Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I went through college without drinking and it was fine even at a school with heavy drinking. It's good to learn to function in the real world.
I found friends (my people) who liked doing things other than drinking, from hiking to games to attending campus events. They all drank too, it just wasn't how they spent the majority of their spare time.
I also found that I could go to parties and socialize where there was drinking as long as I was willing to leave before it got sloppy. No one ever cared what was in my cup. (Very few people even noticed that I didn't drink because I was always social.) I got good at reading the room and would depart before people were drunk and it stopped being fun for a sober person.
The choice not to drink actually had a positive impact on my social life. I'd hop from parties that were turning sloppy to other gatherings, ultimately extending my social circle. It wasn't odd for me to make an appearance at 3-4 parties in a single night. I also wouldn't be hung over so the next morning I'd get up early and go do something with other friends. I had tons of friends and ended up being elected student body president as a result.
Eh. Partying is synonymous with drinking in college. People notice if you’re not drinking, and it makes it harder to get into certain circles. Students who don’t drink will usually need to find friends who don’t party.
A few very popular kids can be accepted by people who drink without drinking themselves, but they’re rare.
-Teetotaler NP
Eh. Bad take and not at all true.
I went to JMU, which has a reputation as a party school. I drank, but of my half dozen closest friends, two did not (one for religous reasons, one because he was a serious athlete). We all hung out together, including at frat parties.
Agree that a non-drinker may have more luck finding his/her people at larger schools.