Posts Tagged ‘Drinking’
How to Stop Drinking Without Alcoholics Anonymous!
How to Stop Drinking Without Alcoholics Anonymous!
Contrary to what you may have heard alcohol addiction is not an incurable brain disease. In fact, it is not a disease at all! But, for decades people have believed that alcohol addiction is a disease. Most psychologists, counselors, specialists and recovery groups today still believe that alcohol addiction is an incurable disease that must be managed for a lifetime, and that “there is no complete cure to stop drinking alcohol!” However, alcohol addiction is not a genetically predisposed disease that is handed down through faulty genes, and it is possible to stop drinking alcohol in 60 days!
The following theories represent the current bio-psychosocial disease model of alcohol addiction as presented by the National Institute on Drug Abuse as well as the U.S. medical community:
How to Stop Drinking Alcohol Without AA Meetings
How To Stop Drinking Alcohol Without AA Meetings
This article on how to stop drinking alcohol is specially written for human beings who want to refrain from but do not own all the money in the real world to do so. These people cannot have enough money to register in AA or any rehab out there. Their addiction trouble has made them waste lots of cash and some of them have even lost their employment. Unless you are a tough drinker, there is hope for you. With the steps revealed in this piece of writing, it is pretty possible for any alcohol addict to stop drinking alcohol without resorting to AA or other expert assistance.
Heavy Drinking: The Myth of Alcoholism as a Disease By
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Ways to Quit Drinking Alcohol – Benefits of Stop Drinking Alcohol
Ways to Quit Drinking Alcohol – Benefits of Stop Drinking Alcohol
Whether your beer, wine or spirits, you know alcoholic drinks may help boost either party. Everyone has a flavor and the session continues to drink from dusk until dawn. Despite its popularity among young and old, people should stop drinking alcohol.
Anda and downing alcohol is perhaps one of the few universal practice that people of all cultures can relate to and enjoy together. However, adverse effects may lead to a series of problems that can ruin someone’s life. Here are a number of reasons that can make you stop drinking alcohol forever.
Why Can’t You Just Control Your Drinking?
Why Can’t You Just Control Your Drinking?
This just in: heavy alcohol use can interfere with relationships!
“I don’t want to stop drinking. I want to drink moderately, like two or three beers a night. If I do that I can get my wife/girlfriend/husband/boss off my back. I think if I just stick to beer, maybe wine when we go out to eat, I’ll be okay. It’s the hard stuff that’s a problem.” “Or maybe I could drink beer during the week, and the other stuff, just one or two…maybe three drinks, on weekends.”
This is the wish of every alcoholic: to drink like a “normal” person. If alcohol has caused a problem in your life, a legal, health, job or family problem, why would you want to drink more of it? Is that seductive liquid, alcohol, so important that you are willing to risk another DUI and probable jail time? Or is the price of your drinking just a disappointed wife and another night passed out in front of the television? I know, you’re just tired after a tough day. You deserve a drink. Right! You have not had “a drink” in a very long time.
How Does Binge Drinking Early in Life (Age 35 and Under) Impact Longevity/health Later in Life?
Question by Chad Marsh: How does binge drinking early in life (age 35 and under) impact longevity/health later in life?
Here’s the scenario – I drank fairly heavily from age 21 to 35. Specifically, I almost always had at least two drinks a day, most weeks I would have five or more drinks on at least one – and often two, three, or four occasions, and once or twice a month or so I would exceed 10 drinks. While the term “alcoholic” might accurately be applied to me, I never experienced any sort of physical withdrawal other than morning-after hangovers and shaky hands. Since then, I’ve quit drinking completely, eat well, exercise daily, and consider myself to be in above average health. I don’t feel as if my 14 years of drinking damaged my health in any way, but I can find very little information on the long-term health of heavy drinkers who quit drinking young. Having a lot of people in my family who stay healthy well into their 90s, I’m particularly interested in how heavy drinking at an early age followed by abstinence later on impacts one’s chances of living well beyond the average life expectancy