Denial is one of the stages of aging. Get a checkup. Exercise and get in better health. Abstain from harmful activity if you are unwell. |
There it is. |
No, not really. Hangovers aren't caused by alcohol staying in your system longer. More likely, if you can drink significantly more than this without a hangover, you're probably an alcoholic. |
Two 8 hr Tylenol before bed. |
Me too! |
Tell us more |
Obviously quit drinking, but abstinence is crazy, unless your doctor said something knock yourself out. |
Pretty much. I was OP a few years back but ultimately mostly stopped drinking. I will now have ONE drink sometimes socially, for fun, but only with food and plenty of water and I will often take headache medication proactively before bed. I found my alcohol tolerance went south fast in my 40s, post-kids, even though my overall health improved (eating great, more consistent exercise, just better lifestyle overall with better sleep and gut health). My doctor thinks there is a link between peri-menopause/menopause and alcohol tolerance, and says she's seen a lot of women with my same issue (migraines or tension headaches triggered by mild to moderate alcohol intake) and there doesn't appear to be a silver bullet. |
Milk? Really? Do you drink it before you drink? Beers. What do you recommend? When I drink IPA, I’ve noticed I feel tipsy faster and also get a headache soon after. I randomly had Michelob ultra light at a bbq recently and I felt much better. |
Your doctor isn’t an alcohol specialist. It’s not like she told you anything meaningful |
Liquid IV. Costco has. Drink before and after drinking |
Drink less. Instead of 2.5 beers, drink 1. |
No studies have come out to 'prove' it helps hangovers, but I definitely notice a difference when I forget to take some before or after having had some drinks. A friend first gave me some for this purpose a few years ago and I was skeptical but it works for me. (And if it is just a placebo effect then, well, it still works!) I also agree that drinking higher quality drinks helps mitigate hangovers. Light beers are not high quality. |
You probably don't process alcohol like an average person. There are some ethnicities - particularly Asian - for whom alcohol is especially disagreeable. But 2.5 light beers shouldn't be an issue for anyone the following day. I would get your liver and pancreas checked the next time you go to a doctor. As for recovering from a hangover, brothy things are helpful - like pho or ramen, especially with an egg. Alcohol inhibits your body's ability to process nutrients and a salty broth will help a lot. Follow with a banana for the potassium and wash it all down with pedialyte. Take a B complex, folic acid, and magnesium. Avoid coffee or caffeine, which will only exacerbate the hangxiety. And hydrate. Go for a walk to get some endorphins going, which will help. But 2.5 light beers should not be an issue for any healthy adult unless they have the enzyme that makes processing alcohol so difficult, which is typically present among those from Asian descent. |
You need to eat and drink water while you’re drinking, not afterward.
So you had 3 beers (2.5 to be exact), then ate something light and drank water and the next day, felt like you drank alcohol the night before and are surprised cause you thought that today, you’d feel like you had no alcohol. You need to drink less, eat / have water while your drinking, and still expect to feel some effect next day. |