Hello legends. Watch the full length episode with Andrew here - ruclips.net/video/BoutTY8XHSc/видео.html. Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D & more from AG1 at drinkag1.com/wisdom
Your liver was so damaged that it wasn't clearing all your bilirubin and depositing it in your skin causing intense itchiness. Very good thing you stopped when you did. Keep up the good work.
That was the episode that made me go cold turkey and quit alcohol completely. 52 days in can't even begin to tell you how good it feels to lead a alcohol free life.. I used to be a binge drinker , zero alcohol during weekdays due to work but 5-6 drinks on the weekends.. Now, I wake up at 6 am on a Sunday morning completely free of hangover and feeling great. Alcohol is the biggest illusion that has been sold to us.. I am so glad Huberman made that podcast..
@@stefanallard3084stopping caffiene is dumb for most ppl. Caffiene is basically fine as long as its not used every day and relied upon. For its purpose its useful. Like most substances
I remember few years back after my wife died, I was left alone with 3 kids. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got addicted to alcohol. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment changed my life for better. I can proudly say i'm totally clean for 6 years and still counting. Always look to nature for solution to tough problems, Shrooms are phenomenal.
I love hearing great life changing stories like this. I want to become a mycologist because honestly mushrooms are the best form of medicine (most especially the psychedelic ones) There are so many people today used magic mushrooms to ween off of SSRI medication- its amazing! Years back i wrote an entire essay about psychedelics. they saved you from death buddy, lets be honest here.
Hey mates! Can you help with the source? I suffer severe anxiety, panic and depression and I usually take prescription medicine, but they don't always help. Where can I find those psilocybin mushrooms? I'm really interested in treating my mental health without Rxs. I live in Australia don't know much about these. I'm so glad they helped you. I can't wait to get them too. Really need a reliable source 🙏
Thanks for sharing your story. That's rough I sympathize. Save your health save your mind. Life is better without heroin, cocaine, alcohol and cigarettes. And you have more money in your pocket. God bless everyone who has rejected the devils intentions to be addicted to alcohol and cigarettes etc which can cause so much damage to health. I will pray for you all.
I just reached 6 years of sobriety. I was a problem drinker for over a decade and never imagined being able to live without alcohol. Now alcohol never crosses my mind and my life has improved dramatically.
Year and a half. In my addiction days I couldn’t imagine without it either. I was looking forward to retirement because I thought that was all I would do is drink. I’m so indifferent to it now and very content that I have no interest in ever consuming it again. And the sleep, omg sobriety feels good
3+ years no alcohol and it’s not even a thing in my brain anymore. I don’t even consider how my life is improved, I just look at alcohol like damn, that looks a major impediment to living a happy life.
@primetimejabroni903 hey you got this. I'm 3years sober. Once you hit your 1st year it gets so easy and then you stop counting the days and just celebrate the anniversary of you making the best decision ever. Remember you are doing the right thing don't ever forget that!
Alcohol and cigarettes addiction actually destroyed my life. I could remember several years ago after divorce with my wife which brought me into my disastrous journey on Alcohol and cigarettes. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got diagnosed with cptsd. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Much respect to mother nature the great magic shrooms.
They saved you from death bud, lets be honest here. and mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on this planet i wish people would all realize. they could solve a lot of problems, more than just mental treatments, environmental clean up; the possibilities are endless with fungus.
Hey mates! Can you help with the source? I suffer severe anxiety, panic and depression and I usually take prescription medicine, but they don't always help. Where can I find those psilocybin mushrooms? I'm really interested in treating my mental health without Rxs. I live in Germany don't know much about these. I'm so glad they helped you. I can't wait to get them too. Really need a reliable source🙏🏻
Huberman is a great role model especially for young men. Brains and muscles , street wise and academic, he has done the drugs and booze and now moved on to better things. Its great that he is reaching so many with his inspiring messages.
1. Hangovers 2. Bad for every part of your body 3. Costs money 4. Say things you wouldn’t say 5. Eat things you wouldn’t eat 6. Do things you wouldn’t do 7. Do things you don’t remember 8. Shortens your life 9. Bad for relationships 10. You feel better without it
7 months sober and going strong!! Videos like this just reaffirm my decision of giving alcohol up entirely. After more than 10 years of daily binge drinking, I quit it cold turkey and never looked back. If you're recently sober or contemplating it, you CAN do it! Life is so much better without that poison being ingested. Stay strong, friends.
Hang in there. Been a drinking since my teens. Heavily since my 20s. Really heavily the last 12. Just put it down out of the blue 2 months ago. No desire to go back or cravings whatsoever. Very strange. I did the same 37 years ago with cigarettes. I'll be 65 in 12 days. Hoping you've been able to continue and wishing you strength and peace.
Alcohol is involved in most cases of physical assault, domestic violence, sexual assaults, murder, car accidents, affairs, accidental injuries, and poor decision making. If I think about the top 5 worst things that have ever happened in my life, alcohol is involved in every one of them with either myself or someone else that was drinking.
@@DM-ur8vc and there's liberals in Britain. I didn't say democrat. Taking common sense and trying to spin it as victim blaming is a liberal thing. In this case it had to do with alcohol, but that's what I was calling out.
The first time I ever drank, I was 14 yrs old and got caught by my parents. My dad kept me on a tight leash from then on out, I remember being like 16-17 asking to stay out past 10:30 & my dad said “nothing good goes on past 10pm”. Although it pissed me off at the time, as a 31 yr old mother I know exactly what he meant by that. I became a party animal,moved out at 17, would go to work at 6am after going to bed at 4am. Got into a physically abusive relationship where he actually put me in the hospital but because I was alcoholic, my mind was severely clouded and only worried about being chosen. I left that relationship and found out I was pregnant a week later. I had my baby in 2016 and quit drinking for 4.5 yrs, my life elevated tremendously in the first 6 months & then so on. 2022 I lost my mama and 9 months later picked up a drink again because I just couldn’t cope with the grief. Today I’m 110 days sober and what I’ve learned about my triggers for drinking were more based around not wanting to deal or feel what I was feeling- not so much that I liked it or even slightly enjoyed it. The first step in your journey is often the hardest but the most important. You’ll find the excuses you had for drinking were contributed mostly by alcohol consumption itself. ““You’re never going to understand your relationship to a substance until you get off it”
there are lots of supplements for a daily usage to just feel fine overall daily and not to want to drawn your pain in alcohol. Btw I liked your story! Vitamin D St John wort Magnesium Glycinate Fish oil Multivitamins Thats the basic that needs to be taken! It will help you
Coming from a alcoholic family, I chose to not drink. We had a lot of alcoholic violence and constant stress from all of it. I was picked on for not partying, called names by family members. Needless to say I stayed away from family functions. All my partying family are long dead from their ways, sad but people need to realize how destructive alcohol is.
My narcissist father was basically like a high functioning alcoholic in a lot of ways...He had a good job but I still vividly remember him driving home & swerving repeatedly on the main road multiple times with me in the backseat as a little girl🤦♀️.I refuse to drink & I personally don't hang with the alcohol consuming crowd.Not saying all addicts/alcoholics are narcs but you should 👀 up Cluster B personality disorders & also check out channels on here like Surviving Narcissism & Dr.Ramani to screen yourself for narcissistic family members since it's not unusual to have those types of dynamics at play.
I’m 18 days without a drop of alcohol after almost twenty years of drinking mostly everyday and heavily 2 to 3 times a week. The anxiety and self loathing after drinking became unbearable. I thought for years that I was just a person that suffers from anxiety, just unlucky or something 🤦♂️ what a fool I’ve been, I’ve felt zero anxiety since I stopped. I have no desire to drink, it terrifies me. A beer just looks like a big glass of anxiety, nightmare juice. It has tricked me way too long.
as someone who stopped cold turkey after 10 years of partying like a teenage dumbass.... i would say to you. get rid of those people, you know who, will try to make you drink again. those toxic friends we all had. they try to make you drink, because they are alcoholics themselves.... you cant get sober, living between alcoholics. is like being a heroin addict, in a heroin lab... you will die by overdose in a relapse, with 99.9% chance
My Father has been a serious Alcoholic for many years his life has been destroyed, he’s been in many fights and legal trouble from drinking, he’s been shot and stabbed on separate occasions, he’s been ran over by a motor cycle because he was so drunk one time he fell into the street and he fell off a roof one time and broke his leg because he was drunk and trying to evade the police, my dads drinking has been such a problem I’ve seen him almost die in front of me many times from drinking too much, if he can’t afford a bottle he will steal it or resort to drinking mouth wash or any cleaning supply with alcohol in it, our relationship has been pretty much burned to the ground, he’s betrayed me many times and stolen from me just to get drunk or high and I can truly say I’ve pretty much given up on him. I gave my dad so many chances and forgave him so many times but he threw his life down the drain and it all started with him drinking. I don’t remember a time when he wasn’t a alcoholic and when he got into meth, things got so much worse. I wish him and I could be cool again but after all that’s happen, I do hold some hatred for him but I’m trying my best to just live and let live, through it all I’ve seen what alcohol can do to someone and I’m gonna do everything I can do not be like him.
I came to realize that I am allergic to alcohol and that I can't safely predict what happens to myself and to other people when I do drink. I'm 15 years and 3 days sober, and I'm very proud of that accomplishment.
I've grown up with an alcoholic father, saw that man go from my hero to someone i hated for years even after he passed away. Almost went down the same path without realizing it, so thankfull my wife was there to save me before it was too late.
I’m in the exact situation now. My dad was my hero and he is now a complete failure due to alcohol. I quit drinking 11 months ago and don’t ever want to start again because of seeing my dad turn into someone I am no longer proud of but someone I am starting to hate. I know he has a disease but he also refuses to get help and is a shell of the human he used to be.
@@ChuckHarlan You need to have a heartfelt conversation with him, even if that change nothing, telling him how you feel and why seing him like he is today breaks your heart,i know its easy to say and hard to actually do, but its gonna save you years of extra pain.
Will be 4 years without a drop of alcohol come January 1st. One of the best decisions I've ever made was staying off the drink. Wishing anyone thats working on cutting it out of their life the strength to see it through! Its absolutely worth it!
Good for you. I don’t have a “drinking problem” and literally only do it for tailgating and family gatherings etc. What I find most bizarre is the weird stigma when you decline a drink because it’s the thing to do at the event. I’ve literally pretended to drink beer before and just poured it out slowly 😂
Day 25 for me. I found giving up tobacco helpful as well. They kind of trigger each other. Feels incredible. I actually feel like a kid again. Anything is possible and I'm no longer a slave to anything.
I was a waffle house cook. This old guy named Buddy used to come in and drink a coke everyday. He had quit drinking alcohol, coffee, and smoking cigarettes on the same day when he turned fifty. He was 84 and had never touched it again.
42 days sober now. I tried in the past but never I made it this far. This time around I was truly ready to give it up though. The list of bad choices I’ve made and memories missed out on while intoxicated over the years is far too long for me to recite. I could sit in my regret while continuing the cycle, but I chose to break generational cycle by choosing my four beautiful children and wife over alcohol. I’ve been tested once last week under a lot of stress but I have not felt this good in a very long time! God bless all of you that are working for being a better you!
10 weeks sober here. Improved my sleep, relationship with my family, overall mental health. Strongly advise people to try to stop for a period of time and see the improvements it can make in your life.
Oh man, I absolutely LOVE this episode! I haven't had alcohol for 11 years. Didn't have a 'problem' just got sick of feeling like crap from overindulging. I started drinking for fun at 15yo and just decided it was time to stop. I found the whole drinking thing boring by 41. I get so sick of getting the side eye when I turn down drinking in public. I have way more productive days in my life and am so much healthier as a 53yo female🙏
@@TheDionysianFields for women, even having one drink a day increases the risk of cancers. As we age that risk goes up. I am a grandmother with so much life left and absolutely won't compromise my time and energy with my granddaughter just to have 'wine time' or whatever with the girls.
@@curiouskato I don't drink every day and I have never heard that before about women. I take many different supplements and antioxidants to counteract the negative effects but I'm certainly not trying to encourage anyone to drink. Do whatever works for you. Alcohol (like sugar, wheat and many other things) will never be particularly good for the human body. That much I agree with.
00:57 🍷 Two drinks per week is considered the upper threshold for safe alcohol consumption for adults, unless one is an alcoholic. 01:24 🚫 There are elevated health risks for women, especially in terms of breast cancer, associated with alcohol consumption. 02:33 🎉 Some people may view non-drinkers as "boring" or as taking the fun out of social situations, but this is a misconception. 03:43 💡 There are many alternative ways to have a good time without relying on alcohol, and it's important to be aware of them. 05:06 💪 Taking breaks from alcohol can lead to increased consistency, productivity, and better use of time for personal interests. 06:04 🍻 While alcohol can have a place in socializing, it's important to consider the effects and benefits compared to other activities. 10:16 ☀ Getting morning sunlight has significant positive effects on mood, mental health, and overall well-being, and it's a cost-free practice.
