What Kind of Drinker Are You?
A simple profile test that categorizes your drinking pattern (habit, stress, social, binge, reward, concealment) and suggests a targeted cut-back or quit path.
A clean, supportive portal for anyone navigating alcohol use, recovery, relapse prevention, and the long work of rebuilding trust — for the people in the middle of it, and for the loved ones trying to find their way back in.
Addiction is not a personality. It’s not “who you are.” It’s a system that rewires priorities, routines, and decision-making — and that system can be interrupted, rebuilt, and replaced. This space exists to make that work feel less lonely and more navigable.
No shame. No performance. Just steps, tools, honesty, and support — in a language that makes sense.
Not everyone drinks the same way. The “right” plan depends on how alcohol shows up in your week, your stress, your relationships, and your rituals. This self-test is designed to quickly identify patterns — without judgment — and point you toward next steps that match.
A simple profile test that categorizes your drinking pattern (habit, stress, social, binge, reward, concealment) and suggests a targeted cut-back or quit path.
Recovery improves with connection. This section is designed as a respectful, moderated social layer: celebrate wins, talk through tough nights, share what worked, and build a circle that doesn’t collapse when life gets loud.
Streaks, resets, anniversaries — and small wins that deserve credit. Post updates privately or publicly.
A place to talk to others who get it — plus dedicated spaces for partners, family, and friends.
Optional check-in groups with rules you can trust: no shaming, no preaching, no chaos.
Nicknames, private profiles, content controls, and a “quiet mode” for people who want help without visibility.
Design goal: a supportive network without the usual social-media noise. No algorithmic rage loops. No “hot takes.” Just real people using real tools.
Below are the companion titles connected to this self-test and recovery tools. Each links to Amazon, and each description stays short on hype and long on usefulness.