It helped me to step back and look at all of this as if it were an academic challenge rather than a personal problem. It has been fascinating to learn about the science of addiction and the effects of alcohol. If any medicine were prescribed to me or food/beverage suggested that had the same known risks and benefits of alcohol, there is no way that I would take it.
The Allan Carr and Jason Vale books are brilliant at portraying alcohol as a poison that no one in their right minds would consume. Here is a pretty good and somewhat more objectively written summary: There is no such thing as a safe level of alcohol consumption | Professor David Nutt | Science | theguardian.com.
So, the fact is, everyone probably would be better off not drinking. But alcohol consumption is considered normal and actively promoted in our society - both by industries that benefit and by people who themselves enjoy it and don't want it to be considered a bad thing -- it is in all of their interests for the problem to be us (the self-identified addicts) rather than the addictive substance per se.
I'm too busy working on myself right now to try to change the world but we can hope that over time, the same forces that pushed tobacco past the tipping point and the truth came out about the manipulation of the public by the tobacco companies will become stronger on this front, also (and on the food industry Big Sugar's Sweet Little Lies | Mother Jones).
I think the more you learn about the subject, the happier you'll be that it's out of your life. You'll not only accept that you can't drink, you'll be glad you don't have to.
You're doing so well - no reason to do anything different today or tomorrow or... EVER! NS
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