is going to the bar, like you have so many times before. Hurting yourself, your relationship… your mind. That would be sad.
    Working out, not sad. That is exciting. I am no exercise guru, but if that motivates you, go for it. You will feel so good doing it.

    So today is my 3 week anniversary. I have attended many social events, no problem yet. Today, however, my wife is out of town on a business trip, I close my firm early on fridays and my typical friday routine is a long lunch, with a few sailing buddies ceremonialy downing a couple bottle of wine and waxing poetic about lst weeks race. So like many have said befor me here, my enemy today is time and boredom. I have nothing else I “have” to do.

    My accountability is 0… gonna be a tough afternoon.

    dodger

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