Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a 44 year old woman who has never liked to drink. I’m not opposed to it for others. It just doesn’t make me feel good. I tend to get headaches and want to fall asleep.
And yes people have always pressured me. It’s weird. I don’t know why some people do thwt.
I don’t do this, and don’t always drink — but I think people do it because it feels like a social connection/engagement. Like putting music on and dancing. It’s not as fun when you are the only one dancing. Or the only one that isn’t dancing because it isn’t fun.
I recall a former acquaintance who never drank but always got a seltzer with lime just so people wouldn’t ask him to drink. It is more about their self-consciousness or feeling judged than not. Many of my friends don’t drink because of their religion. But maybe they use a hookah. Same difference.
Anonymous wrote:I enjoy a (one) glass of wine and stop. If I'm with friends, I'll have two, then stop. I grew up in an alc0holic home, so I am very careful with drinking. I've never been drunk.
I would turn it around and ask, "Why is it so important to you that I am drinking alcohol like you? Why is this bothering you so much?" Wait for the answer. It will probably stump them. Then you say "I'm fine, concentrate on your own drinking."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m so surprised at all the people who even care if others drink. I’m thinking through the psychology of these conversations and maybe people just feel there is a pregnant pause after, “I’m not drinking anymore,” (or similar) and they feel the need to fill it with something. What about trying to get rid of that awkward pause and say something like, “Alcohol doesn’t really agree with me these days (lots of fond memories though!). You know, what would really hit to spot for me? Do you have any sparking water? Thanks so much.”
What’s the point of this post?
Anonymous wrote:I've never drank, and am 43. I'm not an alcoholic.
What I've noticed is that as a teenager, when you're taught about peer pressure, if someone offers you alcohol and you say, "No thanks" they just accept it and move on. I never had to give any reasons, nobody ever asked a second time, etc. That stuck through college, where everyone was happy to have a sober friend. Who carried gum. And could drive.
As an adult, I got SO MUCH SHIT for not drinking. There have been times I've resorted to saying I'm an alcoholic so that people will drop the issue. This is mostly at required work functions.
OP, if these are your friends? I would look at whether most of their socializing is centered around drinking events - wineries, breweries, pub crawls, wine tastings, happy hours, etc. If so, try to introduce doing other activities with them. If it doesn't take, you may need to seek out new friends. I go for walks and hikes with friends, take yoga classes, explore fun neighborhoods, go boating, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I’m so surprised at all the people who even care if others drink. I’m thinking through the psychology of these conversations and maybe people just feel there is a pregnant pause after, “I’m not drinking anymore,” (or similar) and they feel the need to fill it with something. What about trying to get rid of that awkward pause and say something like, “Alcohol doesn’t really agree with me these days (lots of fond memories though!). You know, what would really hit to spot for me? Do you have any sparking water? Thanks so much.”
Anonymous wrote:This is the OP-thanks for all of the responses. PP 22:05-thanks for the laugh.
Yeah I think a lot of it's because I only stopped drinking within the past few years. And I do have friends who are respectful of that. The people who have been the loudest about me not drinking are those who tend to drink more/people I used to drink with in the past.