Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Moderation as the Key to Controlling Alcohol

Intoxicating, there is perhaps no better word to use for the purposes of describing alcohol. Doesn’t that word so effectively sum up all that there is to know about alcohol in the first place? It describes just how irresistible it is and how its flavor is so tough to run away from especially for those who fancy themselves as refined eaters. They like alcohol in their food, and they like it beside the food as well. They even spend an almost disproportionate amount of hours just trying to pair up wines with dishes, reinforcing just how much they really appreciate this most inebriating of liquids, and that right there is where the word intoxicating becomes even more apt as it also describes in fine detail the uniquely inebriating effects of even just a glass of alcohol. Simply appreciating the flavor of alcohol is certainly no issue by itself, but excessive consumption triggering too many instances of inebriation, well that’s a different matter altogether. Excessive consumption is going to lead to alcohol treatment somewhere down the line, and it’s almost inevitable at this point.

The old government warning at the end of most alcohol ads informs people to drink moderately. It’s a reasonable and certainly sensible request to ask of individuals that are about to partake in a healthy amount of drinking. Its goal is just to tell them that if they’re planning a night of drinking, that a little bit of moderation is in order. If people heeded this piece of advice that routinely came at the end of most beer commercials, then there would probably be far fewer people who are in genuine need of alcohol treatment. As it stands though, there are more people who suffer from alcohol issues than those that are already accounted for, and that’s not the most reassuring thing that people can hear. Finding out that there are so many people out there who need alcohol treatment so dearly is an indicator that there are people out on the streets that are as much a danger to themselves as they are to other people. Alcohol should never be the root cause of any life being lost, and that’s why treatment facilities are popping up all over the place to ensure that people have safe havens to go to in the hopes of getting clean and sober.

Realistically, there is probably no way to completely wipe alcohol away from people’s tables or cellars, so bothering with that course of action is a fool’s errand at this point. The only real reasonable course of action left is to promote moderate drinking so that more people will avoid the need to obtain alcohol treatment. Some people may not be able to fully restrain themselves however, and even moderation may be tough to pull off as well. For these people, the only hope left is to make sure that they get the alcohol treatment that they need in order to recover from their addiction and to hopefully help them regain some sense of who they really are.

No comments:

Post a Comment