google's top alcohol concern question

Am I drinking too much?

The answer is more complicated than you think.

Am I an alcoholic, or is something else going on?

Signs of Autopilot Drinking

  • You drink most evenings without having decided to

  • Your idea of a normal amount has quietly crept up

  • Alcohol marks the end of the working day, automatically

  • You pour a glass while cooking before you’ve thought about it

  • You’ve tried cutting back and the pattern reasserts itself within days

  • Alcohol is doing several jobs at once: stress relief, reward, boredom, habit

  • You could stop if you had to. You just don’t.

Signs of Alcohol Dependence

  • You drink first thing in the morning

  • You shake or sweat when you haven’t drunk

  • Anxiety or panic sets in when you can’t drink

  • You drink to stop withdrawal symptoms, not for pleasure

  • You hide how much you’re drinking even from yourself

  • You need a drink before you can function normally

  • Your days are planned around your alcohol intake

  • You know your drinking is a compulsion, not a choice

 

The distinction matters because the solutions are completely different.

If the right-hand column felt more accurate, then medically qualified advice is required as alcohol withdrawal is a serious condition and can be fatal. Please speak to your GP or contact the We Are With You charity.

World Health Organisation Alcohol AUDIT assessment tool.

Why does drinking become a problem in the first place?

Reasons for Autopilot Drinking

  • Your brain automates repeated behaviours to save energy. Do something often enough in the same context and it stops being a decision.

  • Alcohol triggers a dopamine response. Your brain registers this as worth repeating and begins anticipating it before you’ve made any conscious choice.

  • The trigger fires, the routine runs, the reward lands. Each repetition strengthens the loop.

  • By the time you notice the pattern, the behaviour is no longer coming from conscious choice. It is coming from a neural pathway your brain has spent years reinforcing.

  • Willpower operates in the prefrontal cortex. After a drink or two, that’s the first thing that goes. Using willpower to fight an automated process is a structural mismatch, not a character flaw.

Reasons for Alcohol Dependence

  • With sustained heavy drinking, your central nervous system adapts to alcohol’s presence by downregulating its own inhibitory systems.

  • When alcohol is removed, those systems overcorrect. This produces the withdrawal symptoms, shaking, sweating, anxiety, seizure risk, that are the hallmark of physical dependence.

  • This is not a habit. It is a physiological state that requires medical management, not behavioural intervention.

  • The brain’s reward system also adapts, requiring more alcohol to produce the same effect. Tolerance is not a sign of handling drink well. It is a sign of neurological adaptation.

  • Unlike autopilot drinking, the drive to drink is no longer psychological. It is the body defending what it now treats as a baseline state.

 

What about the Guidelines?

The UK Chief Medical Officers recommend no more than 14 units per week. A standard 175ml glass of 13% wine is roughly 2.3 units. A pint of 5% beer is around 2.8. If you are drinking a bottle of wine most evenings, you are at 50+ units a week, more than three times the guideline. NHS alcohol units guide.

Most people drinking at hazardous levels are not dependent, and are typically high-functioning. But many of the consequences of prolonged heavy drinking are not apparent until serious damage has already been done. The risks are linear, which means cutting back to a moderate level carries significant health benefits, even if you feel fine right now.

How do I know if I have a problem with alcohol?

    1. Do you drink most days without having decided to?
    2. Has your idea of a normal amount crept upward over the past year?
    3. Do you feel mildly irritable or unsettled on nights you don’t drink?
    4. Is alcohol doing more than one job, unwinding you, rewarding you, marking time, managing stress?
    5. Have you tried cutting back and found the pattern reasserts itself within a week or two?
    6. Does the thought of not drinking for a month feel more uncomfortable than it should?
    7. If most of these apply, the pattern has probably become automatic.

Why ARC doesn't use quizzes or 30-day challenges

No quiz

  • A 10-question online quiz cannot safely map a drinking pattern. A proper coaching assessment runs to 50 questions minimum.
  • A quiz gives you a category. It doesn’t give you a diagnosis, a strategy, or any understanding of what is actually driving the behaviour.
  • Our own onboarding assessment for coaching clients incorporates Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Neuroscience, Habit and behaviour change theory, Sleep science and Nutritional psychology.

No 30-day challenges

  • A month off drinking works on willpower, not on the autopilot mechanism.
  • The habit loop is still intact when the month ends. Most people are back to their previous pattern within a fortnight.
  • Dry January, Sober October and their variants postpone the pattern. They don’t rewire it.

Can you cut back on drinking without quitting?

  • For hazardous drinkers without physical dependence, controlled drinking is a viable and evidence-based alternative to abstinence. (Henssler et al., PubMed systematic review and meta-analysis, 2021)
  • According to NHS Digital’s Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey, 75% of people drinking above government guidelines are not dependent on alcohol.
  • Moderation is not a compromise position or a stepping stone to abstinence. For autopilot drinkers it is the appropriate goal.
  • The obstacle is not motivation. Most people who struggle to cut back have tried. The obstacle is that willpower cannot reliably override an automated neurological process.
  • Cutting back successfully requires diagnosing the specific pattern driving the behaviour, then matching the right strategies to it.

How Alcohol Reduction Coach™ can help

  • The BAC System is a moderation-first programme for high-functioning drinkers, taught by someone who understands both behavioural science and the wine world from the inside.
  • Built around strategies for combatting the autopilot mechanism, not by using willpower
  • Your trackers provide an in-depth profile of your triggers, allowing us to match specific strategies from our extensive library
  • Used by professionals, stay-at-home parents and retirees who had already tried everything else
  • Every plan includes an onboarding call and  data interpretation / strategy suggestion with the founder, Alastair
  • For those who want more, 1:1 coaching and bespoke programmes are available

About the Author

  • Alastair, 32+ years in the wine trade. Buying, selling, marketing & winemaking around the world. Author of wine and restaurant guides.
  • For the past three years also been working as an Alcohol Moderation Coach, having perfected a system to manage my own challenges
  • Studied and certified in Neuroscaience, Alcohol and Substance Addiction, and ADHD
  • Created the groundbreaking BAC System™ for alcohol moderation, focusing on cutting back, not quitting alcohol.
  • Approved CPD (Continuing Professional Development) Provider.