91色情片

Group, people and drinks at barbecue in backyard, summer and vacation for holiday, celebration or event. Friends, cheerful and bbq with cooler box for dinner, party or reunion with alcohol in America. Group, people and drinks at barbecue in backyard, summer and vacation for holiday, celebration or event. Friends, cheerful and bbq with cooler box for dinner, party or reunion with alcohol in America.

8 ways to drink less during the silly season

Play icon
Katinka Van De Ven
Nicole Lee
Katinka Van De Ven, Nicole Lee,

You don鈥檛 have to rely on willpower alone.

8 ways to drink less during the silly聽season

鈥淲e must have a drink before the end of the year!鈥

December is a perfect storm for anyone trying to cut back on drinking. Between end-of-year deadlines, work parties, family gatherings and school events, alcohol is suddenly everywhere.

It can make drinking feel not just normal, but expected.

But if you want to drink less (or not at all) this silly season, you don鈥檛 have to rely on willpower alone. Having a plan can help.

Some suggests when goals are focused on how you鈥檒l approach something 鈥 such as a not-drinking strategy 鈥 rather than what you鈥檒l avoid (alcohol), it鈥檚 easier to follow through.

So here are some simple strategies, backed by evidence.

1. Make a plan

When making decisions, our brains tend to prioritise immediate goals over long-term ones. Scientists call this 鈥溾. This means it鈥檚 harder to keep your long-term goal (cutting back on alcohol) in mind when confronted by the chance for immediate gratification (having a drink).

But if you plan when you will and won鈥檛 drink in advance, you reduce the need to make this decision in real time 鈥 when alcohol is in front of you and and you鈥檙e more driven by emotion.

Look ahead at your calendar and choose your drinking and non-drinking days deliberately. reduces the chances of opportunistic drinking when social pressure is high.

2. Track your drinks

Tracking when and how much you drink is one of the and strategies for reducing alcohol use and staying motivated.

You may be surprised how much tracking alone can change your drinking, simply by being more mindful and helping you understand your patterns.

It doesn鈥檛 matter how you do it 鈥 in an app, a notebook or even on your phone calendar. is better than trying to remember. And doing it consistently works best. Aim to record drinks in real time if you can.

There are lots of free, evidence based apps, such , that can help you track your drinking and drink-free days.

3. Try zero alcohol drinks

For many people, the rise of alcohol-free beer, wine and spirits has made it to enjoy the ritual of drinking at social events, without the intoxication.

But 鈥 particularly those who find the look, smell and taste of alcohol triggering. Know yourself, see what works, and don鈥檛 force it if it鈥檚 not helping reach your goals.

4. Slow the pace

If your aim is to cut back, try with something non-alcoholic.

Water is best, but zero, low or non-alcoholic drinks can still reduce how much you drink overall 鈥 and as a bonus they can also help you stay hydrated, which may reduce the chance of a hangover.

before and during drinking is also a good idea. It prevents rapid spikes in blood alcohol levels, as well as slowing the absorption of alcohol into your system. This means your body has a better chance of metabolising the alcohol.

Eating well can also help calm the that are often triggered by alcohol.

5. Beware of an all-or-nothing approach

Don鈥檛 fall into the 鈥済oal violation鈥 trap (sometimes called the effect). That鈥檚 the when slipping up makes you abandon your plan altogether.

Maybe someone talks you into 鈥渏ust a splash鈥 鈥 or one drink somehow becomes five 鈥 and you tell yourself: 鈥淥h well, I鈥檝e blown it now.鈥

But a slip is just a slip 鈥 it doesn鈥檛 mean you have to give up on your goals. You can reset straight away, at the next drink or the next day.

6. Set up accountability

Letting a friend or partner know that you are trying to drink less helps you stay accountable and provides support 鈥 even better if they join you.

7. Have responses ready

People may notice you鈥檙e not drinking or are drinking less. They may offer you a drink. Try a 鈥淚鈥檓 good鈥 or 鈥淚鈥檓 pacing myself tonight鈥. Work out what feels OK to you 鈥 you don鈥檛 need to give long explanations.

8. Be kind to yourself

When you鈥檙e making a big change, it won鈥檛 always go smoothly. What matters is how you respond if you slip up. Shame and guilt often lead to more drinking, while longer-term behaviour change.

Instead of seeing a slip as failure, treat it as information: What made it hard to stick to your goals? What could help next time?

December doesn鈥檛 have to derail your goals

Change comes from consistent small steps, even during the busiest month of the year. Focus on developing a relationship with alcohol that you are in control of, not the other way around.

If you are trying to make changes to your drinking, talk to your GP or check out free evidence-based resources such as , and the .The Conversation

, Alcohol and other drug specialist, and , Adjunct Professor at the National Drug Research Institute (Melbourne based),

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .