Staying alcohol free — reflection on some challenges

Yesterday, I wrote in celebration of being alcohol free for twelve months.
Today, more soberly, I’m going to share some of the challenges in doing so, at least as I experienced them. This can’t be definitive, for everyone will take a different path — but I hope it’s a thoughtful reflection that will resonate with others, whether they’ve ‘taken the pledge’ themselves, or are supporting someone who’s giving it a go.
For me, there are four major challenges that come to mind — roughly speaking, they were experienced sequentially, but not entirely so, and one year on, all of them remain prescient in some form or other.
Sun’s over the yardarm…
The first challenge is simply to overcome the habit of drinking.
Anyone committing to a ‘dry january’ or ‘sober october’ will know what I mean. You don’t have to be an alcoholic to know that lip puckering feeling as the evening draws in and you settle down for a TV drama, or return from a stressful day at the office and head straight to the fridge.
It took me a good few weeks to lessen the habitual pangs, and even now the urge to have a drink can be triggered by association. As with smoking it’s often linked to time and place, so finding alternatives activities at peak times (I often went swimming) and avoiding obvious temptations like a big night out at the pub, will help to get you through.
For me, the ‘yardarm’ urges came in waves — and especially so in the first three months. At around about 100 days, there was a significant easing, and the other challenges were more likely to derail progress.
Couldn’t you just…
I’d suggest that nowadays, for almost anyone who gave up smoking, very few of their friends would temp them to ‘ have a puff…’ There’s a universal acceptance that smoking’s a habit worth kicking — if you succeed, then expect congratulations to flow and your advice to be sought by others.
Not so with alcohol.
One of the most sustained challenges all abstainers will face, is the tacit resistance it engenders. By the far the majority of those around me — be they friends, colleagues or even family — would rather I’d had the odd glass, joined in the fun, just drank at the weekend… almost anything but giving up for good.
Unlike with smoking, it seems our not drinking, mildly threatens the fact that they do. Those questioning might not see it that way — indeed many of them may genuinely worry you will miss out, or perhaps fear the loss of friendship based on shared experience — but deep down I think it’s true.
I realise that I too have been guilty of equivalent behaviour — one of my closest colleagues is vegetarian and it recently struck me that for years I badgered him to defend the logic of his decision. Why did I feel the need to do that I wonder?
I’ve read of people who, to deflect the constant questioning, falsely declare they are on a ‘charity challenge’ for a month… sometimes six months, or even longer. I can see why they might do so, but it all feels a bit temporary — the day you say otherwise, I’d bet all the Bacardi in Barbados that the questioning and suggestions will start again.
Ultimately, close friends do give you some slack; but the collective impact of what amounts to a widespread reluctance, verging on resistance, is real and substantial. I liken it to a gravitational pull — never beyond my strength, but always, inescapably, tugging away.
Those you care about most…
In counter-point to the resistance of others, is the need to maintain the relationships with those closest to you. With so much of our leisure time centred on — or at least associated with — alcohol, it’s naive to think there’s no impact or effort to be made.
The single biggest thing I miss as a non-drinker is not the nights out, the rush of spirits in my bloodstream, or even the taste of Chablis with oysters… it’s sitting down with Jane and sharing a bottle of plonk with a plate of nibbles and an episode of Poirot on the television. In fact, of all the challenges, this is the one that almost broke me — for these little impromptus are central to the pattern of our lives and relationships.
Similarly, my best and oldest friend used to love opening a few beers when I come round on a Sunday night. While I wouldn’t describe it as the highlight of his week, the truth is, my sipping tea doesn’t quite make for the same atmosphere. I get that, and it’s taken time — and real friendship — to come through.
Luckily, the people who pressured me the least, turned out to be those I hold closest. Nonetheless, I still invested more time in talking to them than others, acknowledging the downsides and lamenting the loss of some shared experiences — but also explaining that overall I was so much happier and healthier as a non drinker. And you know what: once you put it that way, almost everybody gets it.
Beyond a year…
I read somewhere, that in making any lifestyle change, twelve months is a seminal point in making a permanent change. Maintain a diet for a year and you’re more likely to keep the weight off — the same applies to ingraining the habit of regular exercise, and of course, to staying alcohol free.
So if you make it through a year, it’s no coincidence that one of the first the questions you’ll likely be asked, is what you’re going to do next?
The view I hear most — largely from those who say ‘couldn’t you just..’ — is that I should start again, taking confidence that after a year off the booze I could moderate my intake in future. It’s a sort of ‘hard reset’ hypothesis — that by abstaining for so long, staying within recommended guidelines would be a breeze.
The diametric position, as expressed by a friend who’s also stopped drinking this year, is to ask, why on earth would you go back? If you’re demonstrably happier, healthier and wealthier, then why restart behaviours that threaten all you’ve worked so hard to achieve?
It’s not an easy choice.
I’m not so ‘born again’ that I can’t see there are many joys in drinking that I must now miss out on — nor do do I fear a gradual slippage back to some imaginary nadir. That said, I’m conscious that I feel the best I have for years, and (perhaps perversely for someone who never suffered too badly from hangovers) I’ve come actually dread the thought of ever waking up with a thumping head and dry mouth again.
So at least for now, I’m staying off the booze.
In many ways that choice is driven by the simplicity of what’s required — total abstinence is a ‘bright line’ policy that’s easy to see and simple to follow. You just don’t cross it! Anything else — moderating to limits; sticking to high days and holidays; only drinking when in France — even if I were confident of success, would require a level of self awareness that’s grinding to maintain.
But in truth, there is more to it than that — and it’s something to do with ‘who’ I’ve become. After a year without booze I’ve started to think of myself not as someone who’s ‘giving up’, but as someone who doesn’t drink, full stop! Being a non-drinker has become part of my personal brand, and the fact is, I like that identity more than the one I had before.
I know that’s a touch didactic — and maybe at some point I’ll be up for a fuzzier path.
But for now I’ve had enough of challenges.