Colonel Mustard
Well-known member
- Jun 18, 2023
- 2,240
For the first time ever I tried - and succeeded - abstaining from alcohol through January this year. Result? I feel a lot better for it, healthier and more clear headed, so have decided to continue with it through February. After that? Who knows, it could become permanent. Anyone else in this position? Or who tried but failed miserably? Or who did it but was relieved to start boozing again on Feb 1st?
Here are a few random thoughts, and reasons why I think I've managed it well so far --
Here are a few random thoughts, and reasons why I think I've managed it well so far --
- For the first time ever, in December I gave a lot of thought to my relationship with alcohol. Like most regular drinkers, I've never considered myself an alcoholic but I've become more aware that I drink out of habit more than anything. I'm a bit of a wine buff and have plenty of decent stuff in storage, so my excuse for years is that it's a hobby as much as a compulsion. This reasoning has started to wear thin though. I've increasingly had to accept that alcohol was delivering diminishing returns.
- Money wasn't the principal reason for taking a break but it certainly strengthens the case for abstinence. When preparing for Dry January I calculated how much money I was spending on booze, and was surprised. Perhaps a little shocked. Now that it's commonplace to pay for everything with a debit card it becomes easy to see how much you're spending on what. I stuck last year's expenditure in a spreadsheet and categorised everything. Alcohol was costing at least around £100 a week, or £5K a year. That might sound like a lot of booze but it really isn't to an habitual drinker. I was going to the pub a maximum of twice a week and usually having 4 pints each time (£40). About four bottles of wine a week (£35-40). Then the occasional meal out with the cost of a restaurant bottle of wine (£20-40). Plus, there is always a bottle gin in the sideboard which seemed to get replenished at least once or twice a month, especially when we have visitors. It soon adds up.
- I'm in my mid-sixties which I think has made it easier. As you age you get more health conscious, and are under a bit more pressure to reassess how you treat your body.
- We've been back in East Sussex for only a couple of years, and we live in a different town to previously. So I don't have a long-established social life that revolves around drinking. If I'd been going to the local pub or social club every weekend for 20 years, it would be a harder habit to break.