I'm going on 6 years sober from alcohol. It's definitely the most important thing that I've ever done in my life. Everything about my life is different and improved, my mood, temperament, my day to day activities, my physique, my health, my happiness, energy levels, quality of sleep, financial situation. Literally every single aspect of my life improved after I quit drinking, and I'm happy to say I will never go back and I have zero urge to ever have a drink again. I'm very grateful for everything I've gained by quitting alcohol.
What do you do when you aren't working? My whole life is in one of 4 conditions: 1.Sober and working. 2.Sober and exercise. 3. drinking and chilling. 4. sleeping. It's hard for me to just chill and hang out without alcohol. I just don't a give a fuck what anybody is talking about when I am sober. Sobriety is made for work.
9 месяцев назад
How much did you drink, average per week?
9 месяцев назад
@@danielm5161 "Sobriety is made for work" is as stupid and wrong as "Alcohol is the devil's juice". It does sound like you lead a very boring and sad life if you have no idea what to do when not working or exercising (I assume going to the gym). Listen to music? Making music? Reading a good (or any) book?
@ I am a music producer of 20 years funnily enough. I do make music sober but I categorize making music as "work". If a person has to apply dedicated focus/problem solving action to a situation then it is work and that is what our sober mind's evolved to do. Passive activities where the brain only reads the situation without having to respond is not work. So LISTENING to music is not work. WRITING music is work. READING a book is not work, WRITING a book is work. WATCHING a t.v. show is not working, FILMING a t.v. show is work etc. Listening, Reading or Watching things is boring to me without a beer in hand.
My dad was an alcoholic but has been sober for 12 years 🎉 I never said I would go down that same road. I have just graduated from University and have realized the role alcohol has played, and how detrimental it has been. I found myself blacking out most times I drank, and not being able to control how much I had. I have decided to stop altogether now at a young age to prevent anything else from happening.
Was daily drinking since the beginning of the pandemic running through Costco sized bottles of vodka weekly before. That one podcast put a dead stop on all that! I owe Huberman my life ❤
I just quit drinking when I learned my wife is pregnant with my second child (I'm a 27yr old) Honestly felt like I got heavy drinking out of my system since I started so young .. 14 - 18 were my hardest years by far. Recently until I quit over a month ago I noticed I had significantly started drinking more consistently.. it's never worth it. Don't poison yourself. You don't need alcohol to have fun. Live life freely
Funny because I didn't start drinking until I was 33. And was a very light drinker until was about 43. Still considered a light drinker by most except when I do drink- it's to at least get a buzz and twice a year to get drunk.
As someone who worked in the nightlife for almost a decade quitting alcohol was the best decision I ever made. It seems impossible at first but when you give it a try you will see every aspect of your life improve. It will also give you a lot of clarity and time to reflect on what matters the most in your life. Alcohol is really an escape and a gateway drug
Isn't it ironic how children have crazy amounts of fun completely sober, and then all of a sudden, when we become adults, we think that fun can only be had while drinking?
You changed my life....with the episode of what alcohol does to your health/brain. I was a big scotch connoisseur with many friends, but I've made the decision to completely stop knowing that it is a poison destroying my health. I've always been athletic attending triathlons, running races, rescue diver, MMA, etc. But was feeling really bloated all the time & just sluggish....stopping alcohol has been a game changer. Now I can start fresh & begin to change my health/fitness again. I don't care what others think....thank you very much.
I wanted to quit alcohol for many years before I did 7.5 months ago. Andrew's episode in reference here was one of the biggest helps in getting me through the treches of attempting sobriety. Truth is powerful and overcomes lies.
True. Alcohol is more dangerous then people think. As someone who lost a dad to alcohol (his not dead but not the same person). He went from a hard core business man to being homeless, literally. This is why my husband and I do not drink. It’s not worth it.
My dad had an alcohol problem from the age of 15. So I never had a clue about the person he could have been. He managed to quit drinking for the last 10 years of his life which was great, because he was aggressive and spiteful when he was drunk. So, I had a few years of seeing him sober but it really was too late for him. His brain was effectively pickled and all of the usual human emotional responses had been killed off decades earlier.
I think biggest problem with alcohol addiction is chasing past. When you are young everything is new, and doing silly things with friends is making life time memories. With alcohol you boost enchant or whatever your happiness, and every great memory while you were consuming alcohol with friends it stays with you. And after some years when your friends have families and its not like it used to be, you gonna start chasing past. Trying to feel happy and young with alcohol. I drank almost every day for ten years, i tried successfully be sober for one year in hopes that i will lose addiction and will be able to drink occasionally. Failed and started to drink even more like 3-5 liters of beer every day with occasional vodka days. Now im sober for half a year, and im never going to drink again.
Huberman's episode on alcohol was my introduction to him and was life-changing. I didn't have 'a problem', but it was eye-opening to learn why it seemed like I just couldn't kick my depression. I've cut WAY back the last few months and my mood has been so much more stable. Finding Huberman has been a game-changer. 💙
It was the same for me.... Even though I drank every evening to relax, I never really had a problem with hangovers or drinking too much. Fortunately it was very easy for me to stop completely.
he thinks hes better than everyone and has no sense of addiction "I am great I dont do drugs or drink" this is about addiction its not a subject he should handle he is nor an addiction specialist or has been through this and addiction himself. People get upset with his preaching because he has no qualifications to talk about addiction, just stop some people cant, he is highly toxic with his preaching.
9 месяцев назад
I can't do it, the "cutting way back"… unless I drank no alcohol at all (the weird way you all use "to drink" is, frankly, really weirding me out). And my depression… as much or little as their is is not alcohol-related because I'm stone sober most of the year… let's just say when Huberman in that podcast described "low consumption" as "a drink a day" I was "then I basically drink no alcohol at all" (I don't have depression, but I did have a pretty serious brush with a very specific suicidal thought over ten years ago… right after and because I had become homeless and, in that very moment, had the feeling I had nowhere to go)
I turned 50 and was drinking 2-3 drinks a night. Within 3 months of my birthday I had gained almost 15lbs at 22% body fat and I was still hitting the gym 6 days a week. I was also having trouble with acid reflux and waking up 3x a night to urinate. So I quit drinking completely and within 7 months i've dropped 25 lbs and am down below 15% body fat. Acid reflux is gone and I sleep like a rock.
Chris was the one who planted the idea of alcohol-free lifestyle into my head. But that Huberman episode was the nuclear missile launched into my synapses that evaporated any desire to continue drinking. Been sober since the end of April now.
I gave up alcohol two years ago. I did share a bottle of table wine with a friend a couple of times a month and thought that was probably ok. I listened to the Huberman podcast on alcohol and stopped completely. Having said that, I used to enjoy alcohol. Now, from time to time I have had a glass or two. On those rare occasions, I look at my Fitbit sleep record - and there is no deep sleep. I am now happy to tell others that there is no safe dose.
3 years sober in 3 days. So grateful I saw the issue and finally addressed it. To those out there struggling, stay with it. Go to meetings, whatever. You can do it. Fight for your life back.
If I go sober I feel like I'd want to avoid drunks as much as possible so I'd completely change the times I was up 😂. For myself I know the hours I'm rarely seen out of my flat are between 6am and 1pm. That's the window I'd ideally like to often operate in. The reason I'm awake at 4am rn is a result of drinking. I'm sober rn. First day in a while.
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, dr.sporessss. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.
@@Co-Ma Funny how there's always another side to any comment on the internet. That's not my experience at all. This interview just brought to mind something my dad always said.
Yeah, totally get where you are coming from. I had drinking buddies who all I had in common with was just drinking heavily. I look back now and realise they weren't really friends at all.
I am seeing this now, something similar. My biggest drinking buddy quit drinking at the same time I did. Without alcohol, our time together seems soooo boring now. Like I do not even really look forward to it. I am close to 50 years old, so it was past time to slow down, but now weekends feel like I am at a nursing home.
@@ericpigg2689ugh. That's terrible. You need to find hobbies that can keep you occupied. I enjoy reading, but I'm too ansty to do it. I've thought about going shooting, fishing, movies, eating out. Try something new.
I am allergic to Alcohol. Yet i drank for years and years. I always used to joke that I am allergic to alcohol. I would quote Robert Downey Jr., "I am allergic to alcohol, evrytime I drink I break out in handcuffs." Well, it turns out my liver will barly process alcohol. So I remain at super high blood alcohol levels when I drink. My liver starts spitting out ridiculous amounts of enzymes which who knows what changes that is making in the body and brain. I wish I knew more of the science behind this. I've almost died many times. I have been in the hospital with bac in the .4s many many times. 2 years ago I was on a binge and quit cold turkey and was driving and had a siezure from alcohol withdrawal. I am roughly 6 months sober now. I finally realize, I can not drink. I think my liver is worse now because if I drink even 4-5 beers i get so sick the next day like I drank two fifths of whiskey. Alcohol is a killer. it has been killing me for years. It has given me nothing in return. It has been the bane of my existence. Alcohol is poison.
2:57 I’ve always said that sometimes you have to go crazy (maybe a night out drinking or whatever) so you don’t go insane. It’s not my way of motivating one to drink but it’s something I say to someone the next day when they are feeling guilty about drinking so much. I’m Curious how Huberman would respond to my going crazy to not go insane statement above. Happy to hear anyone’s thought 💭 about that too - it’s a position I don’t hear people discuss
I drank for about 40 years, heavy daily drinking towards the end but have been alcohol free for 4 years now. For many yrs I knew I had a problem but didn't know how to stop. A sort of "out of body experience " really scared me. I was on my way into a liquor store and kind of saw myself from above, like an overhead shot in a movie or being a human marionette. In the end 3 people I'd never met or even spoken to got me to quit: Nikki Glaser the comedian, David McMillan the Montreal restauranteur and John Fluevog the Canadian shoe designer. I recommend 3 books: Allen Carr's Quit Drinking Without Willpower, Annie Grace's This Naked Mind and William Porter's Alcohol Explained.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🍷 Risks of Alcohol and Personal Experiences with Sobriety - Discussion about the risks of alcohol and personal sobriety experiences. - Chris discusses his past efforts to avoid alcohol and its impact on productivity. - Huberman highlights the health risks of alcohol, especially for women, and societal perceptions of non-drinkers. - 02:05 🎉 Social Dynamics and Alcohol Consumption - Exploration of social dynamics around drinking, particularly in college settings. - Huberman shares his college experiences with alcohol and discusses the negative effects of drinking on sleep and decision-making. - The conversation touches on the ritualistic aspect of drinking in various cultures. - 04:26 🚫 Perspectives on Nightlife and Sobriety - The impact of alcohol on nightlife and the perceived benefits of sobriety. - Chris reflects on his experience as a club promoter and the realities of late-night parties. - Discussion of sobriety as a productivity tool and its impact on consistency, time, and money. - 06:04 🌿 Comparing Alcohol with Psilocybin - Comparing effects of alcohol to low doses of psilocybin. - Chris shares insights on how psilocybin affects his thinking and overall well-being compared to alcohol. - Discussion on why people choose alcohol over other substances, considering tradition and marketing influence. - 07:53 🧪 Alcohol's Impact on Health and Social Perceptions - Alcohol's detrimental effects on testosterone levels and health. - Discussion on societal views of drinking at different ages and the infantilization of long-term drinkers. - Huberman clarifies his stance as not anti-alcohol, but emphasizes the importance of informed choices. - 09:35 🌞 Combining Socializing with Health-Promoting Activities - Shift in socializing trends towards health-promoting activities. - Examples of combining social experiences with wellness practices like Russian baths. - Discussion of the benefits of morning sunlight and its impact on mental health and circadian rhythms. - 11:52 🌙 Circadian Rhythms and Mental Health - The relationship between disrupted circadian rhythms and mental health issues. - Importance of getting enough sunlight during the day and minimizing artificial light at night. - Practical tips for maintaining a healthy circadian rhythm, such as using red light functions on devices. - 13:42 🥦 Promotion of AG1 Nutritional Supplement - Advertisement for AG1 nutritional supplement. - Benefits of AG1 on digestion and overall health, as experienced by the speaker. - Incentives and offers related to the purchase of AG1. Made with HARPA AI
Going on 9 years sober, cold turkey. Was blacking out 5 or 6 days a week. Havent looked back, life is a million times better. Once i quit my whole life changed for the best.
My wife has never drank alcohol. My drinking has diminished greatly to where I have 1-2 drinks per month (Was a binge drinker from 16-30). What is eye opening to me is how people react to her sobriety. I've seen women just walk away from a conversation immediately. She has never expressed any issue with others drinking, but to Huberman's point, people will assume negative things about her.
