• kronisk
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      134 months ago

      Um, no. Problematic use of alcohol, perhaps - “alcoholism” implies addiction, impact on relationships and rest of life etc, which is not implied in the previous comment. A lot of people use a beer or two to deflate after work or stress without it necessarily being a problem. You have to look at the whole picture.

      • AggressivelyPassive
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        -114 months ago

        Um, yes.

        At least with a pretty high certainty, the “I can do without” is a lie. If you need alcohol that much to “de-stress”, then you are functionally unable to live without alcohol. And that is extremely problematic.

        • kronisk
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          154 months ago

          Perhaps you should be a bit more cautious about diagnosing people you’ve never met based on very little information. You assume a lot and jump to baseless conclusions.

          If you need alcohol that much to “de-stress”, then you are functionally unable to live without alcohol.

          The original comment describes a situation of constant stress, and alcohol as a shortcut to destress. That person even says that it’s not the alcohol in itself that is desirable. Nowhere does this person talk about excessive consumption.

          • @Crashumbc
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            4 months ago

            As an alcoholic, I can say with complete certainty. That some one who drinks everyday to “de-stress” IS one or very much is in danger of becoming an alcoholic if it goes on long enough.

            Second, specifically mentioning “it’s not the alcohol” is usually a huge red flag, it means they’re worried they may actually have a problem and are over compensating.

            • kronisk
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              4 months ago

              As an alcoholic, I can say with complete certainty. That some one who drinks everyday to “de-stress” IS one or very much is in danger of becoming an alcoholic if it goes on long enough. Second, specifically mentioning “it’s not the alcohol” is usually a huge red flag, it means they’re worried they may actually have a problem and are over compensating.

              I get that you are trying to be helpful here and that’s a good thing, but I suspect you try too much to fit what OP is saying into the mould of your own experiences. And again, you assume too much and to boot, you assume that OP is lying, which means suddenly anything could be true or false.

              some one who drinks everyday

              OP does not drink every day.

              Second, specifically mentioning “it’s not the alcohol” is usually a huge red flag, it means they’re worried they may actually have a problem and are over compensating.

              Or it could actually be true. People simply use alcohol in this way because it works. It might end in a destructive pattern of abuse or it might not, but actual alcohol problems come with a lot of other symptoms and patterns, none of which are on display here.

        • @[email protected]
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          34 months ago

          Idk, I moved further away from my favourite bar and now I drink maybe twice a month. Used to be my daily routine to go grab a few cold ones after work and chat with whoever else was there.

          Plenty of people do the same. Now if you start doing it at home, alone… Yeah you’ve got a problem.

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            I mean I’m not saying you are or were am alcoholic but you can definitely be an alcoholic who regularly frequents bars

            • @[email protected]
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              24 months ago

              Oh definitely. My point was that for some people it’s the environment they chase, whereas for others it’s the substance.

    • @[email protected]
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      74 months ago

      I disagree. I don’t need that drink, it’s just helpful because I don’t have unlimited free time to do breathing exercises or run or whatever other stress management would otherwise work. I have maybe 1-1.5 hours after I get done with everything else I need to do to try and watch a show or play a game or something else that’s fun and if I’m still stressed from work I can’t enjoy those things. If I have to use other methods to calm myself first I won’t have enough time to actually do the fun thing.

      I rarely drink on weekends unless it’s socially. It doesn’t even occur to me to do so.

        • @[email protected]
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          64 months ago

          Did you even read my reply? I CAN, I just don’t have enough time on a week night to do so. I’ve tried numerous methods of doing so and so far having a drink is what works in the timeframe required. I’m certainly open to suggestions for better alternatives.

          • AggressivelyPassive
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            -84 months ago

            Again, you CAN’T, obviously. Otherwise you wouldn’t keep doing it. It’s a coping mechanism you found and now you got so used to it, any other method just doesn’t cut it anymore. That’s a dependence.

            You can argue all you want that it’s a time issue, but we both know that’s not true.

              • @Crashumbc
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                4 months ago

                No one starts out at the deep end of the pool. It took me 15+ years to get bad…

                I’m not saying you are or aren’t, but that behavior, if kept up long term, is problematic for many people.

                You also seem overly defensive about the implication you could have a problem.

                I say this as someone who was exactly like you. Then it was 3-4 after work, and drinking “socially” every weekend… Etc etc… And so forth.

                Not judging, just throwing it out there for you to think about.

                • @[email protected]
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                  94 months ago

                  I appreciate your concern but I’ve been handling things this way for ~12 years now and it hasn’t escalated. If anything I drink less now than in the past. I’m not worried. I don’t even like getting drunk. What I’m defensive about is the implication that I’m an alcoholic from someone that knows next to nothing about my life and is probably unqualified to make that determination anyway. Especially when they ignore half of what I’m telling them and just says that I’m lying. As I said before if anyone has any better ideas I’m open to suggestions but so far nothing else I’ve tried gets the job done.

                • @PapaStevesy
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                  64 months ago

                  They’re not overly defensive, they’re just regular defensive because everyone is ignoring what they say and calling them a liar & an alcoholic over and over. They’re being very reasonable and thoughtful, they’re not calling people ugly names or insulting anyone’s family. How is that overly defensive?