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Quit Plan

Habit / Routine Drinker

If alcohol is built into your daily sequence, quitting is a design problem: you’re rebuilding the routine. This plan focuses on cue removal, replacement rituals, and repeatable structure.

Medical safety note: Alcohol withdrawal can be dangerous. If you drink heavily every day, have had withdrawal symptoms, or are unsure, consult a clinician before stopping abruptly. This page is educational/supportive — not medical advice.

Step 0: Decide what “quit” means (clear, not vague)

Habit drinkers often “kind of quit” and then drift back because the routine still exists. Clarity helps your brain stop negotiating.

Simple definition: “No alcohol. Replacement ritual instead.”
Not: “Maybe, depending on the day.”

Step 1: Remove the cue chain (Time → Place → Action)

You don’t need to fight the habit at full strength — you need to stop activating it automatically. Change one or more links for the first 14–30 days.

Time disruption

  • Schedule a new activity at the “pour time”
  • Move dinner timing by 30–60 minutes
  • Take a walk at the old start time

Place disruption

  • Use a different chair / different room
  • No TV/show that’s strongly paired with drinking (for now)
  • Change lighting/music to signal a new routine
Important: Your brain may interpret “new routine” as discomfort. That discomfort is not proof you need alcohol — it’s proof the old habit was strong.

Step 2: Replace the ritual (keep the “moment”)

Many routine drinkers miss the signal more than the alcohol: the pour, the glass, the “night begins” feeling. Replace it deliberately.

Replacement ritual (recommended)

  • Same glass + ice
  • NA beverage (seltzer, NA beer, tea, mocktail)
  • Same chair/time if needed (but alcohol removed)

This keeps the nervous system calm while the habit rewires.

Make it automatic

  • Keep NA options chilled and visible
  • Pre-prep (limes, teas, flavored waters)
  • Don’t wait until you “want” it — start it on schedule

Step 3: Add friction (so relapse isn’t effortless)

You’re not trying to “prove discipline.” You’re trying to make the old routine harder to re-enter.

Physical friction

  • Remove alcohol from home (best)
  • If not possible: store it out of sight, not cold, not in your routine path
  • Avoid buying “backup” alcohol

Digital friction (technology layer)

  • Delete alcohol delivery apps
  • Unsave payment info
  • Unfollow alcohol-heavy accounts
  • Block “temptation time” browsing after a set hour

Step 4: Plan for the predictable “blank space”

Routine drinkers often relapse because evenings feel empty. Fill the space on purpose — not with pressure, but with something repeatable.

Pick 2 “evening anchors”

  • 10–20 minute walk
  • Shower + music
  • Cooking project or meal prep
  • Light workout / stretching
  • Hobby: model kits, drawing, puzzles, games

An anchor is something you do whether or not you “feel like it.”

Step 5: Urge plan (simple and repeatable)

With habit drinking, urges often feel like “something is missing” rather than craving. Use a script and a swap.

Urge protocol

  • Name it: “Old routine is firing.”
  • Swap: pour NA drink immediately.
  • Move: change rooms for 5 minutes.
  • Delay: wait 10 minutes before any decision.

Words that help

  • “This is a cue, not a command.”
  • “I’m building a new default.”
  • “The discomfort means it’s working.”

Support (optional, but powerful)

Habit drinkers sometimes avoid support because it “feels dramatic.” But support is not drama — it’s structure.

Peer support options

  • AA (Alcoholics Anonymous)
  • SMART Recovery
  • Recovery Dharma
  • Local sober communities

Clinical options

  • Primary care clinician (risk / safety)
  • Therapist (habit + coping skills)
  • Addiction medicine specialist
Immediate help: If you feel unsafe or in crisis, contact local emergency services. In the U.S., call or text 988.

Quit-day worksheet (print-friendly)

Next steps