Yeah, the same thing happens with me. I guess it’s like holding up that alcoholic mirror for others and they don’t like what they see. So weird because I don’t have an issue with people drinking in front of me, but apparently they feel guilty about it?
Thank you for this video!!!!! Thank you! About to hit my 2 years being sober of alcohol and I’m truly grateful for it. For those who are struggling, please know there is hope and a better life out there for you. ❤
I've quite drinking for 7.5 months now and one of the primary reasons i can resist reincorporating it into my life is the fact that just a single drink drastically reduces your sleep quality. Thanks Andrew for bringing the truthe to light on this destructive substance
I'm 36. Never drank a sip in my life. I've been pressured, I've been looked down on because of it, no doubt I have missed a lot of opportunities social, sexual, careerwise, and I don't give a fuck about it. Nothing can dwarf the value of always being a responsible adult and in control of your faculties. Don't be a wretched slave to some drug. Don't be pathethic piece of crap whose mind can be pressured into drinking. Be a fortress, stand strong. That's what my grandfather would also advise you. Probably, I don't know. Never met the guy, cuz his liver succumbed to his alcohol habits in his 30s. My mother had to drop out of school as a young teen and start working. Learn from the mistakes of others around you.
Alcohol made me gain 60lbs (mostly belly fat), become depressed and lose friends/opportunities. Now I'm a month sober and eating clean while hitting the gym and goin on walks.
I haven’t had a drink for over 25 years…alcohol is such a waste of time and money. Not to mention health, soul, sanity, prestige, shame, anger, resentment and money…”spiritus contra spiritum”
70, drank since my mid teens, often heavily as I got older. Was getting really bad acid reflux every time I drank and one evening decided I’d had enough. Tipped what was left of the bottle down the sink. That was around 18 months ago and I haven’t touched a drop since. Acid reflux has gone, my once high blood pressure is now back to normal, sleep much better, more energy, brain fog gone, have more money in my pocket that I can put to better use. Honestly wish I’d stopped years ago.
I feel like the key to alcohol, like anything else, is to just not overdo it. It's easier said than done for a lot of people, but it is true. I think completely ousting it from your life is a little unrealistic and unnecessary for most people who don't have a problem. It's like saying "I'm never eating pizza again because it's unhealthy". Sure, it is unhealthy, but if you don't eat all the time, you'll be fine. Some of my best memories are with friends having a couple of beers or making lasagna with my girlfriend, splitting a bottle of wine. Would it still be as good of a memory without the alcohol? Honestly, no, it wouldn't. On those occasions I didn't have more than a couple of beers or one bottle of wine. Nothing got out of control, but it was enough to elevate the experience and get me out of my shell enough to land the joke or do that funny dance that I wouldn't have otherwise. It's probably a very unpopular take, but I have a good relationship with alcohol and never overdo it. It has improved social experiences for me and I won't stop using it just like I won't stop eating pizza (on occasion). Life gets pretty boring if you obsess about what's absolutely optimal for health all the time. Just as boring as the old adage "everything in moderation", but it's true.
Yeah absolutely moderation is key if people want to be technical we are all going to die from something I'm mean they spray cancer causing pesticides on our produce and a lot of states water has forever chemicals in it so a drink here and there ain't gonna hurt 🤷♂️
@@jakezywek6852 You're missing the point. Alcohol is bad, even worse than pizza, but it's ok if you drink only a small amount on special occasions. It will temporarily have negative effects on your hormones but those effects will diminish pretty soon after you quit drinking.
I agree with what they're saying, but I've actually had some really fun and memorable times with my friends at parties, or even at the bar, at home watching the sunset, or even going for a hike and cracking open a few beers. Sometimes it does really help open you up and calm you down in moderation. Sure, some would say, "well, weed, mdma, mushrooms and lsd can do that too AND its better for you." And I somewhat agree, however its easier to control 1 or 2 beers for me than it is to eat some mushrooms. 2 beers will ALWAYS be the same for me, while .5gs of mushrooms or a bowl hit of weed can sometimes wildly differ.
I never liked alcohol, but I drank once at 15, and twice in my 20s because people would say "come on, let's have some fun". These three times I was drunk, I got in BIG trouble. Now, that I am free from peer pressure, I would not drink alcohol for any reason whatsoever.
He summed it up perfectly at 4:00 in! I'm talking about drinking at home, not so much social events. I think a lot of people drink at home to change the mode they are in: From work time to fun time, from busy time to relaxation time, from someone else's time to MY time. Almost like "I'm free and in control now". I noticed I was doing this and stopped immediately. I don't keep drinks at home anymore. I might have one when I'm out in the future, but no more drinking at home for me. I'm sick of it and I'm just done doing it regularly. It helps to come up with a replacement for the "now it's my time to relax" feeling. Cranberry and sparkling water works great! I don't miss drinking at all, no need to sedate myself after work!
I totally get that. As someone who drank mostly at home just to "relax" as you put it, I wasted a lot of time doing almost nothing while drunk. Worst of all it starts to become a routine that is extremely hard to break once you've done it so many times. Im very thankful for the fact i finally dont follow that pattern anymore.
@@pumbaapigTotally, it became a habit and we don't realize how long we are doing it. I also was unproductive, mainly vegging out online. There a many other ways to relax, once we realize alcohol is just a mental association with "fun" or '"relaxation" time, it's quite easy to break. Just find something else to associate as relaxation time. Dark chocolate, hot shower, video game, reading, comedy, etc. Glad you figured it out too!
On the other hand, noting is better than a good glass of wine with a nice meal. I keep 550 bottles on hand to enjoy with meals for the next twenty years. The secret is to keep it to one (occasionally two) glasses per night.
My mom works at a drug rehab and she says the alcoholics are always the worst ones by far in terms of how much their physical health and lives have been destroyed. Very heartbreaking.
yep. because no one takes a loved one to rehab for alcohol.... until they are deep in alcoholism like 10-20 years. but if you know your loved one is doing cocaine, heroin etc only 1 time. you will try to send them to rehab inmediatly..... people in general think that alcohol is harmless because is "legal".....
@@Junglebtcyou are wrong .. Heroin does no damage to the liver, you can inject heroin and have a healthy liver and kidneys. Cocaine alone doesn't damage the liver and kidneys, especially if smoked or injected. Cocaine with alcohol is HORRIBLE for the liver. But alcohol totally melts your internal organs, destroys your liver and kidneys, it also ruins your heart, it also is horrible for your skin. U are better off injecting 💉 heroin daily than drinking a fifth of spirits a day
In my family we were given our first drink at age 14 and I thought drinking was wonderful. When my husband, an alcoholic, stopped drinking I did too, just to support him, and I can tell you EVERYTHING in my life has improved. I realize, even though I was not an alcoholic, I had wasted 50 years of my life by drinking my “healthy” two drinks in the evening. I’m envious of the people who were advised early on never to start, and I’m going to advise my grandchildren to never take up alcohol in the first place.
Pancreatitis, twice, my god that hurts. After the last attack, and after a week in Hospital, I told the consultant, "that is it, never again", and I meant it, to him and to me. It lasted 18 months, looking back, looked and felt so healthy, after a year or so sober. Went back to Bangkok, after many years away, Took a single drink on night out, and said " hello my friend, where have you heen ". The rest is predictable, I am afraid . Self control of a slug does not help. But the cost to finances and health, why? why? why?
Sounds like you need more discipline in your life, I would get used to putting yourself through a struggle every day and embrace it as much as you can.
@@nathanwahr7802 No, you're not considering what it took to get him to go 18 months...anything BUT raw discipline. Note: I don't support the abstinence movement.
Getting to 18 months must have been really hard, I hope you can get that 18 month "holiday from the devil" again. But maybe all you need to focus is just 1 day. (And then the next one but that's for tomorrow's Danny...) I can't compare but to me it helped to think of my sobriety as return to where I was when I was a kid who would sit at his desk making paper models while listening to Genesis - Foxtrot, and just having an absolute blast. Then all of a sudden 20 years of alcohol happened but I'm going back. "hello my friend sobriety (I did not know I had until I lost it), where have you been"
Sober 6 years best six years of my life. Bottle of JD a night for over 10 years. Stopped in 10 secs drinking alcohol, not touched a drop since. Lost 90% of my friends within a couple of weeks. But gained some of the best friends I will ever have. Did a diploma in CBT - worked in a rehab for 3 years then mental health with people with severe personality disorders. Now and then I think of drinking - but it passes quickly. Stop paying big corp to fuck up you mental health.
This incredible. I'm 7 years clean, my wife is 6 years clean. I've been held hostage, lost my son to the ministry, lost the cars, the house, the money, the business, my wife left to a life on the street where she spent 18 months escaping extreme domestic and gang violence. She ended up pregnant and clawed her way out, she had to escape for two now. we spent 5 years apart healing in recovery. we've been back together for 2 years now and after losing all, today, we closed on a home. I run this podcast in a beautiful studio, full time thanks to a bunch of great organizations in my community. I have a life I never saw coming. its possible. It's an epic adventure. We can recover.
As a drinker, i agree alcohol can count for loss of productivity, especially on days that you are hung over, but those days, especially as you get older are few and far between. I think any extreme is bad in most things. A lot of the cases mentioned are exactly that. Drinking until 1 AM, binge drinking on weekends… The occasional drink regardless of science, I feel can help more than just catching a buzz. That being said, I definitely use that video as a push to drink less because its obviously not the best thing for you
If one is not drinking to "catch a buzz" what is the point? No one, and I repeat, no one, starts off liking the taste of alcohol. One is not drinking initially for the taste experience.
I gave up smoking marijuana 5 years ago , i got into physical fitness regime 5 years back and now im progressing towards calisthenics, ive came to realize that these addictions are not worth ,there was a time when i used to smoke Marijuana 7 to 8 times a day , but after quitting as the days passed by i awakened my self and there was a time when my hands used to shake with anxiety but now im feeling tough mentally as well as physically, addictions ruins ones self, it makes us far away from our mighty ambitions, it kills us in every way possible by inducing those harmful chemicals, i feel that the love for life has such an overpowering feel that its much more than any addiction .
I quit drinking in 2005 at age 26 or I would not be here today. 100 percent I was an alcoholic my first drink. It literally felt like god wrapped his arms around me.
1 year and 6 months sober here, best decision ever. When they were talking about doing healthy social activities, at the moment I gather with a solid group of friends and we do calisthenics on sundays, sometimes we are 10-14 people in the park, man it is the best plan of the week, always looking forward to it.
What I take away from this chat: don't always drink. Personally, I only drink on weekends. Week days are a hard no. I also only drink higher end liquor which I do for enjoying the craftsmanship. I may drink with a friend, and half the conversation is just about the liquor in question. Forget the cheap stuff. It hits you differently, and it hits hard. Life is too short for cheap liquor. Don't make a daily habit of drinking a lot either. Be intentional.
I've always said that cheap booze isn't the way to go. Drinking the better stuff never gives me hangovers. I don't even mess around with lagers and ciders anymore.
It’s not enough to just quit alcohol if you wanna feel better. Proper diet, mindful eating, and some exercise is also necessary, but being sober gives you a leg up on all that. I’m 770 days sober today after 20 years of hard drinking.
Most of my poor judgment calls, regrettable decisions, unnecessary conflicts, and foolish actions can be attributed to being under the influence of alcohol.
Very good connection, awesome topic to talk and the uncontrable truth to talk about, over a year sober now, did struggle to sober and stay sober but the longer I go sober the better life gets.. so I'm better off now..
Shit bro quite before you start drinking too much & have to worry about withdrawals killing you. I thought it would never happen to me and here I am 10 years daily drinking
I’ve been sober from alcohol for almost 10 years (10 years this April). Whenever I’m at a party or function, right about the time when people start to get noticeably drunk is my cue that it’s time to leave. Not because I feel tempted at all… but because it gets to a point where people become kind of obnoxious and if I’m being honest, it’s annoying when you’re sober 😂 I just can’t relate to anyone at that point. Some people say drinking makes you more authentic but I feel it makes people less authentic. The whole “I love you man” attitude. And I’ll be having conversations with people that I know they won’t remember. That’s just not fun to me 🤷🏻♀️
very true about the authentic part - I noticed it on myself! And I talked and liked people who in reality I disliked but alcohol "changed my mind" while drunk. And the next days I was embarrassed.
Hahahahah, I totally agree. I enjoy my time out and socialising, but as soon as people start getting to that noticeable point, it's home time- which is perfect cause it also comes up around 11pm/12, which means I'm home early enough to still get a nice good night's sleep!
