Womens Health Australia September 2017

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1
emotional, physical and psychological
realities of life. It is in the middle of
the current environmental, political,
economic and emotional uncertainty
that the sober curious movement is
taking hold. The reasons for this
shift away from the cycle of regular,
heavy or binge drinking are, of
course, complicated. The rise of
social media and the consequent
possibility of ‘public shaming’ has
made many young women scared
to lose control. And the choice of
non-alcoholic beers and other
drinks has made teetotalism a
tastier prospect, too. You no longer
have to be an addict to see yourself
as a problem drinker; you no longer
have to be in recovery to go dry.
“Once you start taking a vested
interest in a holistic idea of wellness,
you can’t help but question the fact
that you are choosing to drink a

special report


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You’d be forgiven for thinking these
non-drinking females are hiding in
the outback. News headlines report
on Australia’s binge-drink culture
and show women out-drinking the
average bucks party. And yet, while
a report from the Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare (AIHW) found
18- to 24-year-olds are the most likely
to binge, they’re also more likely to
abstain from alcohol altogether.
Initiatives like Hello Sunday Morning
are growing in popularity, where
people take a break from alcohol
and often end up abstaining or
seriously curbing their habits. The
UK is now home to dry bars, where
you can enjoy grog-free nights out,
while lots of Aussie venues now
proudly tout non-alcoholic menus.
In short, we’ve moved on from the
days where being teetotal was akin
to announcing you have leprosy.

The bigger picture
For journalist Ruby Warrington, the
choice to (mainly) stop drinking was

not merely physical, psychological
or social; it was about creating
harmony between all three. A self-
confessed party girl, Warrington
spent much of the 1990s and 2000s
tipsy, wasted or hungover – inspired,
in part, by ads and TV shows (Sex
and the City and the like) that
glamorised alcohol. “It’s very easy
to get into the habit of drinking
without considering whether you
even want to,” she says, over the
phone from New York, where she
founded the sober curious event
Club Söda NYC. “But if you’re not
connecting to your feelings, you
constantly override the messages
your body is giving you such as
fear, anxiety and discomfort.
These feelings are telling you to
stop and change the situation –
be it to move jobs or have a difficult
conversation. And the longer you
ignore these messages, the longer
you battle negative patterns, and
the harder it is to make decisions
that would serve you better.”
Warrington is referring to ‘oblivion
drinking’, coined by psychoanalyst
and author of Alcoholism and
Women Jan Bauer. It refers to the
sort of boozing that, instead of
ending up with you face down in
a wheelie bin, simply numbs the

There’s a very particular eye flick – from face, down to
stomach, back to face – that any non-drinking woman
will recognise immediately. The pre-verbal, unconscious
asking of that age-old question: are you pregnant or in
AA? For decades, anyone who dared turn up to a party
with a booze-free bottle or was caught ordering a soda
and lime at the bar would instantly become the subject
of knowing looks, sympathetic head tilts and near-
gynaecological examinations. If a woman wasn’t drinking,
she must, surely, either be up the duff or have issues
with alcohol. But no longer. We are witnessing a new
trend in the so-called ‘sober curious’: young, ambitious
people – mostly women – turning away from booze by
choice and without detriment to their social life.

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