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How a 66 day Sober Challenge changed my life... with Tribe member Claire B


Episode 173


If I had to describe a typical Tribe member then I would pick a lady in her 40’s or 50’s – successful career woman with a family.  Noody would dream that this lady had a problem with alcohol but in fact she’s been worried about her drinking for years.

My podcast guest this week pretty much fits that profile...Tribe member Claire B

In this Episode:

  • Claire's parents didn’t drink much so her first experience of drinking was as a teenager – 18th birthday parties – vodkas and a sweet concentrated orange juice was her drink
  • As she says she went straight for the hard stuff but of course had to add sweetened orange juice to make it palatable just as I did with my whisky and coke
  • As a trainee nurse Claire would drink when she went out but would never drink alone and it was not problematic in those days
  • In her early 20’s Claire moved from the UK to SA and was struck by the drinking culture – wine at lunchtime and in fact she celebrated her first birthday in SA with a champagne breakfasts!
  • She embraced this culture and thought it was great!
  • The first time she began to worry about her drinking was in her late 20’s when she came home from a very boozy lunch and found herself wanting to have another glass of wine
  • That became a habit for Claire – going out for drinks and then carrying on the party alone when she got home
  • She realised that like so many of us she didn’t have an “off” button –that’s definitely a red flag… as is drinking alone
  • Other warning signs are – regularly drinking more than the low risk limits which are just one and a half bottles of wine a week, trying (and failing) to cut down, again and again - …..also when all your social activities revolve around alcohol etc 
  • I asked Claire if she tried to cut down or set rules for her drinking – she explained that she wanted someone else to set rules for her – she was actually looking for a reason to stop drinking
  • She thought she’d found one when she relocated to China as she wasn’t expecting alcohol to be so readily available and she remembered welcoming that situation
  • However she found that alcohol was available and in fact she drank a lot during her 3 years there
  • She found herself engineering situations where she could drink and as she said the subject took up “a lot of her bandwidth”
  • People often ask me if they are drinking too much – I explain that if they are thinking about it, even if it’s a niggling thought at the back of their mind…. Then that’s probably a sign that they should take action, even if they are not drinking huge amounts
  • Quite simply if it’s on your mind.. you’ll be happier without it!
  • Those of us who’ve spent years trying and failing to moderate know only too well that it takes up far too much mental space – and when we get sober we can find peace
  • Claire tried the odd alcohol free challenge but found the thought of quitting drinking for ever extremely scary
  • She began to feel that there were 2 Claires – the sensible one and the other one who was egging her on to drink more
  • Many of us experience this inner struggle between our rational conscious mind and our subconscious which is holding limiting beliefs about alcohol
  • Limiting beliefs like “we can’t have fun, relax or socialize” without it
  • Beliefs which are the result of decades of exposure to marketing and peer pressure convincing us that alcohol is essential to a happy life!
  • Claire and I both drank for decades and agreed that our neural pathways for drinking were more like Superhighways than pathways!
  • When we start to build our alcohol free life we are looking to replace that Superhighway with an alcohol free pathway which will in turn become a Superhighway if we stick at our sobriety and continue to do that work
  • Claire came up with a lovely analogy that her sobriety was like a g


    Published on 2 years, 4 months ago






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