Even just a week or so without it, I’ve gone out to work functions and not drank, and I was shocked at how quickly I saw my coworkers change and YES how obnoxious I found them to be after just 2 drinks, plus the smell of beer on their breath as they began to talk louder and louder with me and each other. Christ, I’ve been that person hundreds of nights! Get me outta here lol
@@thesweetprince Hahaha, and then there are the ones that get closer and closer, too close, when they talk, the more drunk they get, to the point that you are having to shift further and further back, completely changing positions in the room and they haven't noticed at all, hahaha
Never drank or smoke in my entire life. A great part of it had to do with the fact that I grew up in a country where alcohol is banned. But even after moving to the US in my early 20s, I never got the urge to try. You realize how closely it's linked to health issues when the very first question you get asked at every doctor's visit is 'Do you drink or smoke?'. Anyway, now that there is a ton of scientific research out there that the healthy level of alcohol for a person is 'zero', I am happy that it was always like this for me lol.
I think that in general drinking less is the best thing to do, however there’s also something beautiful about getting drinks with friends and family and having those late night beach bonfire conversations that only can happen with a little tequila or whiskey. In Vino Veritas. Live life with balance and no regrets.
@ch-yq5ynyep exactly. Some people can have balance and some can’t. But being aware is very important. I definitely feel like culturally we drink too much.
I don't think I was ever an "alcoholic" but a six pack a few times a week or a few shots after work was definitely a problem. It made doing manual labor 100x more difficult and unsafe.
I am 23, writing this while hungover. My friend got married last weekend and it was one of the most fun days of my entire life for so many reasons. I’ll set the scene for you. I don’t dress nice barely at all but I thought I looked great, felt great, was so happy for my friend and was absolutely thrilled to be a part of such a beautiful day with fantastic people. For me alcohol was such a great addition to this day, I hung out with people much older than me and was truly myself, I got a great compliment from a father of a new friend he said at the end of the night “thank you for giving me faith in our future generation” it made me tear up because I felt so proud. My friend who got married told me that night “thank you for carrying the dance floor” I danced my heart out for so long that my calves were sore the next day to the point where I was limping 😂he also told me that one of his biggest regrets of the day was not making me a groomsman because I was so sincere and helpful and fun that day. I’ll remember him saying that to me for the rest of my life. My self worth is pretty low right now and hearing these wonderful things about myself really helped me feel grateful for who I am, and the people that molded me. I was so free that whole day because I was drinking, I was bonding with new friends over beers, taking shots in celebration of a new chapter in a great friends life, sipping on a gin and tonic while eating a wonderful meal and listening to people pour their hearts out. It was incredible. I cried watching my friend cry watching his new wife dance with their son. I’m afraid to give up drinking because of those days. Days where everything is perfect, alcohol makes me super loving happy and free, but I’m terrified of the health impacts, I hate feeling horrible the next day (sometimes 2) and I hate feeling like I have a problem. The problem isn’t severe but when people ask if I want to grab drinks I have a hard time saying no because of how much fun it is. I drink maybe 5-6 times a month pretty heavily (I’ve never blacked out or even come close) I drink a beer or two after work maybe 1-2 times a week and I know I shouldn’t. The moral of this long comment that I turned into my journal entry for the day, I love what drinking can open up in a day and I don’t want to miss out or lose those precious moments of seeing myself and others be completely free and in the moment, enjoying each others company and learning about eachother on a deeper level because the booze takes off the edge. I want to be more health conscious, I have bad acid reflux because of drinking and my sleep has been horrible. I need to be more disciplined and take a break. But I do enjoy it a ton. It’s hard, I’ll figure it out and be better. Huberman is the goat
Damn. It was tough reading this because you have so many positive associations with alcohol. I’m the opposite. I grew up with an emotionally detached mother (alcoholic). Where we intersect is that after 1-2 drinks, I’m able to curb my cynicism and be more loving and affectionate. I’m a very friendly & outgoing person, but I’m high strung & struggle to Relax. I drink about 3 nights a week, 1-2 drinks so that I can stop being angry with my husband for stupid reasons. Reading your comment really gave me a different perspective and made me realize that I need to address the root of Why I drink. I didn’t watch Huberman’s original video about the health risks of alcohol consumption, but I’m going to find it now. I hope you’re doing well on your journey.
I’m quite restrained while sober. One unit of alcohol helps with social interaction, as it lowers my guard that is too high by default. So one unit feel great. Two feels good, but the added positive effect is lower than the first unit. Very little additional positive effect is added after that, rather negative effects starts coming into play instead. Like reduced coordination and increased tiredness.
Sometimes I drink more, sometimes less. Not drinking has a clear positive effect over my well being and I don't mind going for weeks or months without a drink. That being said, there is part of me which only exists after a drink or two. This part of me is able to "let it go" and be more present in the moment and open to it. I just have to deal with it.
I’m 25, been a huge drinker for the last 9 years and I’m 5 days sober. I shouldn’t be alive because of it. I’m so determined this time. My previous record was 17 days sober.
Good to hear, im also 25 and have been drinking since i was 20. Even in those 5 years it destroyed a lot of things in my life, my wake up call I think was me drinking a pint of cheap liquor while having the flu, it made me feel tremendously worse and I couldn't even breathe while laying down. I'm 3 days sober and if I drink within the next week I'm convinced that I need rehab
A meta point you can make on those discussions on alcohol, social media, weed or whatever is that people really lost the art of moderation. People of both camps will just hate on you for not fully agreeing with them. You can very well enjoy a glass of wine or two a week or a beer with a friend, it's beneficial. But you don't need to keep drinking, your mood won't be better. It's the same for other habits
Bob Marley once sang:- "you've got to free yourself from mental slavery... none but ourselves can set us free..." 🙂 I have never been a part of any controlled religious group nor do I believe in their individual life manipulating indoctrination's, but; I was once invited to a gathering of young Mormon's in a Hyatt hotel where there was absolutely NO alcohol (because they're programmed not to use it); but everyone were dancing and truly having fun!! This seriously confused me as at the time I luuuurved get socially(?) wasted on drink/drugs!! So; I went for a walk around the hotel complex and looked in through the window/door of a typical American Tiffany lamp filled bar with customers drinking at the bar in a smoke-filled environment, and it immediately hit me that it looked like HELL!! These individuals needed like-minded people/drinkers to somehow associate with each other just like the religious followers, but why I thought... can we not have the courage to just enjoy the moment/life without the need to collectively belong to any group? 🙂😉
I quit drinking in 2018 and everything in my life got better immediately after that point. My life is exponentially better in every way possible, it’s awesome. I think I was 31 when I stopped, and alcohol sure made a hot mess of my life by that point, but I’m thankful I stopped when I did, so I can enjoy my life a million times better without alcohol. If you’re reading this and you’re struggling with alcohol, don’t give up it’s a hard thing to put down but it’s worth it all to try, life is too short
Hello legends. Watch the full length episode with Andrew here - ruclips.net/video/BoutTY8XHSc/видео.html. Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D & more from AG1 at drinkag1.com/wisdom
Thats it alcohol is wack, I'm switching to crack.
Non-alcoholic beer is so nice
Your liver was so damaged that it wasn't clearing all your bilirubin and depositing it in your skin causing intense itchiness. Very good thing you stopped when you did. Keep up the good work.
The problem with stating "Alcohol is worse than you think" is that you have no idea what I think.
What is a good psilocybin?
That was the episode that made me go cold turkey and quit alcohol completely. 52 days in can't even begin to tell you how good it feels to lead a alcohol free life.. I used to be a binge drinker , zero alcohol during weekdays due to work but 5-6 drinks on the weekends.. Now, I wake up at 6 am on a Sunday morning completely free of hangover and feeling great. Alcohol is the biggest illusion that has been sold to us.. I am so glad Huberman made that podcast..
Same, life's good
How is it going now? I relapsed after 10 months. Will start again
🎉congrats. about 2 years for me. 40 yr old. i say im retired from drinking 🍸 i feel good and the longer i have the easier it is. cheers
@@stefanallard3084stopping caffiene is dumb for most ppl. Caffiene is basically fine as long as its not used every day and relied upon. For its purpose its useful. Like most substances
Same! I am going on 11 months with zero alcohol. Huberman's episode was the catalyst for me as well.
The cancer risk from alcohol has gotta be one of the most well kept secrets of the alcohol industry
its the new smoking bus alcohol can get you release tension too wich is actually healthy
@@hearsayfiles stress reduction is good for you, but there are much less harmful ways to do so
100%, just in the same we don’t talk about sausages, bacon, salami etc are carcinogen. Most people give it to their kids every single day …
BarbQ is also a cancerous way to cook
@@stldweller love me some bbq 😋
I remember few years back after my wife died, I was left alone with 3 kids. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got addicted to alcohol. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment changed my life for better. I can proudly say i'm totally clean for 6 years and still counting. Always look to nature for solution to tough problems, Shrooms are phenomenal.
I love hearing great life changing stories like this. I want to become a mycologist because honestly mushrooms are the best form of medicine (most especially the psychedelic ones) There are so many people today used magic mushrooms to ween off of SSRI medication- its amazing! Years back i wrote an entire essay about psychedelics. they saved you from death buddy, lets be honest here.
Hey mates! Can you help with the source? I suffer severe anxiety, panic and depression and I usually take prescription medicine, but they don't always help. Where can I find those psilocybin mushrooms? I'm really interested in treating my mental health without Rxs. I live in Australia don't know much about these. I'm so glad they helped you. I can't wait to get them too. Really need a reliable source 🙏
Yes sure of mycologist Pedroshrooms. I have the same experience with anxiety, addiction. Mushrooms did a total reset for me.
Thanks for sharing your story. That's rough I sympathize. Save your health save your mind. Life is better without heroin, cocaine, alcohol and cigarettes. And you have more money in your pocket. God bless everyone who has rejected the devils intentions to be addicted to alcohol and cigarettes etc which can cause so much damage to health. I will pray for you all.
Can I reach this dude through Google?
I just reached 6 years of sobriety. I was a problem drinker for over a decade and never imagined being able to live without alcohol. Now alcohol never crosses my mind and my life has improved dramatically.
Just gonna say, keep it up! Congrats to you man!
Year and a half. In my addiction days I couldn’t imagine without it either. I was looking forward to retirement because I thought that was all I would do is drink. I’m so indifferent to it now and very content that I have no interest in ever consuming it again. And the sleep, omg sobriety feels good
I had around 25 drinks over Christmas loll
@@shaunwalker4221same haha. Trying this dry January thing. Boy is it hard, but going strong so far
@Sean-ie3wy not saying its amazing just saying we should just live life
3+ years no alcohol and it’s not even a thing in my brain anymore. I don’t even consider how my life is improved, I just look at alcohol like damn, that looks a major impediment to living a happy life.
7 months here, having a very hard time functioning right now. This is encouraging, thanks
@primetimejabroni903 hey you got this. I'm 3years sober. Once you hit your 1st year it gets so easy and then you stop counting the days and just celebrate the anniversary of you making the best decision ever. Remember you are doing the right thing don't ever forget that!
@@zenchan924 thank you! Yes I’m hoping things get a little easier come a year.
Just earlier today I was thinking about the OG zombie RUclipsrs I used to watch in high school. What a random coincidence hope you’re doing well
its been 16 hours for me.
Alcohol and cigarettes addiction actually destroyed my life. I could remember several years ago after divorce with my wife which brought me into my disastrous journey on Alcohol and cigarettes. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got diagnosed with cptsd. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Much respect to mother nature the great magic shrooms.
They saved you from death bud, lets be honest here. and mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on this planet i wish people would all realize. they could solve a lot of problems, more than just mental treatments, environmental clean up; the possibilities are endless with fungus.
Hey mates! Can you help with the source? I suffer severe anxiety, panic and depression and I usually take prescription medicine, but they don't always help. Where can I find those psilocybin mushrooms? I'm really interested in treating my mental health without Rxs. I live in Germany don't know much about these. I'm so glad they helped you. I can't wait to get them too. Really need a reliable source🙏🏻
benmycologys is your guy
Thanks for sharing your experience, this would help my son
Replacing one substance with another
Huberman is a great role model especially for young men. Brains and muscles , street wise and academic, he has done the drugs and booze and now moved on to better things. Its great that he is reaching so many with his inspiring messages.
I dont think he did drugs
I think bro had a problem. He’s says he was never a big drinker ?
@@maxk880 He took the SATs on Acid haha his backstory is really interesting
He did do drugs and didn’t stop drinking completely until 2019.
Spare me
1. Hangovers 2. Bad for every part of your body 3. Costs money 4. Say things you wouldn’t say 5. Eat things you wouldn’t eat 6. Do things you wouldn’t do 7. Do things you don’t remember 8. Shortens your life 9. Bad for relationships 10. You feel better without it
Amen to that.
