I have been asked since about this question on a variety of occasions. This is not a joke, I am serious. I believe that it is best to drink responsibly. I have been prescribed various medications to treat medical conditions such as Addison’s disease, Type 1 diabetes, and Crohn’s, and I’ve been sober for many years.
In my experience, there is often a connection between the alcoholic’s state of mind, the amount of alcohol he is consuming, and the severity of his symptoms. The more of an alcoholic you are, the more severe your condition is likely to be, and the more severe your symptoms are likely to be.
As we all know, the more of an alcoholic you are, the more severe your condition is likely to be, and the more severe your symptoms are likely to be.
The problem is that alcoholics are always blaming themselves. We can’t help drinking, and we can’t help being an alcoholic, but we can’t help blaming ourselves for the state we’re in. It’s an understandable reaction that alcoholics have to drinking, but it’s not the correct approach.
Alcoholics tend to blame the problems they have in life on themselves. It only makes sense. This is one of the most common ways of treating alcoholism. You can only drink so much, and then it affects your ability to live a normal life.
In other words, if you are a person who drinks, you will have to deal with the consequences of that behavior. And if you are an alcoholic, you will have to deal with the consequences of that behavior. How? By not drinking. A person who is an alcoholic knows that it would be impossible to drink and live a normal life. But as long as you stay that way, you don’t have to deal with the consequences of that behavior.
Some people call this “drinking and living”. Others call it “drinking and dying,” but the two are not equivalent. Drinking and drinking and drinking, as a general rule, and drinking and dying, as a sub-category, are two unrelated things. Drinking is simply the act of drinking. Dying is simply the act of dying. Drinking and dying are two different things. And the only thing you can do about it is to drink less.
Like most of the other articles in this newsletter, this one is written by a guy who has a Ph.D. in something and a bunch of other people all write articles for him. So I dont know if I am making that statement up or not. But I do think people who are not well educated about their own drinking habits are likely to make that statement up.
People who are well educated about their own drinking habits will know that drinking while driving is a serious problem. So most people who are not well educated about drinking habits will probably know that it is a serious problem. However, medical conditions can mimic the act of drinking. These things are called “alcoholism” and are the result of drinking.
I don’t know about you, but I’m not sure if someone that’s been drinking and has a medical condition would be considered an alcoholic. Many medical conditions have nothing to do with drinking. For example, a person with a heart condition or diabetes that’s a result of drinking (not smoking, and not eating a healthy diet) probably won’t be considered a alcoholic.