Common side effects of not drinking ..
- barishkumar samantaroy
- Feb 19, 2024
- 8 min read
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Over a year ago, someone shared with me this informative Ā about the effects of any amount of alcohol on your brain and body. Since I had just reached the wise age of thirty, otherwise known as the age when you have less fucks to give, I asked myself why I drank at all and what would happen if I stopped. And then I stopped.
You know how it goes from there. I felt great, I saved money, āI often regretted drinking but I never regretted not drinkingā and so on. Itās all true.
However, before that, since the first glass of wine that my parents gave me at 12, for the good 18 years of my life, I did regularly drink. Why?
BecauseĀ thatās what people do.
So, letās start by saying that when you stop drinking, people donāt know what to do with you.
The side effects of being sober
1) People
People will ask you why you donāt drink.
They react well if you respond honestly. They donāt react well if you reverse the question in return. Pro tip: you can do that if you donāt want them to speak to you for the rest of the party.
People will ask you for permission to drink.
Oh you donāt? Good for you! Would you mind if I had a beer though?Why would I?! Iāve just explained itās not because of a past addiction or an alcoholic parent. The only reason I see for this persistent question isā¦
People will think you are judging them.
If youāre sober not because of a problem, then it must be because you feel superior this way.Ā I choose not to drinkĀ meansĀ I understand the implications of alcohol on my behaviour tonight and on my health in the long term,Ā meansĀ Iām a responsible and mature person and you, in turn, are an idiot. Thatās how many drinkers will see you.
If weāre not all in this together, peopleās choices reveal themselves as choices and not as a default. Consequently, they think that you are judging them, when in reality they are faced with the need to evaluate their own behaviour for the first time.
People will stop inviting you to stuff.
They think itās because you wonāt enjoy yourself in a drinking crowd, so itās best to protect you from boredom. You think itās because they wonāt enjoy your boring presence and want to protect themselves from your judgement.
People will think you are less fun.
These last two points create a vicious circle. Or rather, a spiral of social exclusion for sober people. This ā is how you lose friends.
Sorry, maybe I shouldāve started off with that.
When you go sober, you will lose friends.
2) Friends
Will split into two groups. Those who will find ways to spend time with you without alcohol and those who will keep pressuring you. The second group will split into two groups. Those who stop seeing you and those who start drinking less, because being with you made them realise their own drinking behaviour.
Whether you like it or not, you will have an impact on your friends. Your choice will not come unnoticed, it will create ripples in your friendsā group, precisely because itās a choice and not the default, and one that rejects the fundamental way in which people connect.Each of the people that used to drink with you will now be faced with a new way of relating to a friend. They may or may not like their own sober interpretation of friendship.
My transition to alcohol-free socialising was easy because it coincided with moving to a new city. I simply made friends who were okay with me not drinking. Hence I have 2 friends .
When I lived in London, I used to hang out with a big group of people. Now when I come to visit, I see a couple of them, maybe a handful. Iāve realised that all the others were my party friends. To put it bluntly, I now see that I cannot stand them without alcohol.
Sorry, maybe I shouldāve added that.
When you lose friends, itās because youāll realise that without alcohol, they donāt have much in common with you.
That is, the new you.
3) You
Youāll behave differently.
Of course you will: youāll have removed a substance that influenced, even dictated your behaviour in many contexts and now youāll have to figure out what to do by yourself.
More than that, youāll have to face your sober personality, always. Youāll love the weight loss, the energy, the deep sleep, but this ā this you may not love.
You may, indeed, be less fun than you thought.
Youāll drink a lot of sparkling water.
This will be the ultimate fallback in any bar, restaurant or house party, unless you quit alcohol to get diabetes from Sprite and Fanta instead. Coke Zero is your other new friend, but not for the whole night, because chances are that if youāve been sensitive to the effects of alcohol, youāre sensitive to caffeine as well. And if youāre so caffeine insensitive that you can drink Coke Zero the whole night, then you have a different problem, becauseā¦
Youāll get tired.
I know youāre determined to prove everyone that youāre not less fun without alcohol, but they can see you yawn. Yes, itās obvious with your mouth closed, too. Youāre now the friend who asks if we can start at 7:30 instead of 8pm (it would be 7, if it was up to you). You need a little pick me up, it seems.
Youāll substitute for other substances.
Depending on your caffeine tolerance, Coke Zero either leaves you jittery or has no effect whatsoever. Unenthusiastically sipping your sparkling water,
you will long to change your consciousness, somehow. To hold and taste the essence of a party, the embodiment of fun.
Thatās how I started liking cigarettes, and would probably be a social smoker now if my doctor didnāt categorically forbid it. Thatās how I also experimented with weed at parties, only to find out itās a substance I should enjoy in solitude, unless people are okay to speak to me without expecting a response.
Itās either sparkling water or jittery Coke Zero for me. If I choose the first one, I donāt stay awake, if I choose the other one, I donāt chill out.
Youāll get stressed.
Itās only half bad when you notice the small stuff. That tall people have zero spatial awareness in clubs. That your partner transitions from charming to embarrassing at a house party. That your boss tells sexist jokes at team dinners. Only half bad.