11. You don't go to jail 12. You don't go to the emergency room 13. You don't hate yourself
I've never understood this, I've passed out from drinking but I never say or do things I wouldn't do sober
Every big mistake I’ve ever made was due to alcohol.
@@keithkennedy9072 stop drinking then lol
Over 1 year sober ✌🏼 sobriety was the biggest act of self care I ever gave myself ❤️
7 months sober and going strong!! Videos like this just reaffirm my decision of giving alcohol up entirely. After more than 10 years of daily binge drinking, I quit it cold turkey and never looked back. If you're recently sober or contemplating it, you CAN do it! Life is so much better without that poison being ingested. Stay strong, friends.
Congratulations!!! 👏👏👏❤
Day 3 after 15 years of every day. I'm not going back. Congratulations on your sobriety.
@@smoothcynical3651 3 days, bud! Congrats to you as well!
You wont regret it, alcohol adds little value to the human experience from what I can see
i want this, stop the mass poisoning its not social its antisocial drinking
2 years sober. Best decision ever. Every facet of my life has improved drastically, bar none.
Awesome, keep up the great work!! Congratulations on your sobriety!! 😁👏👏
@ch-yq5yn I thought I had IBS. Turns out it was all the booze.
"bar none".... guess I'm the only one who loved the word play there. ..
go to england and rave and drink. if youre boring, have a nice meal and sleep more...we dont live till 200
@ch-yq5ynto be honest, that’s a pretty minuscule problem on the spectrum of alcoholism.
Deep into week 5 here and holding strong this time, longest dry streak since I was a teenager. I'm 50 now.
Hope everything still doin fine !
@@charlesallison4937I second that
Hang in there. Been a drinking since my teens. Heavily since my 20s. Really heavily the last 12. Just put it down out of the blue 2 months ago. No desire to go back or cravings whatsoever. Very strange. I did the same 37 years ago with cigarettes. I'll be 65 in 12 days. Hoping you've been able to continue and wishing you strength and peace.
Push through, it's worth it
we’re in the same boat i’m on day 40 - been a great 40 days man
1 year sober for me TODAY. Hubermann video on alcohol helped, as has my faith. Grateful to be clear headed and well rested!
Let’s go buddy!!
Was brain fog pretty bad?
@@dialed4life not at all. I got a lot of sleep and stayed busy
@@Werewolf.with.Internet.Access I meant while you were drinking
Alcohol is involved in most cases of physical assault, domestic violence, sexual assaults, murder, car accidents, affairs, accidental injuries, and poor decision making. If I think about the top 5 worst things that have ever happened in my life, alcohol is involved in every one of them with either myself or someone else that was drinking.
Yup.....
Every single one of the worst days of my life were ultimately a result of a binge drinking episode
Me too now that I sit back and think
@@DM-ur8vcA liberal has entered the chat...
in many cases, probably@@DM-ur8vc
@@DM-ur8vc and there's liberals in Britain. I didn't say democrat. Taking common sense and trying to spin it as victim blaming is a liberal thing. In this case it had to do with alcohol, but that's what I was calling out.
The first time I ever drank, I was 14 yrs old and got caught by my parents. My dad kept me on a tight leash from then on out, I remember being like 16-17 asking to stay out past 10:30 & my dad said “nothing good goes on past 10pm”. Although it pissed me off at the time, as a 31 yr old mother I know exactly what he meant by that. I became a party animal,moved out at 17, would go to work at 6am after going to bed at 4am. Got into a physically abusive relationship where he actually put me in the hospital but because I was alcoholic, my mind was severely clouded and only worried about being chosen. I left that relationship and found out I was pregnant a week later.
I had my baby in 2016 and quit drinking for 4.5 yrs, my life elevated tremendously in the first 6 months & then so on. 2022 I lost my mama and 9 months later picked up a drink again because I just couldn’t cope with the grief. Today I’m 110 days sober and what I’ve learned about my triggers for drinking were more based around not wanting to deal or feel what I was feeling- not so much that I liked it or even slightly enjoyed it.
The first step in your journey is often the hardest but the most important. You’ll find the excuses you had for drinking were contributed mostly by alcohol consumption itself.
““You’re never going to understand your relationship to a substance until you get off it”
there are lots of supplements for a daily usage to just feel fine overall daily and not to want to drawn your pain in alcohol. Btw I liked your story!
Vitamin D
St John wort
Magnesium Glycinate
Fish oil
Multivitamins
Thats the basic that needs to be taken! It will help you
I would say “nothing good happens after midnite”. 10pms still a bit early
Coming from a alcoholic family, I chose to not drink. We had a lot of alcoholic violence and constant stress from all of it. I was picked on for not partying, called names by family members. Needless to say I stayed away from family functions. All my partying family are long dead from their ways, sad but people need to realize how destructive alcohol is.
Yeah, I understand completly.
Same here !
makes sense. me personally, im able to drink once ever 2 weeks to month, is that so bad for me?
My narcissist father was basically like a high functioning alcoholic in a lot of ways...He had a good job but I still vividly remember him driving home & swerving repeatedly on the main road multiple times with me in the backseat as a little girl🤦♀️.I refuse to drink & I personally don't hang with the alcohol consuming crowd.Not saying all addicts/alcoholics are narcs but you should 👀 up Cluster B personality disorders & also check out channels on here like Surviving Narcissism & Dr.Ramani to screen yourself for narcissistic family members since it's not unusual to have those types of dynamics at play.
same thing when I became muslim
I’m 18 days without a drop of alcohol after almost twenty years of drinking mostly everyday and heavily 2 to 3 times a week.
The anxiety and self loathing after drinking became unbearable. I thought for years that I was just a person that suffers from anxiety, just unlucky or something 🤦♂️ what a fool I’ve been, I’ve felt zero anxiety since I stopped.
I have no desire to drink, it terrifies me. A beer just looks like a big glass of anxiety, nightmare juice. It has tricked me way too long.
that's a good way to put it, unfortunately it's socially pushed on people so hard, very hard to say no to
Keep up the good work! Be proud and enjoy life!
@@lenseofficial "I'm not drinking today, and I'm not obligated to explain or justify decisions I make for myself to anyone."
as someone who stopped cold turkey after 10 years of partying like a teenage dumbass....
i would say to you. get rid of those people, you know who, will try to make you drink again.
those toxic friends we all had.
they try to make you drink, because they are alcoholics themselves....
you cant get sober, living between alcoholics.
is like being a heroin addict, in a heroin lab... you will die by overdose in a relapse, with 99.9% chance
I get the exact same symptoms post drinking, of anxiety and self loathing. I'll be drink free for 1 year in January. Stay strong 💪 it's worth it
My Father has been a serious Alcoholic for many years his life has been destroyed, he’s been in many fights and legal trouble from drinking, he’s been shot and stabbed on separate occasions, he’s been ran over by a motor cycle because he was so drunk one time he fell into the street and he fell off a roof one time and broke his leg because he was drunk and trying to evade the police, my dads drinking has been such a problem I’ve seen him almost die in front of me many times from drinking too much, if he can’t afford a bottle he will steal it or resort to drinking mouth wash or any cleaning supply with alcohol in it, our relationship has been pretty much burned to the ground, he’s betrayed me many times and stolen from me just to get drunk or high and I can truly say I’ve pretty much given up on him. I gave my dad so many chances and forgave him so many times but he threw his life down the drain and it all started with him drinking. I don’t remember a time when he wasn’t a alcoholic and when he got into meth, things got so much worse. I wish him and I could be cool again but after all that’s happen, I do hold some hatred for him but I’m trying my best to just live and let live, through it all I’ve seen what alcohol can do to someone and I’m gonna do everything I can do not be like him.
I ask with a heart full of compassion, (not out loud) what happened to your pops before his first drink….😌
Sounds like he was definitely battling some demons in his mind. Something happened. The spirits are in him and need to be fed all the time.
I came to realize that I am allergic to alcohol and that I can't safely predict what happens to myself and to other people when I do drink. I'm 15 years and 3 days sober, and I'm very proud of that accomplishment.
You should be.
Damn alcoholic at 15 years old, when did you start to drink? haha
Well done mate .
@@luskira Put the drink down and re-read the comment.
Very nice, brother.
I've grown up with an alcoholic father, saw that man go from my hero to someone i hated for years even after he passed away. Almost went down the same path without realizing it, so thankfull my wife was there to save me before it was too late.
So happy to hear the love & gratitude you have for your wife! 😁❤ Congratulations on your sobriety!! 👏👏👏
I’m in the exact situation now. My dad was my hero and he is now a complete failure due to alcohol. I quit drinking 11 months ago and don’t ever want to start again because of seeing my dad turn into someone I am no longer proud of but someone I am starting to hate. I know he has a disease but he also refuses to get help and is a shell of the human he used to be.
I know, I've been in the same sad boat.
@ChuckHarlan bro this hit different, I know what you're saying. Hope you're still going well. I'm trying to get over it
@@ChuckHarlan You need to have a heartfelt conversation with him, even if that change nothing, telling him how you feel and why seing him like he is today breaks your heart,i know its easy to say and hard to actually do, but its gonna save you years of extra pain.
I quit today wish me luck guys my whole life is riding on it
IREALLY WISH YOU WLL PAL ,, GOOD LUCK
there is no luck just take control
You got this
Are you still going on? Good luck.
God Bless you. Keep firm, when you feel the temptation just remember how great you feel being sober. ❤
Will be 4 years without a drop of alcohol come January 1st. One of the best decisions I've ever made was staying off the drink. Wishing anyone thats working on cutting it out of their life the strength to see it through! Its absolutely worth it!
Good for you. I don’t have a “drinking problem” and literally only do it for tailgating and family gatherings etc.
What I find most bizarre is the weird stigma when you decline a drink because it’s the thing to do at the event. I’ve literally pretended to drink beer before and just poured it out slowly 😂
Great man! You have a strong character!
Day 25 for me. I found giving up tobacco helpful as well. They kind of trigger each other. Feels incredible. I actually feel like a kid again. Anything is possible and I'm no longer a slave to anything.
I was a waffle house cook. This old guy named Buddy used to come in and drink a coke everyday. He had quit drinking alcohol, coffee, and smoking cigarettes on the same day when he turned fifty. He was 84 and had never touched it again.
I haven't quit coffee...yet lol. Enjoying the weight loss. Down 20 ilbs
Go carnivore diet and you're all good
Yep, beer and cigarettes are like peas and carrots, but worse, lol
I’m almost a year sober and this is how I describe the feeling. Like a kid again! I wish everyone would ditch the poison. It’s not worth it.
42 days sober now. I tried in the past but never I made it this far. This time around I was truly ready to give it up though. The list of bad choices I’ve made and memories missed out on while intoxicated over the years is far too long for me to recite. I could sit in my regret while continuing the cycle, but I chose to break generational cycle by choosing my four beautiful children and wife over alcohol. I’ve been tested once last week under a lot of stress but I have not felt this good in a very long time! God bless all of you that are working for being a better you!
10 weeks sober here. Improved my sleep, relationship with my family, overall mental health. Strongly advise people to try to stop for a period of time and see the improvements it can make in your life.
Let’s go, king! Keep it going! It needs you WAY more than you need it!
How are you doing now?
Nothing improves for me when I stop
I have severe self hatred and anxiety I go crazy when I don't have a substance to calm me
❤❤
Oh man, I absolutely LOVE this episode! I haven't had alcohol for 11 years. Didn't have a 'problem' just got sick of feeling like crap from overindulging. I started drinking for fun at 15yo and just decided it was time to stop. I found the whole drinking thing boring by 41. I get so sick of getting the side eye when I turn down drinking in public. I have way more productive days in my life and am so much healthier as a 53yo female🙏
Love drinking by never in excess
Key word: "overindulging"
@@TheDionysianFields for women, even having one drink a day increases the risk of cancers. As we age that risk goes up. I am a grandmother with so much life left and absolutely won't compromise my time and energy with my granddaughter just to have 'wine time' or whatever with the girls.
@@curiouskato I don't drink every day and I have never heard that before about women. I take many different supplements and antioxidants to counteract the negative effects but I'm certainly not trying to encourage anyone to drink. Do whatever works for you.
Alcohol (like sugar, wheat and many other things) will never be particularly good for the human body. That much I agree with.
@@DM-ur8vc failed to get drunk?
Huberman was the push I needed to finally stop drinking. My life has improved so much since then, and I simply cannot thank him enough.
00:57 🍷 Two drinks per week is considered the upper threshold for safe alcohol consumption for adults, unless one is an alcoholic.
01:24 🚫 There are elevated health risks for women, especially in terms of breast cancer, associated with alcohol consumption.
02:33 🎉 Some people may view non-drinkers as "boring" or as taking the fun out of social situations, but this is a misconception.
03:43 💡 There are many alternative ways to have a good time without relying on alcohol, and it's important to be aware of them.
