Stress-Relief / Emotional Regulation Drinker — Tips & Advice | Addiction Corner | JeremyAbram.net

Stress-Relief / Emotional Regulation Drinker

If alcohol is used to calm anxiety, numb pain, fall asleep, or “take the edge off,” your nervous system has learned a fast shortcut. The goal is not to shame the shortcut — it’s to build safer ways to regulate.

Core truth: Alcohol can relieve emotions quickly — and then it quietly raises your baseline stress over time.

What this pattern looks like

Common signs

  • Drinking after stress or conflict
  • Drinking to sleep or “turn the brain off”
  • Drinking when lonely, overwhelmed, or anxious
  • Feeling more anxious the next day
  • Needing more to get the same relief

Common drivers

  • Chronic stress
  • Unprocessed grief or trauma
  • Anxiety or depression symptoms
  • Burnout / emotional overload
  • Sleep disruption

Regulation tools (fast, practical)

Goal: Build a “toolbox” that can calm you in 5–15 minutes — without tomorrow’s penalty.

Body-based tools

  • Short walk (even 5 minutes)
  • Hot shower / temperature shift
  • Stretching / mobility
  • Slow breathing (simple counts)

Mind-based tools

  • Journal: “What do I feel + what do I need?”
  • Grounding: name 5 things you can see
  • Music + dim lights
  • Call/text a safe person

Technology angle: stress amplifiers

Tech can keep your nervous system in a “never off” state: endless notifications, doomscrolling, social comparison, and late-night stimulation. Alcohol becomes the artificial brake.

  • Set a hard stop for notifications at night
  • Use focus/sleep modes
  • Reduce late-night scrolling
  • Replace screens with wind-down rituals

When to upgrade support

  • Alcohol is required to calm down or sleep
  • Stress/anxiety is increasing over months
  • You’re drinking earlier in the day
  • Emotions feel unmanageable without alcohol

Peer supports

  • SMART Recovery
  • AA
  • Recovery Dharma

Clinical supports

  • Primary care clinician
  • Therapy (stress, trauma, anxiety)
  • Addiction-focused counseling
Immediate help: If you feel unsafe or in crisis, contact local emergency services. In the U.S., call or text 988.

Next steps