1. Your drinking is habitual
Dr Campbell believes that developing a negative relationship with alcohol isnβt always related to trauma.
βIt can be habitual. You get into a pattern of drinking the same way every day: a glass of wine while cooking dinner, finishing off the bottle with the meal, a nightcap before bed. It can soon build. I recently had a female patient who was drinking on a daily basis from 10am till 3pm. It was always the same routine and it was escalating. Her blood pressure was through the roof and that eventually scared her to do something about it.β
2. You use alcohol as an emotional crutch
Campbell regularly sees people using drink as a coping mechanism for stress β but βit definitely wonβt help you manage well in a crisis,β he says.
Andrew Harvey, a counsellor and psychotherapist who specialises in alcohol and substance abuse, asks his clients: βWhen did you start using alcohol rather than enjoying alcohol?β In other words, is drinking there as a crutch to help you deal with the pressures of life?
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Harvey says that shame often plays a part: βIβve never met anyone who set out to have a problem with drink, but once itβs there, the avoidance, deception and self-loathing can manifest.β
And while all these signs that you are in the danger zone are a warning, often itβs others who notice what we canβt see in ourselves.
βSometimes clients struggle to follow through with promises they make. For example, they might say they will restrict their drinking to weekends only, but then find themselves pouring a drink on Tuesday. Having this pointed out by others in a supportive, non-confrontational way can be helpful.β
Itβs true that people often turn to alcohol when life throws them a curveball, Harvey agrees. βItβs the medicine for a lot of peopleβs pain. It numbs them for a while, but its relief is short-lived.β
3. You have more time on your hands
βIn my experience as a therapist, Iβve seen unhealthy drinking habits accelerate after retirement,β says Harvey. βEvery night is Friday night, you donβt need to get up for work the next day. Plus retirement can mean that people lose their status, confidence, focus; theyβve got time on their hands, theyβre bored. Lifestyle change is hard for most of us.β
Itβs a common misconception that having a problematic relationship with booze means you drink every day. Some can go for days, even weeks without indulging. βDependence takes on many forms,β adds Harvey. βIt doesnβt always present itself as hardcore daily excess.β
4. You veer towards situations where drinking is acceptable
In the lead-up to festivities, getting drunk is normalised. In fact, itβs revered; an integral part of the seasonal blowout. A report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development stated that 26 per cent of British women indulged in βheavy episodic drinkingβ at least once a month, while 45 per cent of men were regularly bingeing.
βPeople with an unhealthy relationship with alcohol tend to veer towards situations where drinking is acceptable,β says Harvey.
Frequenting environments where excessive drinking is celebrated could be a sign youβre in the danger zone. Credit: Getty Images
Sir Ian Gilmore, a liver specialist and chair of the campaign group Alcohol Health Alliance UK, agrees there is too much bravado around heavy drinking.
βThe burden on the NHS isnβt the so-called alcoholics, itβs people in the middle of the drinking spectrum, because there are so many of them. Itβs a myth that a glass of red wine a day does you good. In rough terms, if you stick to the recommendations of drinking no more than 14 units a week, your chances of dying of an alcohol-related disease is less than one in a hundred.
βUnfortunately, [during holiday periods] itβs more normal to get completely inebriated, put yourself in danger and then shrug it off as a bit of festive fun. The trouble is, when the parties are all over, there can be significant physical and mental repercussions on your health.β
The Telegraph, London
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