05:06 💪 Taking breaks from alcohol can lead to increased consistency, productivity, and better use of time for personal interests.
06:04 🍻 While alcohol can have a place in socializing, it's important to consider the effects and benefits compared to other activities.
10:16 ☀ Getting morning sunlight has significant positive effects on mood, mental health, and overall well-being, and it's a cost-free practice.
00:01 - 14:50... Alcohol is bad MKAY, Psilocybin mushrooms, and sunlight are better, got it.
@@Rambleon444the Professor seems to agree to that statement hotshot 😂
I'm going on 6 years sober from alcohol. It's definitely the most important thing that I've ever done in my life. Everything about my life is different and improved, my mood, temperament, my day to day activities, my physique, my health, my happiness, energy levels, quality of sleep, financial situation. Literally every single aspect of my life improved after I quit drinking, and I'm happy to say I will never go back and I have zero urge to ever have a drink again. I'm very grateful for everything I've gained by quitting alcohol.
I have 30 years in sobriety. AA is working for me
What do you do when you aren't working? My whole life is in one of 4 conditions: 1.Sober and working. 2.Sober and exercise. 3. drinking and chilling. 4. sleeping. It's hard for me to just chill and hang out without alcohol. I just don't a give a fuck what anybody is talking about when I am sober. Sobriety is made for work.
How much did you drink, average per week?
@@danielm5161 "Sobriety is made for work" is as stupid and wrong as "Alcohol is the devil's juice". It does sound like you lead a very boring and sad life if you have no idea what to do when not working or exercising (I assume going to the gym). Listen to music? Making music? Reading a good (or any) book?
@ I am a music producer of 20 years funnily enough. I do make music sober but I categorize making music as "work". If a person has to apply dedicated focus/problem solving action to a situation then it is work and that is what our sober mind's evolved to do. Passive activities where the brain only reads the situation without having to respond is not work. So LISTENING to music is not work. WRITING music is work. READING a book is not work, WRITING a book is work. WATCHING a t.v. show is not working, FILMING a t.v. show is work etc. Listening, Reading or Watching things is boring to me without a beer in hand.
My dad was an alcoholic but has been sober for 12 years 🎉 I never said I would go down that same road. I have just graduated from University and have realized the role alcohol has played, and how detrimental it has been. I found myself blacking out most times I drank, and not being able to control how much I had. I have decided to stop altogether now at a young age to prevent anything else from happening.
👏👍
College parties make everything worth it tbh
Was daily drinking since the beginning of the pandemic running through Costco sized bottles of vodka weekly before. That one podcast put a dead stop on all that! I owe Huberman my life ❤
Proud of you! 👏👏👏
What’s the link to that episode?
I just quit drinking when I learned my wife is pregnant with my second child (I'm a 27yr old)
Honestly felt like I got heavy drinking out of my system since I started so young .. 14 - 18 were my hardest years by far.
Recently until I quit over a month ago I noticed I had significantly started drinking more consistently.. it's never worth it. Don't poison yourself. You don't need alcohol to have fun. Live life freely
Funny because I didn't start drinking until I was 33. And was a very light drinker until was about 43. Still considered a light drinker by most except when I do drink- it's to at least get a buzz and twice a year to get drunk.
It only took me 8 years to mess up my body from drinking daily shits sad tbh
@@trapgod95xxx63”only” bro that’s a long time. That’s more than a masters degree with an undergrad
As someone who worked in the nightlife for almost a decade quitting alcohol was the best decision I ever made. It seems impossible at first but when you give it a try you will see every aspect of your life improve. It will also give you a lot of clarity and time to reflect on what matters the most in your life. Alcohol is really an escape and a gateway drug
Well said
Almost 2 years sober and ill never go back! Thank you Chris for continuing to reassure so many people this is the best decision for us.
Isn't it ironic how children have crazy amounts of fun completely sober, and then all of a sudden, when we become adults, we think that fun can only be had while drinking?
Such a good point😊
Thats what im looking at now. 5 and 8 year old. You always think everyone is drinking but when you stop you notice it was just you😂
Generally speaking as children you had very little to worry about and could behave as a child.
To validate your claim we should give alcohol to kids and register the impact on fun level 😅
@@erickgomez7775 Done. Good idea. Ill let you know how it goes😂
You changed my life....with the episode of what alcohol does to your health/brain. I was a big scotch connoisseur with many friends, but I've made the decision to completely stop knowing that it is a poison destroying my health. I've always been athletic attending triathlons, running races, rescue diver, MMA, etc. But was feeling really bloated all the time & just sluggish....stopping alcohol has been a game changer. Now I can start fresh & begin to change my health/fitness again.
I don't care what others think....thank you very much.
I wanted to quit alcohol for many years before I did 7.5 months ago. Andrew's episode in reference here was one of the biggest helps in getting me through the treches of attempting sobriety. Truth is powerful and overcomes lies.
I've preached against alcohol for a long time but have always gotten mocked for it. Maybe the tide is finally turning.
What episode?
True. Alcohol is more dangerous then people think. As someone who lost a dad to alcohol (his not dead but not the same person). He went from a hard core business man to being homeless, literally. This is why my husband and I do not drink. It’s not worth it.
My dad had an alcohol problem from the age of 15. So I never had a clue about the person he could have been. He managed to quit drinking for the last 10 years of his life which was great, because he was aggressive and spiteful when he was drunk. So, I had a few years of seeing him sober but it really was too late for him. His brain was effectively pickled and all of the usual human emotional responses had been killed off decades earlier.
I'm pretty sure alcohol killed my father.
I think biggest problem with alcohol addiction is chasing past. When you are young everything is new, and doing silly things with friends is making life time memories. With alcohol you boost enchant or whatever your happiness, and every great memory while you were consuming alcohol with friends it stays with you. And after some years when your friends have families and its not like it used to be, you gonna start chasing past. Trying to feel happy and young with alcohol. I drank almost every day for ten years, i tried successfully be sober for one year in hopes that i will lose addiction and will be able to drink occasionally. Failed and started to drink even more like 3-5 liters of beer every day with occasional vodka days. Now im sober for half a year, and im never going to drink again.
Huberman's episode on alcohol was my introduction to him and was life-changing. I didn't have 'a problem', but it was eye-opening to learn why it seemed like I just couldn't kick my depression. I've cut WAY back the last few months and my mood has been so much more stable. Finding Huberman has been a game-changer. 💙
It was the same for me.... Even though I drank every evening to relax, I never really had a problem with hangovers or drinking too much. Fortunately it was very easy for me to stop completely.
he thinks hes better than everyone and has no sense of addiction "I am great I dont do drugs or drink" this is about addiction its not a subject he should handle he is nor an addiction specialist or has been through this and addiction himself. People get upset with his preaching because he has no qualifications to talk about addiction, just stop some people cant, he is highly toxic with his preaching.
I can't do it, the "cutting way back"… unless I drank no alcohol at all (the weird way you all use "to drink" is, frankly, really weirding me out). And my depression… as much or little as their is is not alcohol-related because I'm stone sober most of the year… let's just say when Huberman in that podcast described "low consumption" as "a drink a day" I was "then I basically drink no alcohol at all" (I don't have depression, but I did have a pretty serious brush with a very specific suicidal thought over ten years ago… right after and because I had become homeless and, in that very moment, had the feeling I had nowhere to go)
I turned 50 and was drinking 2-3 drinks a night. Within 3 months of my birthday I had gained almost 15lbs at 22% body fat and I was still hitting the gym 6 days a week. I was also having trouble with acid reflux and waking up 3x a night to urinate.
So I quit drinking completely and within 7 months i've dropped 25 lbs and am down below 15% body fat. Acid reflux is gone and I sleep like a rock.
The worst thing about it for me is disrupted sleep and waking up about 2 am....and then unable to get to sleep again, no alcohol sleep like a baby
Yes
Dog when I’m drinking I’ll awake until 4-5am
It's only been about 3 months but I am sleeping through the night now it took 9 days of cold sweats
I only sleep well with it
Damn there days when I have to have a few drinks in order to sleep that night.
Chris was the one who planted the idea of alcohol-free lifestyle into my head. But that Huberman episode was the nuclear missile launched into my synapses that evaporated any desire to continue drinking. Been sober since the end of April now.
I gave up alcohol two years ago. I did share a bottle of table wine with a friend a couple of times a month and thought that was probably ok. I listened to the Huberman podcast on alcohol and stopped completely. Having said that, I used to enjoy alcohol. Now, from time to time I have had a glass or two. On those rare occasions, I look at my Fitbit sleep record - and there is no deep sleep. I am now happy to tell others that there is no safe dose.
Yo dude you're like 6 years old what are you doing drinking table wine
He's not lying about people judging you for not drinking!
3 years sober in 3 days. So grateful I saw the issue and finally addressed it.
To those out there struggling, stay with it. Go to meetings, whatever. You can do it. Fight for your life back.
If I go sober I feel like I'd want to avoid drunks as much as possible so I'd completely change the times I was up 😂. For myself I know the hours I'm rarely seen out of my flat are between 6am and 1pm. That's the window I'd ideally like to often operate in. The reason I'm awake at 4am rn is a result of drinking. I'm sober rn. First day in a while.
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, dr.sporessss. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place.
Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac.
He's constantly talking about killing someone.
He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.
Is he on instagram?
Yes he is. dr.sporessss
I’ve never had as much as a sip of alcohol. My dad always told me, “nothing good comes from drinking alcohol”. Thankful.
Alcohol isn't great, but a blind faith to your dad can be also dangerous.
@@Co-Ma Funny how there's always another side to any comment on the internet. That's not my experience at all. This interview just brought to mind something my dad always said.
Belgian Imperial Stout is so good though... And Flanders Ale? Man... So so good.
@@PaulGPixelBike I still miss trappist beers. Only had a couple over twenty years ago on a "work" trip to Belgium, but still miss them.
@@PaulGPixelBike Flanders Red
Year sober. But the social cost of loosing drinking buddies is hard. I'm starting to get cooler friends with hobbies but it's a challenge after 30
Yep, I hear ya.
Yeah, totally get where you are coming from. I had drinking buddies who all I had in common with was just drinking heavily. I look back now and realise they weren't really friends at all.
I am seeing this now, something similar. My biggest drinking buddy quit drinking at the same time I did. Without alcohol, our time together seems soooo boring now. Like I do not even really look forward to it. I am close to 50 years old, so it was past time to slow down, but now weekends feel like I am at a nursing home.
@@ericpigg2689ugh. That's terrible. You need to find hobbies that can keep you occupied. I enjoy reading, but I'm too ansty to do it. I've thought about going shooting, fishing, movies, eating out. Try something new.
I am allergic to Alcohol. Yet i drank for years and years. I always used to joke that I am allergic to alcohol. I would quote Robert Downey Jr., "I am allergic to alcohol, evrytime I drink I break out in handcuffs." Well, it turns out my liver will barly process alcohol. So I remain at super high blood alcohol levels when I drink. My liver starts spitting out ridiculous amounts of enzymes which who knows what changes that is making in the body and brain. I wish I knew more of the science behind this. I've almost died many times. I have been in the hospital with bac in the .4s many many times. 2 years ago I was on a binge and quit cold turkey and was driving and had a siezure from alcohol withdrawal. I am roughly 6 months sober now. I finally realize, I can not drink. I think my liver is worse now because if I drink even 4-5 beers i get so sick the next day like I drank two fifths of whiskey. Alcohol is a killer. it has been killing me for years. It has given me nothing in return. It has been the bane of my existence. Alcohol is poison.
2:57 I’ve always said that sometimes you have to go crazy (maybe a night out drinking or whatever) so you don’t go insane. It’s not my way of motivating one to drink but it’s something I say to someone the next day when they are feeling guilty about drinking so much. I’m Curious how Huberman would respond to my going crazy to not go insane statement above. Happy to hear anyone’s thought 💭 about that too - it’s a position I don’t hear people discuss
I drank for about 40 years, heavy daily drinking towards the end but have been alcohol free for 4 years now. For many yrs I knew I had a problem but didn't know how to stop. A sort of "out of body experience " really scared me. I was on my way into a liquor store and kind of saw myself from above, like an overhead shot in a movie or being a human marionette. In the end 3 people I'd never met or even spoken to got me to quit: Nikki Glaser the comedian, David McMillan the Montreal restauranteur and John Fluevog the Canadian shoe designer. I recommend 3 books: Allen Carr's Quit Drinking Without Willpower, Annie Grace's This Naked Mind and William Porter's Alcohol Explained.
I’d reverse the order of the books as far as which to read first, but those are also my top 3. ❤👍
❤ annie grace
why those 3 ppl?
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🍷 Risks of Alcohol and Personal Experiences with Sobriety
- Discussion about the risks of alcohol and personal sobriety experiences.