Itās all bad when you decide to host a party yourself. Either youāll be eaten up by doubts if everyone is having a good time, or youāll lose touch with your thoroughly drunk guests and youāll want to find ways to get them the fuck out of your house. Thatās only all bad, the hosting.
Whatās double bad is a family occasion, sober. Triple bad if youāre single.
Youāll spend the saved money on therapy.
You think youāre coming from a healthy and functional family ā but have you ever tried spending Christmas, birthdays, weddings, christenings or funerals with them, without alcohol? Right, as a teenager. A period when we all appreciated how great our families were and loved spending time with them.
Youāll need therapy after bottling up your feelings and awaken traumas. Because youād sooner drop dead at the family table than pick up a fight.
Youāll have less courage.
Unless youāre fortunate to dance on the bar table, steal pitchers and hit on strangers comfortably by nature, youāll have less ācrazy storiesā to tell. And if youāre dating, youāll need to quickly learn how to break ice without a cocktail.
The first time I missed alcohol after quitting was when I arrived to the first date with my now boyfriend. What he took for a lack of interest was just me being intimidated by him (story) and wishing that my green tea would turn into wine. As it didnāt, the other option was to sayĀ We should head somewhere gesellig, preferably to yours. When you donāt have the Dutch courage, youāll have to build your own.
Youāll be difficult to date.
Should we get a drink soon?Ā Itās the easiest, most straightforward and casual way to offer a first date. Since you both got so far, you donāt want to spoil it by explaining that you donāt drink. Finding an activity is complicated, a dinner is serious and a coffee is prude. You want to come across as carefree and fun, not difficult and boring.
So you meet in a bar, and for the longest time youāre trying not to draw attention to your beverage choices. You may even say that you just donāt feel like drinking today⦠technically itās not a lie.
Youāll be less honest.
Besides preventing you from either chilling out or making irresponsible choices, your sober inhibitions will also stop you from having a heart to heart with whomever youād otherwise do shots with.
On the plus side, your secrets are guarded and your resentments can safely grow forever. On a sad note, you wonāt get a free voucher to get emotional with your friends, especially if youāre a man in our toxic masculinity, no-homo culture.
I once had a crush on my friend and suspected it was mutual.Ā You two just need to get drunk together and talk honestly, advised my boyfriend. Wise, except neither she nor I drink. As a result, weāll probably go to the grave wondering: is she into me? (Really canāt tell).
Youāll lie.
Not only because youāll be less honest, less courageous, less spontaneous and less chilled. Mostly because youāll be fed up. With restaurants that try to sell you wine, with bars that ārun outā of tea. With people that over and over ask you why, doubt you, pressure you and even trick you. Youāll discover one privilege carried with having a vagina in our society: youāll shut them up with a simpleĀ Iām pregnant. Thatās after you discover that āIām muslimā doesnāt work.
Youāll be horrified.
Because really, people donāt give up. For many of them, itās a badge of honour to make you drink and if they canāt, they stop being your friend.
Every time youāll have to decline a drink youāll notice that the other person is indeed drinking, and youāll notice how often that is. Far from judging them, youāll judge our reality itself. People are just doing whatās agreed upon as normal.
Itās normal to regularly, if not constantly, make ourselves happier by distorting the reality.
Itās collectively agreed upon to ingest poison.
Itās not normal, itās actually really difficult toĀ opt outĀ of ingesting poison.You have to execute a conscious choice and a good deal of strong will to exist in our societyĀ withoutĀ ingesting poison.What does that say about our reality?
This flip of perspective wonāt just be sobering, itāll be horrifying.
Youāll give in.
Eventually, youāll do it. Youāll pour some red wine for both of you, just so he knows youād like him to sit on the couch and kiss you. Youāll get a shot of tequila, so that your boss trusts you enough to explain the politics of the promotion cycle. Youāll sip the beer so that your mate ā a good guy, bless him, but a bit stubborn ā stops putting beers in front of you and complaining that theyāre getting warm.
And you will feel exactly as my friend described it:
You donāt drink because alcoholĀ doesnāt do it for you,Ā It doesnāt hide the pains of our reality, not successfully.
4) Warning: the reality may appear undistorted
When people are asked why they choose to be sober, most often they reply that itās because of the hangover. Arguably, for us the hangover is not worth it.And sure, a headache is not fun. But an emotional hangover is much more than that.
sudden realisation that the reality is not as pleasant without alcohol as it is with alcohol.
It sucks. We canāt handle it.
Instead, we set our expectations nice and low by default. We experience the reality of being human in its raw form, without distortion: being stressed, tired, uptight, cowardly, closed up, dishonest and condescending.
It sucks too, but for us, this honesty is easier to handle in small doses on an every day basis, than suddenly in the morning after.
Alcohol exists for a reason. When you quit alcohol, youāll face that reason constantly, but youāll get used to it. As little fun as it is, youāll learn how to live with pain ā the pain of existence.
When you drink, you still face that same reason, but youāre able to get distracted from it for a few blissful moments.
As long as you notice that both are a choice rather than take drinking as a default āĀ Good for you!Ā Enjoy responsibly. Choose your side effects.
JaiHind.. š®š³ JaiBharat..

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