avatarChelsey Flood

Summary

The article provides strategies for overcoming the "witching hour," a critical time when problem drinkers are most likely to relapse, by planning activities, seeking social support, and understanding the underlying emotions that trigger the desire to drink.

Abstract

The article "How To Make It Through The Evening Without Drinking" addresses the challenge of resisting alcohol during the "witching hour," a time of day when the urge to drink is particularly strong. It emphasizes the importance of having a structured plan to avoid unoccupied time, which can lead to drinking. The author suggests engaging in alternative activities such as meeting friends, attending events, or reading. The article also highlights the value of connecting with others through phone calls, which can help combat social anxiety and self-centeredness. It discusses the importance of building tolerance for social awkwardness and finding accountability through support groups like AA or Smart. The author advocates for self-reflection to understand the emotional drivers behind drinking, using the acronym HALT (Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired) as a guide. The piece concludes by encouraging readers to consider the potential benefits of a sober life and to seek help from the various resources available in the sober community.

Opinions

  • The author believes that planning is crucial to avoid the temptation of drinking during vulnerable times.
  • Engaging in conversations with friends is seen as a way to shift focus from oneself and reduce the reliance on alcohol for social interaction.
  • The article suggests that facing social awkwardness without alcohol can help build resilience and improve social skills.
  • Accountability is considered key to maintaining sobriety, with the author recommending non-drinking friends or support groups for support.
  • The author shares a personal revelation that loneliness was a significant factor in their drinking, emphasizing the importance of addressing underlying emotions.
  • The author expresses that sobriety can lead to a more fulfilling life and that reaching out for help is a sign of strength, not weakness.
  • The piece promotes the idea that community support and resources are essential in the journey to sobriety and can lead to a better quality of life.

How To Make It Through The Evening Without Drinking

Some tips for making it through ‘the witching hour’.

Photo by Federico Beccari on Unsplash

Every problem drinker knows about ‘the witching hour’. It’s that time when ordinarily you started drinking. Time slows down and you can’t for the life of you remember why you decided not to drink. Before you know it, you’re drinking again.

How the hell do you change this habit? What on Mary’s earth should you do instead?

Before I successfully quit drinking, the witching hour used to stretch out yawning in front of me, and most often I didn’t make it through without opening a bottle of wine. The trick is to take it seriously. Have a full-blown action plan and don’t underestimate what you’re dealing with.

Here are the different ways I have tried to defeat the witching hour over the years, and how I managed to beat it for good, four years ago.

1. Make a plan

The worst thing you can do when you are trying to quit drinking is to leave open unidentified windows of time (UWOT). UWOTs are beer vortexes and must be avoided at all costs. So make a plan to meet a non-drinking friend for dinner or go to the cinema. Take sweets (you can deal with your sugar addiction later) or snacks.

Have a book ready to read when you get home or make an appointment to call a friend to debrief about the day. Have a plan for how you will make it all the way to your pillow without drinking.

Have a plan for what you will say if somebody offers you a drink.

2. Call a friend and ask how they are

This is tricky when you drink to deal with social anxiety. I often used to drink a bottle of wine before calling my nearest and dearest to chat. Without my favorite tipple, I just didn’t feel so talkative. Without realizing it, I was being selfish.

We call our friends to see how they are and to find out about their lives, not to make ourselves feel good. (Though, incidentally, in the process of connecting, we do usually end up feeling pretty good.)

When somebody pointed out how self-centered my thinking was, I started calling my friends more. I asked them how they were and told them what I was up to.

After years of not answering my phone and rarely calling back, it became a lifeline.

3. Build up your tolerance for social awkwardness

After I quit drinking, I discovered that my tolerance for social awkwardness was incredibly low. I needed to build up my awk muscles and so I started to work out, hard. I talked to people while guzzling diet Coke and I just tolerated the occasional silences that fall between flurries of conversation.

Look, there goes a piece of tumbleweed!

And I didn’t die.

It turns out that feeling awkward can’t kill you.

4. Accountability

Full disclosure: I never got very far with accountability until I asked the right people. Making pacts not to drink with drinking pals, in my experience, is a one-way ticket to Pub Land.

So, ask one of your non-drinking friends (who?) to hold you accountable. If you don’t have any, ask a non-drinking relative (who?). Locate somebody who understands why it is important that you stick to your decision not to drink, and ask them to hold you to your word.

Don’t know anybody like that? Yeah, I didn’t either.

In that case, check out AA or Smart. Those meetings are literally full of people who are so familiar with the witching hour that they call it by its first name (Brian) before telling it go fuck itself, thank you.

As soon as I started attending AA I knew that the witching hour would never have the same hold over me again. I discovered that the witching hour was exacerbated by loneliness and I found the thing that defeated it.

It was the same thing that defeats most social evils: lovely, caring people.

(Sorry, Brian.)

5. Investigate how you feel

Drinking becomes such an ingrained habit that we lose touch with the feelings that cause us to do it in the first place. I had little understanding of why I drank so much. I just loved it. I’d always drank. Everyone drank.

This is why getting sober is such an education. Stop doing the thing you always do, and you discover pretty quick why you do it. You might be surprised by what you find.

I was shocked to realize that my drinking was caused by feeling lonely. I loved solitude! I just didn’t need people like other people did. Right?

Nope. Turns out that was a load of bollocks.

This perspective is so common in recovery circles that it inspired a special acronym — HALT!

Hungry? Angry? Lonely? Tired?

So when the witching hour (Brian) strikes, halt! And ask yourself if any of these things are true. And then take care of yourself accordingly.

In conclusion, if you are struggling to make it through Brian’s witching hour then try these things.

Make a plan — alcohol loves to jump into unidentified windows of time (UWOTs — it’s gonna catch on, just give it a chance.) Call a friend and ask how they are. Learn to tolerate social awkwardness without turning to drink. Find somebody to hold you accountable. Interrogate the feelings that are driving you to drink so much in the first place.

And if all of this still doesn’t work, then take yourself to a sober dweeb society. There are lots of options listed at the end of this post.

I honestly never believed I’d be able to quit drinking longterm. I certainly didn’t believe that I would prefer my life without alcohol. But the fact is that I do. Without my infuriating drinking habit, I am able to do the things I actually love. And that’s what I want for you.

So please, stop trying to beat something that is much bigger than you. Literally millions of people have been where you are now. I was one of them. There’s nothing to be ashamed of.

Stop thinking about what you are giving up, and consider what you might gain. Stop telling yourself your drinking isn’t ‘bad enough’. And ask yourself, How good could life be?

If you’re struggling with drinking, know you aren’t alone.

If you relate to this, and you’re ready for something different, try the alcohol experiment. Do whatever it takes to stay sober for 30 days: go to your doctor, try Smart or AA or Hip Sobriety or Soberistas. Listen to Recovery Elevator and SHAIR podcasts. Read This Naked Mind. Try Moderation Management.

Quitting drinking alone is boring, difficult and for many of us, impossible. There is a whole community of people just waiting to help you. Reach out. Something better is waiting for you.

Chelsey Flood is the author of Infinite Sky and Nightwanderers, a lecturer in creative writing and a dedicated truth-seeker. She writes about freedom, addiction, nature and love.

Sign up for updates at Beautiful Hangover <3

Addiction
Health
Mental Health
Psychology
Self
Recommended from ReadMedium