- Chris discusses his past efforts to avoid alcohol and its impact on productivity.
- Huberman highlights the health risks of alcohol, especially for women, and societal perceptions of non-drinkers.
-
02:05 🎉 Social Dynamics and Alcohol Consumption
- Exploration of social dynamics around drinking, particularly in college settings.
- Huberman shares his college experiences with alcohol and discusses the negative effects of drinking on sleep and decision-making.
- The conversation touches on the ritualistic aspect of drinking in various cultures.
-
04:26 🚫 Perspectives on Nightlife and Sobriety
- The impact of alcohol on nightlife and the perceived benefits of sobriety.
- Chris reflects on his experience as a club promoter and the realities of late-night parties.
- Discussion of sobriety as a productivity tool and its impact on consistency, time, and money.
-
06:04 🌿 Comparing Alcohol with Psilocybin
- Comparing effects of alcohol to low doses of psilocybin.
- Chris shares insights on how psilocybin affects his thinking and overall well-being compared to alcohol.
- Discussion on why people choose alcohol over other substances, considering tradition and marketing influence.
-
07:53 🧪 Alcohol's Impact on Health and Social Perceptions
- Alcohol's detrimental effects on testosterone levels and health.
- Discussion on societal views of drinking at different ages and the infantilization of long-term drinkers.
- Huberman clarifies his stance as not anti-alcohol, but emphasizes the importance of informed choices.
-
09:35 🌞 Combining Socializing with Health-Promoting Activities
- Shift in socializing trends towards health-promoting activities.
- Examples of combining social experiences with wellness practices like Russian baths.
- Discussion of the benefits of morning sunlight and its impact on mental health and circadian rhythms.
-
11:52 🌙 Circadian Rhythms and Mental Health
- The relationship between disrupted circadian rhythms and mental health issues.
- Importance of getting enough sunlight during the day and minimizing artificial light at night.
- Practical tips for maintaining a healthy circadian rhythm, such as using red light functions on devices.
-
13:42 🥦 Promotion of AG1 Nutritional Supplement
- Advertisement for AG1 nutritional supplement.
- Benefits of AG1 on digestion and overall health, as experienced by the speaker.
- Incentives and offers related to the purchase of AG1.
Made with HARPA AI
Going on 9 years sober, cold turkey. Was blacking out 5 or 6 days a week. Havent looked back, life is a million times better. Once i quit my whole life changed for the best.
My wife has never drank alcohol. My drinking has diminished greatly to where I have 1-2 drinks per month (Was a binge drinker from 16-30). What is eye opening to me is how people react to her sobriety. I've seen women just walk away from a conversation immediately. She has never expressed any issue with others drinking, but to Huberman's point, people will assume negative things about her.
give some wine
Yeah, the same thing happens with me. I guess it’s like holding up that alcoholic mirror for others and they don’t like what they see. So weird because I don’t have an issue with people drinking in front of me, but apparently they feel guilty about it?
Thank you for this video!!!!! Thank you! About to hit my 2 years being sober of alcohol and I’m truly grateful for it. For those who are struggling, please know there is hope and a better life out there for you. ❤
I'll have 5 years sober on April 10th 2024. My life has never been better, and I was on the brink of death. Recovery is a gift.
That’s so wonderful … enjoy & cherish your renaissance 💗
I've quite drinking for 7.5 months now and one of the primary reasons i can resist reincorporating it into my life is the fact that just a single drink drastically reduces your sleep quality. Thanks Andrew for bringing the truthe to light on this destructive substance
I'm 36. Never drank a sip in my life. I've been pressured, I've been looked down on because of it, no doubt I have missed a lot of opportunities social, sexual, careerwise, and I don't give a fuck about it. Nothing can dwarf the value of always being a responsible adult and in control of your faculties. Don't be a wretched slave to some drug. Don't be pathethic piece of crap whose mind can be pressured into drinking. Be a fortress, stand strong.
That's what my grandfather would also advise you. Probably, I don't know. Never met the guy, cuz his liver succumbed to his alcohol habits in his 30s. My mother had to drop out of school as a young teen and start working. Learn from the mistakes of others around you.
I quit 4 days ago. I hate the shit and what its done to me in life.
How is it now?
hey, how are you now? I hope you're fine..
Keep going 🩷
Stay strong! 2 years sober, there are hard days. But I feel GREAT! It’s worth it!
I am doing okay thanks. I kept failing but since September something clicked and I'm just not drinking. Hopefully this is it 🙏
Alcohol made me gain 60lbs (mostly belly fat), become depressed and lose friends/opportunities. Now I'm a month sober and eating clean while hitting the gym and goin on walks.
Same here! 2 years sober, started working out at home and eating cleaner. Feel great! Feels like time has reversed for me.
I haven’t had a drink for over 25 years…alcohol is such a waste of time and money. Not to mention health, soul, sanity, prestige, shame, anger, resentment and money…”spiritus contra spiritum”
70, drank since my mid teens, often heavily as I got older. Was getting really bad acid reflux every time I drank and one evening decided I’d had enough. Tipped what was left of the bottle down the sink. That was around 18 months ago and I haven’t touched a drop since. Acid reflux has gone, my once high blood pressure is now back to normal, sleep much better, more energy, brain fog gone, have more money in my pocket that I can put to better use. Honestly wish I’d stopped years ago.
I feel like the key to alcohol, like anything else, is to just not overdo it. It's easier said than done for a lot of people, but it is true. I think completely ousting it from your life is a little unrealistic and unnecessary for most people who don't have a problem. It's like saying "I'm never eating pizza again because it's unhealthy". Sure, it is unhealthy, but if you don't eat all the time, you'll be fine. Some of my best memories are with friends having a couple of beers or making lasagna with my girlfriend, splitting a bottle of wine. Would it still be as good of a memory without the alcohol? Honestly, no, it wouldn't. On those occasions I didn't have more than a couple of beers or one bottle of wine. Nothing got out of control, but it was enough to elevate the experience and get me out of my shell enough to land the joke or do that funny dance that I wouldn't have otherwise. It's probably a very unpopular take, but I have a good relationship with alcohol and never overdo it. It has improved social experiences for me and I won't stop using it just like I won't stop eating pizza (on occasion). Life gets pretty boring if you obsess about what's absolutely optimal for health all the time. Just as boring as the old adage "everything in moderation", but it's true.
Great comment. I completely agree with you.
Yeah absolutely moderation is key if people want to be technical we are all going to die from something I'm mean they spray cancer causing pesticides on our produce and a lot of states water has forever chemicals in it so a drink here and there ain't gonna hurt 🤷♂️
not entirely true. Pizza on it's own doesn't have a whole slew of hormonal and vitamin changes that happen to the body when you consume it.
@@jakezywek6852 You're missing the point. Alcohol is bad, even worse than pizza, but it's ok if you drink only a small amount on special occasions. It will temporarily have negative effects on your hormones but those effects will diminish pretty soon after you quit drinking.
Alcohol is orders of magnitude worse than pizza, any amount is bad for u
If we used the term 'using alcohol' instead of drinking it would make people think differently about it.
I totally agree. People get so aggressive on others who don’t drink. Like why not just perceive that people have their reasons?
They feel triggered because deep down they know that they should stop, too.
I agree with what they're saying, but I've actually had some really fun and memorable times with my friends at parties, or even at the bar, at home watching the sunset, or even going for a hike and cracking open a few beers. Sometimes it does really help open you up and calm you down in moderation. Sure, some would say, "well, weed, mdma, mushrooms and lsd can do that too AND its better for you." And I somewhat agree, however its easier to control 1 or 2 beers for me than it is to eat some mushrooms. 2 beers will ALWAYS be the same for me, while .5gs of mushrooms or a bowl hit of weed can sometimes wildly differ.
I never liked alcohol, but I drank once at 15, and twice in my 20s because people would say "come on, let's have some fun". These three times I was drunk, I got in BIG trouble. Now, that I am free from peer pressure, I would not drink alcohol for any reason whatsoever.
He summed it up perfectly at 4:00 in! I'm talking about drinking at home, not so much social events. I think a lot of people drink at home to change the mode they are in: From work time to fun time, from busy time to relaxation time, from someone else's time to MY time. Almost like "I'm free and in control now". I noticed I was doing this and stopped immediately. I don't keep drinks at home anymore. I might have one when I'm out in the future, but no more drinking at home for me. I'm sick of it and I'm just done doing it regularly. It helps to come up with a replacement for the "now it's my time to relax" feeling. Cranberry and sparkling water works great! I don't miss drinking at all, no need to sedate myself after work!
I totally get that. As someone who drank mostly at home just to "relax" as you put it, I wasted a lot of time doing almost nothing while drunk. Worst of all it starts to become a routine that is extremely hard to break once you've done it so many times. Im very thankful for the fact i finally dont follow that pattern anymore.
@@pumbaapigTotally, it became a habit and we don't realize how long we are doing it. I also was unproductive, mainly vegging out online. There a many other ways to relax, once we realize alcohol is just a mental association with "fun" or '"relaxation" time, it's quite easy to break. Just find something else to associate as relaxation time. Dark chocolate, hot shower, video game, reading, comedy, etc. Glad you figured it out too!
On the other hand, noting is better than a good glass of wine with a nice meal. I keep 550 bottles on hand to enjoy with meals for the next twenty years. The secret is to keep it to one (occasionally two) glasses per night.
As someone who loves drinking, I'm glad to know this. Knowledge is power, even if it's not good news for me.
As someone who exited a decade-long love affair with drinking, I feel your pain, friend.
My mom works at a drug rehab and she says the alcoholics are always the worst ones by far in terms of how much their physical health and lives have been destroyed. Very heartbreaking.
yep.
because no one takes a loved one to rehab for alcohol.... until they are deep in alcoholism like 10-20 years.
but if you know your loved one is doing cocaine, heroin etc only 1 time. you will try to send them to rehab inmediatly.....
people in general think that alcohol is harmless because is "legal".....
Agreed alcohol is one of the hardest to work with, i work in substance recovery as well
Compared to Heroin , Meth and Crack addicts ?
I find that hard to imagine but i could be wrong
@@Junglebtc you are not wrong, different rehabs have bias against certain addictions, maybe a family history.
@@Junglebtcyou are wrong .. Heroin does no damage to the liver, you can inject heroin and have a healthy liver and kidneys. Cocaine alone doesn't damage the liver and kidneys, especially if smoked or injected. Cocaine with alcohol is HORRIBLE for the liver. But alcohol totally melts your internal organs, destroys your liver and kidneys, it also ruins your heart, it also is horrible for your skin. U are better off injecting 💉 heroin daily than drinking a fifth of spirits a day
In my family we were given our first drink at age 14 and I thought drinking was wonderful. When my husband, an alcoholic, stopped drinking I did too, just to support him, and I can tell you EVERYTHING in my life has improved. I realize, even though I was not an alcoholic, I had wasted 50 years of my life by drinking my “healthy” two drinks in the evening.
I’m envious of the people who were advised early on never to start, and I’m going to advise my grandchildren to never take up alcohol in the first place.
Pancreatitis, twice, my god that hurts.
After the last attack, and after a week in Hospital, I told the consultant, "that is it, never again", and I meant it, to him and to me.
It lasted 18 months, looking back, looked and felt so healthy, after a year or so sober.
Went back to Bangkok, after many years away, Took a single drink on night out, and said " hello my friend, where have you heen ".
The rest is predictable, I am afraid .
Self control of a slug does not help.
But the cost to finances and health, why? why? why?
"Self control of a slug does not help."
Sounds like you need more discipline in your life, I would get used to putting yourself through a struggle every day and embrace it as much as you can.
@@TheDionysianFieldsHe’s actually not giving himself enough credit. 18 months is impressive. Just gotta get back to that and then beyond
@@nathanwahr7802 No, you're not considering what it took to get him to go 18 months...anything BUT raw discipline.
Note: I don't support the abstinence movement.
Getting to 18 months must have been really hard, I hope you can get that 18 month "holiday from the devil" again. But maybe all you need to focus is just 1 day. (And then the next one but that's for tomorrow's Danny...)
I can't compare but to me it helped to think of my sobriety as return to where I was when I was a kid who would sit at his desk making paper models while listening to Genesis - Foxtrot, and just having an absolute blast. Then all of a sudden 20 years of alcohol happened but I'm going back. "hello my friend sobriety (I did not know I had until I lost it), where have you been"
Sober 6 years best six years of my life. Bottle of JD a night for over 10 years. Stopped in 10 secs drinking alcohol, not touched a drop since. Lost 90% of my friends within a couple of weeks. But gained some of the best friends I will ever have. Did a diploma in CBT - worked in a rehab for 3 years then mental health with people with severe personality disorders. Now and then I think of drinking - but it passes quickly. Stop paying big corp to fuck up you mental health.
