Gretchen Rubin
Bestselling author; blogger www.gretchenrubin.com
Why I Stopped Drinking Alcohol (More or Less)
One step I've taken to boost my happiness has been to stop drinking, more or less. I was never a big drinker, but in college and afterward I drank about the same as most people.
When I was pregnant, I stopped drinking altogether. After my daughter was born, and I started having the occasional glass of wine or beer again, I had zero tolerance. A half a glass of wine hit me hard.
And not for the better.
Alcohol affects me in several ways. It never really makes me friendly and jolly, as it does many people. First, I become belligerent. I have a tendency to be argumentative anyway, strengthened by going to law school, and alcohol makes me spoil for a fight.
It also makes me less discreet. I say things that I wouldn’t ordinarily say, I’m less tactful.
After these charming effects have worked on me for a while, I then become tremendously sleepy – uncontrollable yawning, pure misery.
These effects were more noticeable in situations when I wasn’t with close friends, but rather was with people I didn’t know well, or didn’t particularly like, or doing something that I didn’t particularly enjoy. Which, of course, were situations where it was all the more important that I be friendly and polite.
And it wasn’t as though my bad feelings were outweighed by my enjoyment of alcohol. Fact was, I didn’t really enjoy it that much. I can’t tell a good wine from a mediocre wine. I’ve never been able to drink hard liquor. And for a diet indulgence, I’ve always preferred dessert to alcohol. I never got a pleasant feeling of relaxation or cheer.
Finally, it hit me – this wasn’t a happy situation. Drinking was fun for other people, but it wasn’t fun for me. So I stopped, more or less.
I’m not saying this solution would work for other people. I enjoy other people’s enjoyment of drinking (unless they talk about fine wine too much). I like the festiveness of martinis and champagne. I like the zestful enthusiasm some people have for drinking–while working on Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill, I vicariously enjoyed Churchill’s love for liquor—though, actually, he drank less than many people think.
But it’s one of the most important Secrets of Adulthood: Just because something is fun for someone else, doesn’t mean it’s fun for me—and vice versa.
I’m happier now that I drink less and behave better. I get home after an evening out, and I don't worry about the way I acted. I feel fine, instead of being so tired that I can hardly take out my contacts. For me, it’s much more fun not to drink than to drink.
I still have a little wine sometimes, or some champagne at a celebration. I drink as much as I like—but I don’t like to drink much, now that I realize that it doesn’t agree with me. (Here's an interesting Wall Street Journal article about why moderate alcohol consumption gets harder with time.)
Sometime I regret the fact that I drink so little. Why am I so abstemious and cramped and cheerless? Am I a killjoy? Other people get so much fun from it.
But then I remember—it isn’t fun for me.
The striking fact about my deciding to stop drinking alcohol is that it took me so long to have the idea to do it. Why is it so hard to “Be Gretchen”? Why was it so hard for me to notice that I wasn’t enjoying myself? It can be very difficult to notice what seem to be very obvious facts about your very own self.
How about you? Have you had a similar experience -- with alcohol or anything else?
I write more about this issue in The Happiness Project, chapter "November."
- Need a good book to read? May I suggest...the paperback of Happier at Home is now available for pre-order. About possessions, body, family, neighborhood...elements to consider, to make yourself happier at home. If you’re thinking, “I’m intrigued! But Gretchen, how can I learn more about Happier at Home?” you’re in luck. You can…
– read an excerpt from the chapter on “Time”
– listen to a clip from the audio-book
– watch the one-minute video trailer on “Ten ways to be happier at home”
– watch the Behind-the-Scenes video (spoiler alert, I reveal the book’s secret motif there)
- sign up for personalized, signed bookplates for you or or friends, (U.S. and Canada only, sorry)
Photo: srahulrao, Flickr
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