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. Gypsie says:

    ACH-good luck, I hope the job fair has a very nice surprise for you-fingers crossed!!! and for me too, though I won’t be there ..but anyway. No St Patty’s celebration for me other than I’m cooking a corn beef brisket for tomorrow -ummm- can’t handle the bar scene-I’m afraid I’d have to drink just to deal with the dumbies overdoing the moment-your(everyone that posts)friends excuded-haha-whatever you chose, HAVE FUN and THE LUCK OF THE IRISH BE WITH US ALL. there, that’s all-feeling tired …

  2. mj says:

    ACH:: In the early going, good idea to go a little incognito and stay clear ‘of things’. Congrats on the (tomorrow) two weeks!!.

    ps. just seems like a lot of us old timers always around, cause it ‘does seems’ like we’re the only ones around :)

  3. TW says:

    Well ending day 2….
    I hope everyone is doing good.

    TW

  4. Peppermint says:

    Long day but still find I need to check in.
    ..
    I am glad I won’t drinking green beer tomorrow..It just turns your tongue green and makes you feel weird because it is a green liquid. Who really wants to drink something green? I think of it as alien beer. Yuck..
    ..
    I know…. I am in one of those giddy moods.

    Talking about old timers I guess you know me well enough by now to know how silly/???>>> I can be at times.
    ..
    Any how’s- Have a great every week everyone. Happy St. Patrick’s Day.

    Peppermint

  5. JAM says:

    This is such an obvious question, but I figure you Veterans can provide some good tips. I generally have no desire to drink during the week, but Friday night I have not found an alternative to drinking in order to “reward” myself after a hard day. Fridays, I generally feel like relaxing and socializing with people, but I don’t want to be in a bar. Any suggestions? Thanks to all of you for all you do and say here.

  6. Jennifer says:

    good morning everyone. its been awhile! it was hard to read these posts when i started drinking again. im on day one and so tired. tired of everything. tired of drowning my sorrows in a bottle of wine. lately its been 2 bottles. i woke up thinking, how did i get here. everytime i drink i feel guilty! i do believe i said that in december to everyone when i had my heart set on not drinking anymore. and then i gave up, just said screw it. i dont even know why! all i know is everyone here was so wonderful to me and it was good to read some posts from familiar names. i do believe i am ready to give this my all and i want it so bad!

  7. TW says:

    Day 3 here! I went 11 days and drank one day, and now back to day 3. I feel good, just tired a lot. I didn’t like how I felt that day afterwards, so I keep thinking about that.

    Jennifer, we are all with you. Keep up the good work.

    TW

  8. key says:

    Wow, I can’t believe I consciously decided to drink last night. I somehow thought I could manage the emotional consequences, but wow, was I wrong! I found out from a friend with terrible heart problems that alcohol is a cardiac stimulant and that when it makes your heart race that sends a signal to your brain that SOMETHING IS WRONG!!! That racing heart causes me to have really bad panic attacks that are not in my head at all! They are physiologically generated and can only be stopped by getting the alcohol out of my system. I used to exercise regularly and participate in a track club and a health club so my heart rate was low and I would drink with no ill effects. I stopped exercising regularly about 3 years ago and now I’m so out of shape that my heart cannot handle even a little alcohol. Why I thought I could talk myself down from a panic attack is beyond me now that I’m living in panic today. Sheesh, this is miserable and I CHOSE IT. That’s insane!

    I was so positive and so strong for the first 23 days that it is really hard to be back here now. Counting days really helps so here I go back at 1.

  9. key says:

    Jennifer, we can start today together.

  10. Johan says:

    Hey all! Balmy here again today! Happy St. Patrick’s day to all celebrating!

    ACH – I can assure you that you will stand out if you look hungover, and smelled of booze from the night before. Just be confident, and be yourself, employers are willing to take a chance, and sometimes overlook a detailed resume for people who have natural people sills.

    Gypsie – with you on the bar scene! Thise people talking with an extremely poor Irish accent, and who now have a good reason to get hammered mid week and not look like an alcoholic. And no, I never drank beer with food colouring in it! Green beer, that’s just not right!

    TW – hang in there!

    JAM – I was big on Friday I just really laid low, avoided certain trigger situations, and tried not to tease the alcohol brain. It was a task for sure. I would actually go to bed early sometimes cause it was easier than fighting it. Not sure what you are into but focus on hobbies, reading, and other things until you are comfortable enough to hit that social scene which almost always includes drinking it seems. Not much help, I know. For me it wasn’t magic, it is about changing my thinking, and that getting pissed every weekend should never associated with the word ‘reward’.