Your problem is that you were drinking JD.
@@harleymitchell2940 Oh i drank lots of other stuff and used lots of other stuff, but my daily bread was a large bottle of JD
@ch-yq5yn As long as you have good family and friends its simple but hard path.
This incredible. I'm 7 years clean, my wife is 6 years clean. I've been held hostage, lost my son to the ministry, lost the cars, the house, the money, the business, my wife left to a life on the street where she spent 18 months escaping extreme domestic and gang violence. She ended up pregnant and clawed her way out, she had to escape for two now. we spent 5 years apart healing in recovery. we've been back together for 2 years now and after losing all, today, we closed on a home. I run this podcast in a beautiful studio, full time thanks to a bunch of great organizations in my community. I have a life I never saw coming. its possible. It's an epic adventure. We can recover.
As a drinker, i agree alcohol can count for loss of productivity, especially on days that you are hung over, but those days, especially as you get older are few and far between. I think any extreme is bad in most things. A lot of the cases mentioned are exactly that. Drinking until 1 AM, binge drinking on weekends… The occasional drink regardless of science, I feel can help more than just catching a buzz. That being said, I definitely use that video as a push to drink less because its obviously not the best thing for you
If one is not drinking to "catch a buzz" what is the point? No one, and I repeat, no one, starts off liking the taste of alcohol. One is not drinking initially for the taste experience.
I haven't had a drink since I listened to his podcast
Me too!
Was that 2 hours ago?
😂august 2022, before that I drank everyday@@Jeremy-wp3fx
I gave up smoking marijuana 5 years ago , i got into physical fitness regime 5 years back and now im progressing towards calisthenics, ive came to realize that these addictions are not worth ,there was a time when i used to smoke Marijuana 7 to 8 times a day , but after quitting as the days passed by i awakened my self and there was a time when my hands used to shake with anxiety but now im feeling tough mentally as well as physically, addictions ruins ones self, it makes us far away from our mighty ambitions, it kills us in every way possible by inducing those harmful chemicals, i feel that the love for life has such an overpowering feel that its much more than any addiction .
I’ve got a fatty liver from drinking. I quit. I feel amazing.
I quit drinking in 2005 at age 26 or I would not be here today. 100 percent I was an alcoholic my first drink. It literally felt like god wrapped his arms around me.
1 year and 6 months sober here, best decision ever. When they were talking about doing healthy social activities, at the moment I gather with a solid group of friends and we do calisthenics on sundays, sometimes we are 10-14 people in the park, man it is the best plan of the week, always looking forward to it.
What I take away from this chat: don't always drink.
Personally, I only drink on weekends. Week days are a hard no. I also only drink higher end liquor which I do for enjoying the craftsmanship. I may drink with a friend, and half the conversation is just about the liquor in question.
Forget the cheap stuff. It hits you differently, and it hits hard. Life is too short for cheap liquor. Don't make a daily habit of drinking a lot either. Be intentional.
I've always said that cheap booze isn't the way to go. Drinking the better stuff never gives me hangovers. I don't even mess around with lagers and ciders anymore.
The problem is that people have no self-control and it seems to be getting worse.
@@TheDionysianFieldsSOME people have no self control.
@@admcglka Right, and those people are probably best off to not drink. And not preach.
Ah yes I never got a hangover from my £10,000 bottle of whiskey , now I just brag about affording the good stuff on RUclips 😂
It’s not enough to just quit alcohol if you wanna feel better. Proper diet, mindful eating, and some exercise is also necessary, but being sober gives you a leg up on all that. I’m 770 days sober today after 20 years of hard drinking.
I quit 5 years ago this coming Christmas Eve. Best decision I ever made........
Most of my poor judgment calls, regrettable decisions, unnecessary conflicts, and foolish actions can be attributed to being under the influence of alcohol.
I did a lot of illegal drugs to excess and never did anything as stupid or wake up not knowing what happened as I did when drinking alcohol to excess.
Very good connection, awesome topic to talk and the uncontrable truth to talk about, over a year sober now, did struggle to sober and stay sober but the longer I go sober the better life gets.. so I'm better off now..
Been drinking and driving these last few months and my family was amazed every time I walked back in the house. Now 9 days sober 💪🏿
Still going strong?
@@jordanrossi3553 hell nah lol but I haven't driven though
Shit bro quite before you start drinking too much & have to worry about withdrawals killing you. I thought it would never happen to me and here I am 10 years daily drinking
I’ve been sober from alcohol for almost 10 years (10 years this April). Whenever I’m at a party or function, right about the time when people start to get noticeably drunk is my cue that it’s time to leave. Not because I feel tempted at all… but because it gets to a point where people become kind of obnoxious and if I’m being honest, it’s annoying when you’re sober 😂 I just can’t relate to anyone at that point. Some people say drinking makes you more authentic but I feel it makes people less authentic. The whole “I love you man” attitude. And I’ll be having conversations with people that I know they won’t remember. That’s just not fun to me 🤷🏻♀️
very true about the authentic part - I noticed it on myself! And I talked and liked people who in reality I disliked but alcohol "changed my mind" while drunk. And the next days I was embarrassed.
Hahahahah, I totally agree. I enjoy my time out and socialising, but as soon as people start getting to that noticeable point, it's home time- which is perfect cause it also comes up around 11pm/12, which means I'm home early enough to still get a nice good night's sleep!
Even just a week or so without it, I’ve gone out to work functions and not drank, and I was shocked at how quickly I saw my coworkers change and YES how obnoxious I found them to be after just 2 drinks, plus the smell of beer on their breath as they began to talk louder and louder with me and each other. Christ, I’ve been that person hundreds of nights! Get me outta here lol
@@thesweetprince Hahaha, and then there are the ones that get closer and closer, too close, when they talk, the more drunk they get, to the point that you are having to shift further and further back, completely changing positions in the room and they haven't noticed at all, hahaha
Never drank or smoke in my entire life. A great part of it had to do with the fact that I grew up in a country where alcohol is banned. But even after moving to the US in my early 20s, I never got the urge to try. You realize how closely it's linked to health issues when the very first question you get asked at every doctor's visit is 'Do you drink or smoke?'. Anyway, now that there is a ton of scientific research out there that the healthy level of alcohol for a person is 'zero', I am happy that it was always like this for me lol.
I think that in general drinking less is the best thing to do, however there’s also something beautiful about getting drinks with friends and family and having those late night beach bonfire conversations that only can happen with a little tequila or whiskey. In Vino Veritas. Live life with balance and no regrets.
@ch-yq5ynyep exactly. Some people can have balance and some can’t. But being aware is very important. I definitely feel like culturally we drink too much.
I don't think I was ever an "alcoholic" but a six pack a few times a week or a few shots after work was definitely a problem. It made doing manual labor 100x more difficult and unsafe.
I am 23, writing this while hungover. My friend got married last weekend and it was one of the most fun days of my entire life for so many reasons. I’ll set the scene for you. I don’t dress nice barely at all but I thought I looked great, felt great, was so happy for my friend and was absolutely thrilled to be a part of such a beautiful day with fantastic people. For me alcohol was such a great addition to this day, I hung out with people much older than me and was truly myself, I got a great compliment from a father of a new friend he said at the end of the night “thank you for giving me faith in our future generation” it made me tear up because I felt so proud. My friend who got married told me that night “thank you for carrying the dance floor” I danced my heart out for so long that my calves were sore the next day to the point where I was limping 😂he also told me that one of his biggest regrets of the day was not making me a groomsman because I was so sincere and helpful and fun that day. I’ll remember him saying that to me for the rest of my life. My self worth is pretty low right now and hearing these wonderful things about myself really helped me feel grateful for who I am, and the people that molded me. I was so free that whole day because I was drinking, I was bonding with new friends over beers, taking shots in celebration of a new chapter in a great friends life, sipping on a gin and tonic while eating a wonderful meal and listening to people pour their hearts out. It was incredible. I cried watching my friend cry watching his new wife dance with their son. I’m afraid to give up drinking because of those days. Days where everything is perfect, alcohol makes me super loving happy and free, but I’m terrified of the health impacts, I hate feeling horrible the next day (sometimes 2) and I hate feeling like I have a problem. The problem isn’t severe but when people ask if I want to grab drinks I have a hard time saying no because of how much fun it is. I drink maybe 5-6 times a month pretty heavily (I’ve never blacked out or even come close) I drink a beer or two after work maybe 1-2 times a week and I know I shouldn’t. The moral of this long comment that I turned into my journal entry for the day, I love what drinking can open up in a day and I don’t want to miss out or lose those precious moments of seeing myself and others be completely free and in the moment, enjoying each others company and learning about eachother on a deeper level because the booze takes off the edge. I want to be more health conscious, I have bad acid reflux because of drinking and my sleep has been horrible. I need to be more disciplined and take a break. But I do enjoy it a ton. It’s hard, I’ll figure it out and be better. Huberman is the goat
Damn. It was tough reading this because you have so many positive associations with alcohol. I’m the opposite. I grew up with an emotionally detached mother (alcoholic). Where we intersect is that after 1-2 drinks, I’m able to curb my cynicism and be more loving and affectionate. I’m a very friendly & outgoing person, but I’m high strung & struggle to Relax. I drink about 3 nights a week, 1-2 drinks so that I can stop being angry with my husband for stupid reasons. Reading your comment really gave me a different perspective and made me realize that I need to address the root of Why I drink.
I didn’t watch Huberman’s original video about the health risks of alcohol consumption, but I’m going to find it now.
I hope you’re doing well on your journey.
I’m quite restrained while sober. One unit of alcohol helps with social interaction, as it lowers my guard that is too high by default. So one unit feel great. Two feels good, but the added positive effect is lower than the first unit. Very little additional positive effect is added after that, rather negative effects starts coming into play instead. Like reduced coordination and increased tiredness.
Sometimes I drink more, sometimes less. Not drinking has a clear positive effect over my well being and I don't mind going for weeks or months without a drink. That being said, there is part of me which only exists after a drink or two. This part of me is able to "let it go" and be more present in the moment and open to it. I just have to deal with it.
I feel exactly the same. Well said
@@kansashoneybadger7899 what is god
67, retired military alcohol was part of my life, went on to complete a second career, same thing. Got sober and I’m a complete different person.
I’m 25, been a huge drinker for the last 9 years and I’m 5 days sober. I shouldn’t be alive because of it.
I’m so determined this time. My previous record was 17 days sober.
Keep on going man, alcohol never got a hold off me , but other things did , sobriety is not as boring or unhappy as the indoctrinated believe
One day at a time. You can do it:) be strong. Be brave. Be focused.
Good to hear, im also 25 and have been drinking since i was 20. Even in those 5 years it destroyed a lot of things in my life, my wake up call I think was me drinking a pint of cheap liquor while having the flu, it made me feel tremendously worse and I couldn't even breathe while laying down. I'm 3 days sober and if I drink within the next week I'm convinced that I need rehab
A meta point you can make on those discussions on alcohol, social media, weed or whatever is that people really lost the art of moderation. People of both camps will just hate on you for not fully agreeing with them. You can very well enjoy a glass of wine or two a week or a beer with a friend, it's beneficial. But you don't need to keep drinking, your mood won't be better. It's the same for other habits
One or two beers a week isn't worth bothering with in terms of a pleasurable effect.
@@fergalcussen everyone's different. For me it's great
@@mickethegoblin7167 exactly, it benefits the social interaction and the mental well being
Bob Marley once sang:- "you've got to free yourself from mental slavery... none but ourselves can set us free..." 🙂
I have never been a part of any controlled religious group nor do I believe in their individual life manipulating indoctrination's, but; I was once invited to a gathering of young Mormon's in a Hyatt hotel where there was absolutely NO alcohol (because they're programmed not to use it); but everyone were dancing and truly having fun!! This seriously confused me as at the time I luuuurved get socially(?) wasted on drink/drugs!! So; I went for a walk around the hotel complex and looked in through the window/door of a typical American Tiffany lamp filled bar with customers drinking at the bar in a smoke-filled environment, and it immediately hit me that it looked like HELL!! These individuals needed like-minded people/drinkers to somehow associate with each other just like the religious followers, but why I thought... can we not have the courage to just enjoy the moment/life without the need to collectively belong to any group? 🙂😉
A movie about him is finally coming out
I quit drinking in 2018 and everything in my life got better immediately after that point. My life is exponentially better in every way possible, it’s awesome. I think I was 31 when I stopped, and alcohol sure made a hot mess of my life by that point, but I’m thankful I stopped when I did, so I can enjoy my life a million times better without alcohol. If you’re reading this and you’re struggling with alcohol, don’t give up it’s a hard thing to put down but it’s worth it all to try, life is too short