Anonymous wrote:I personally avoid people who go out specifically to drink. A happy hour where there is food and optional alcohol is the borderline. Those who go out drinking after dinner or go places specifically to drink are the ones I avoid. I drink infrequently, but socially and I tend to like similar types. Essentially those who drink when it is a part or an aside to the actual activities, but not when it is the main activity.
Anonymous wrote:I rarely drink but when I do go to a wedding, Xmas party or football game like a few beers.
Thing I hate is a religious kook, ex drunk or health nut standing over me judging.
We all know you guys are on Xanax, beat your wives and embezzle money. But drinking a beer while watching a football game is a sin.
 Anonymous wrote:I don’t drink and judge the adults that are hammered and acting the fool. I’ll be wide awake at 6AM tomorrow morning, ready to go, and sharp. You, on the other hand, will be a pile of shit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If someone declines a drink, I don't think anything of it.
Also, I can very happily hang out with my friends while they (or me) are sober, and we have tons of fun.
But *most of the time*, people who "don't drink" are not someone I'm likely to click with, because I find they are typically socially off, religiously kooky, low self esteem, culturally sheltered, or something else.
This. Most people I know who don’t drink are religious, or serious rule followers who swallowed the whole Nancy Reagan “just say no” bullshit. We don’t play well together—they just bore me. There are a few exceptions, but they definitely prove the rule.
Anonymous wrote:I don't drink and most people ask what I would like to drink I say water or seltzer or so many people now ask you to bring what you want to drink.
but there are a few annoying people who press and ask why, so I said I prefer to be sober once the orgy starts.
This is such aa cause for young people drinking under peer pressure. Especially in college and that is often where drinking problems start.
Anonymous wrote:If you need alcohol to "act" a certain way then that is a problem.
Anonymous wrote:If someone declines a drink, I don't think anything of it.
Also, I can very happily hang out with my friends while they (or me) are sober, and we have tons of fun.
But *most of the time*, people who "don't drink" are not someone I'm likely to click with, because I find they are typically socially off, religiously kooky, low self esteem, culturally sheltered, or something else.