    Jennifer – welcome back! Sometimes we just say screw it because it seems like the easier, well worn path. The trail is comfortable while you walk on it, but the destination ends up being miserable.
    Why not try the path less travelled this time, I know you won’t regret it!!

  11. ACH says:

    Key…you can do it!!! Just remember each day you count is a day you will feel better than the last…

    St. Patrick’s Day is just a big old excuse to drink. I’m looking at pictures of my friends who have already started drinking and just keep imagining the big hang over they will have either later tonight or tomorrow….:)

    Day 14 everyone have a great day!!

  12. Jennifer says:

    Key, I think that is a great idea!

  13. Jennifer says:

    Johan, I agree..I was talking to my mom this morning..i didnt tell her anything about my frustration with drinking, we were talking about learning from mistakes our parents made instead of continueing the chain and my father was a hard core alcoholic. he had seizures everytime he tried to stop drinking. but we were talking about raising children and disipline techniques and she called me a chain breaker…i kinda liked that. my grandfather,great grandmother,father,great grandfather…all of them were hard core alcoholics…I would like that chain to break here and set that better example for my 3 kids. I pray they never feel like i have felt and how i feel today!

  14. key says:

    Had a long talk with my sister. She feels that her problem is with food. She is about as overweight as I am a drinker, which is worse than some but not nearly as bad as others…Our situations are more similar than we had realized and addiction thinking is just that, regardless of what the object of the addiction is. Truth be told, we are both single and have filled a void in our lives with a bad habit that is easier than dating. Do we ditch the habit and live with the void, or do we actively start to attempt to fill the void and actually MEET somebody?

  15. TW says:

    Woo Hoo, I finished my taxes, now onto my checkbook…that’s even worse. When I drink I do not accomplish what I am supposed to. Maybe I can get ahead now.

    TW

  16. Gypsie says:

    Yep Key, exactly- I’ve been ready this self-help book called “Feel the Fear and Do it Anyway by Susan Jeffers and that’s her advice to the reader-rather than let the fear of doing something paralyze you, let the fear move you into action.

  17. Peppermint says:

    Key-
    I recall a recent post by Martha who was checking in after a few months. She described how she decided to take charge of her weight and joined Weight Watchers. She then decided to run during the peak hour of wanting to drink. She felt well after the run and after all the hard work that she had been doing she did not want to drink and spoil it. (Thanks Martha)

    I had to find other activities that did not center around alcohol. The void is the alcohol..
    It creates the void…You take it away and build a new foundation, a new structure, a new way of thinking and doing. If possible veer you car to the gym after work or you walk in the door and put on your walking shoes and take you kids with you..whatever it takes to break the routine..
    It’s a bad routine. Change it.

  18. Peppermint says:

    We are prisoner’s of and to alcohol. Until you remove it from your life you will always be questioning your actions and reactions and doubting yourself. It steals from you.

  19. Gypsie says:

    Yes Pep, so true. It is a thief of happiness, beauty, health, and possibilities and lists goes on and on -of all the good stuff.

  20. Johan says:

    Jennifer – then do it! Break the cycle so your kids will never have to go through it. You can do it if you want it bad enough!!! We will help out any way we can! Go for it!

    Key – I am with Peppy on this one, the alcohol creates the colossal void from little bits of doubt we naturally carry! Get rid of it, the voids will backfill.

  21. mj says:

    Johan:: great metaphor on the ‘voids will backfill’. Sh*t, things couldn’t be better right now, but when you climb on (top of) and fire up the virtual backhoe (drunk) look out for where you might push all that dirt to. Might lay a little low for now, but will still be reading and checking in (after the spewing) of late.

  22. Peppermint says:

    mj-What spewing?
    You don’t talk of green tongues and aliens.
    The void is a hole, the backhoe fills it and then a mountain begins and that is when we start to climb.

    I am looking forward to the movie you and Scout were discussing and well your Dillon was just right on. Studied that boy and a couple of others for an entire semester. Pure wit you are.

    See you at the TWITS. We need the backhoe as soon
    as you can bring it. Got to start filling some holes.

  23. Peppermint says:

    And one other thing..
    I enjoyed your discussion regarding photography.
    What a wonderful gift to give yourself when you see the world differently. Child’s eyes….
    Carry On….
    I am Irish and posting a lot cause I can’t partake and away from home..it is hard.but not that hard. Gonna find the work out room. It
    is suppose to have all the fanciest equipment.
    Heard tell Jane Fonda was here once. Probably see a drunkin’ Lepracon on the way back .(Spelling please)

  24. Val says:

    I’m still reading several times a day and struggling mightily. My biggest problem in the past has been quitting it for 3 or 4 days, then falling back and feeling horrible. I know myself and when I fail, I lose faith and I can’t lose my faith in this island so I don’t want to make a half hearted commitment.

    Peppermint, Gypsie, Johan, mj, key, Faith, Scout, River Rat and all the veterans, you are my strength. Jennifer, JAM, TW, ACH, you are my inspiration, keep it up, hopefully, I’ll be right behind you.

    Love to all.

    “If you don’t love yourself, you cannot love others. You will not be able to love others. If you have no compassion for yourself then you are not able of developing compassion for others.” ~Dalai Lama

  25. ACH says:

    Day 14 finished!…. I was thinking today how real this is to me. The longest I’ve gone without drinking is a year ago I went 37 days and only because I was in a bad car accident (which caused a rare stroke because of a blood clot in my neck). 7 years ago I had to quit for 30 days (very difficult even then) and it was because of a medication I was taking. So for the past 10 years I’ve not stopped drinking on my own for more than 7 days. I told myself I didn’t have a problem and could stop at anytime. Then my drinking became worse… blackouts, angry, crying drunk spells. The wake up call was recently when I woke up with puke all over me. My girlfriend told me that I threw up all over myself and she had to clean it and me up. I didn’t remember a thing…. wow….

    This is real and I along with all of you are battling everyday to beat it… I want to thank everyone here for helping me so far… I will beat it!!!

    Take care

  26. Carol says:

    Hi Islanders; RR I was sorry to read about you losing your mom – I hope those months of caring for her helped you in building memories for the rest of your life and in appreciating yourself for giving her her last home on this earth

    Key, thanks for watching the Ireland show for me while I experienced it and thank you for sharing with me your feeling way back that I carried with me around Ireland and read when I needed it – I knew the desire for a beer was a demon wish and yet that euphoria that we get in anticipation of drinking feels so good but I would not allow myself to go there because that is very hard to resist so at times I thought I was missing the good times but really always was and still am glad I did not drink – it is a tradeoff and I think, at least for me, it always will be a tradeoff

    my dogs are very happy to be sprung from the doggie hotel – Ireland is all that and more – to continue on about the struggle with drinking all around me: yes I wished I could just have a “real Guinness” everyone said it tastes nothing like the Guinness we get in the States but I did not even taste it – twice I had a Beck’s n/a that is all the n/a they had at the places I was when I asked for a beer with no alcohol and it really satisfied me – I drank lots of tea and I had a wonderful time and will go again in a heartbeat – I got to kiss the Blarney Stone on my birthday and it was a very moving thing for me and the man who helps hold us was told it was my birthday and he gave me a rock from the castle wall after getting me up

    ir will take awhile to get back in mediocrity and that is OK because I will keep reliving bits of the trip over the next few days and so on

    Keep On Keeping On everyone and believe the statement the Dalai Lama said about loving and having compassion for yourself before you can have these qualities for others and the “Feel the Fear and Do it Anyway” I have taken on as a philosophy a number of years ago and it helps to say that and say it out loud when you need to give yourself a push

    off to bed at 3 AM here – the biological clock is really screwed up!

    STAY love, carol xoxoxo

  27. TW says:

    Hello and Happy Thursday,

    Well day 14 minus 1 for me…meaning I messed up once in the past two weeks.
    Actually today is day four tho. Last night I was craving, so went and watched TV whil lying on the couch. I didn’t crave as much then.

    I hope everyone is well.

    TW

  28. key says:

    My kids are treating me so bad. I hate it and it’s depressing.

  29. Gypsie says:

    I called out sick from my job that is soon to be done- I don’t care

  30. key says:

    So sorry for you postition. It is scary and depressing. Hope you can find a positive in this time.

Post a comment
Name: 
Email: 
URL: 
Comments: 
How do I add an image to my comments?

If you'd like to help support this site, please feel free to make a donation. I'd really appreciate it!