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How Drinking Limits your Potential ...with Ken M Middleton


Episode 156


My guest this week is Ken Middleton

I first connected with Ken a couple of years ago after discovering his brilliant articles.

He was first a guest on this podcast back in 2020 and we’ve been friends ever since

We have a shared passion to highlight the drawbacks of drinking and the joys of sobriety.

As a firm fan of his articles I was delighted to hear that he was going to publish a book.

He involved me in the development of the manuscript and has even included my story!

The book is called Bamboozled and is published TODAY

In fact I have a message for you from Ken – he says buy the the book today (April 1st) and you’ll find an April Fools day surprise – a nice one!

The book is available on Amazon so go check it out while you are listening

The subtitle of Bamboozled is “How Alcohol Made Fools of Us All” and it’s a great read.  After doing this work for 7 years I know a lot about the subject but even I learned a lot from this book

In this episode

  • Unlike myself and many of my podcast guests Ken didn’t come to sobriety from a place of addiction – he came from a place of curiosity.
  • He wanted to see how he felt without alcohol
  • He was always a high performer in his sales job but knew that he wasn’t always operating at 100%
  • As he settled into his sobriety his performance at work shot up by 30%
  • He came to the conclusion that alcohol drastically reduces our potential
  • Ken talked about the compounding effects – for example when we drink we only get two cycles of REM when we need about 7
  • Drinking regularly means the fatigue will build up and up over the years
  • I can really identify with this – when I hit 60 I felt tired all the time but resigned myself to the fact that this is what aging felt like
  • Seven years of sobriety has changed everything for me and I wake up full of energy
  • My exhaustion was nothing to do with my age but everything to do with my alcohol consumption
  • We talked about comparisons and how dangerous it was to compare ourselves with hard core alcoholics – so we end up feeling that we were not “that bad”
  • Of course the comparison we should be making is with the best version of ourselves we could be
  • So the question to ask is not
    Am I an Alcoholic?  -  rather ask
    Am I living my best life?
  • Ken explained that functioning alcoholics are the ones with the most to gain from ditching the booze
  • They have been expending huge amounts of energy just keeping the show on the road
  • I know I did – performing well at work, managing family and a social life is not easy when you’re feeling anxious and worried about your drinking problem that you are too ashamed to talk about
  • Ken summarises the science of alcohol dependency in detail in an article I will put in the shownotes but here are the key moments:-
  • Alcohol spikes our endorphins
  • Our brain likes to stay balanced – in a state of homeostasis so releases dynorphins to dampen down those endorphin spikes
  • The dynorphin level then outweighs the level of endorphins (as our brain wants to get back to homeostasis asap)
  • That’s why we get that dip about 20 minutes after our first drink… our buzz starts to fade so of course we reach for another drink to compensate which results in more dynorphins released…. And so it goes on
  • As many of us know as time goes by we need more alcohol to get the same feeling, the same buzz
  • So far so good but our body is smart and it adapts to our behaviour and this is the dangerous bit..
  • Our subconscious


    Published on 2 years, 8 months ago






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