
TIPS4STRESS
Stress and Alcohol
'It drove me to drink' used to be a popular phrase. Its essential meaning is that stress induces people to consume alcohol. While it's true that stress can be an incentive to drink, it's equally true that heavy alcohol consumption causes stress.
Moderate alcohol intake, to be sure, can have beneficial effects.
Research suggests that small amounts can even improve mental
functioning and increase performance in problem solving while
stressed. But, there are also studies that demonstrate that large
quantities, particularly when consumed for long periods, actually
worsens stress.
Large alcohol consumption stimulates the hypothalamus, pituitary and
adrenal glands. One result is an increase in the amount of cortisol
produced within the body. Another is an increase in adrenaline. Both
those, while they don't alone cause stress, play a large role in the
symptoms.
Extreme stress makes it more difficult to concentrate. One of the
obvious effects of high alcohol intake is to produce that exact
effect. Thus, heavy drinkers get a double whammy just at the moment
they need mental clarity most.
Other studies suggest that chronic drinkers have symptoms similar to
those seen in children with ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder). Children of those drinkers, this research concludes, have
a higher incidence of actual ADHD.
So, it may also be true that as much as the stress of parenting may
lead to drinking, adult drinking may encourage the circumstances
that incent the parent to drink. It may be a factor in producing
children's symptoms that lead to adult stress.
Exercise is known to help relieve the symptoms of stress.
Unfortunately, one of the additional results of excessive alcohol
consumption is decreased exercise. Few inebriated people want to go
a few rounds on the weight machine.
Similarly, high alcohol intake suppresses appetite. Thus, at the
same time alcoholic drinks pour in the calories, they decrease the
incentive to maintain a healthy diet. Once again the drinker
experiences a doubly negative reinforcing effect.
Those who drink excessively to escape stress motivated by money
concerns find it more difficult to cope with the problem that caused
the stress in the first place. Even simple tasks like balancing a
checkbook are clearly more difficult when drunk. But beyond such
minor details, the cognitive functions needed to develop long term
strategies are impaired. Drinkers literally can't think their way
out of the problems causing the stress.
In all these cases there is a vicious cycle established. Stress
encourages heavy drinking, which makes it more difficult to deal
with the internal and external factors that led to stress in the
first place. Though the specific numbers will vary from person to
person, when the average individual drinks more than the equivalent
of two or three shots of whiskey per day, the results are inevitably
bad.
The key to breaking this vicious cycle is to seek alternative
methods for dealing with stress. Both the symptoms and the
underlying motivators are subject to change in almost all cases.
Proper exercise and diet is a good beginning. A realistic attitude
about life's inherent challenges can go a long way, as well. But, as
with any psychological problem, admitting it exists is the first
necessary step.
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