When Drinking Less Feels Hard:  Alcohol Helps Me Relieve Stress

When Drinking Less Feels Hard: Alcohol Helps Me Relieve Stress

In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist podcast, Molly kicks off the series When Drinking Less Feels Hard, inspired by real responses from the Alcohol Minimalist community about the hardest parts of changing drinking habits.

Today’s episode focuses on one of the five Alcohol Core Beliefs: Alcohol Helps Me Relieve Stress.

Alcohol can feel like relief in the moment because it creates a short-term shift in the brain and body. But that does not mean it is actually reducing stress. Molly explains how alcohol can disrupt sleep, increase next-day anxiety, and keep the brain stuck in the loop of believing alcohol is necessary for relaxation. This episode helps you look at stress drinking with curiosity instead of shame, and offers a practical way to challenge the belief that alcohol is the best or only way to unwind.

In This Episode

  • Why alcohol feels calming at first
  • The difference between a state change and real stress relief
  • How alcohol can affect sleep, anxiety, and next-day resilience
  • Why the brain learns to associate alcohol with relief
  • How to use See, Soothe, Separate, and Shift to challenge the urge to drink

Key Takeaway

Wanting relief is human. But alcohol often borrows calm from tomorrow instead of creating real relief today.

Listener Practice

Before drinking in response to stress, pause and complete this sentence:

“I need a drink because…”

Then use the Alcohol Core Beliefs process:

See: I’m having the thought that alcohol will relieve this stress.
Soothe: Of course my brain is offering this; I’ve practiced this pattern.
Separate: The fact is I’m stressed. The story is that alcohol is required.
Shift: I can create real relief before I decide what to drink.

Choose one action that actually addresses the need underneath the urge.


Resources Mentioned:

Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA:

Healthy men under 65:

No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week.

Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:
No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week.

One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink.

Abstinence from alcohol
Abstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past.

Benefits of “low-risk” drinking
Following these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work.

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