The False Promise of Alcohol with Ellen Newstead episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 21, 2023 · 52 MIN

The False Promise of Alcohol with Ellen Newstead

from Tribe Sober - inspiring an alcohol free life! · host Janet

Most of our Tribe Sober members are quite mature – like me ;-)  They drank socially in their 20’s and 30’s and it was only later in life that they found themselves becoming dependent. But now and again we come across a younger person and my guest this week is Ellen Newstead who is in her early 30’s.  She was smart enough to realise at an early age that alcohol was messing up her life and that she would be happier and healthier without it. Ditching the booze at 30 changes your future - and that’s exactly what she did. Ellen’s drinking career was short but it was intense and she very sensibly decided to get sober for her wedding – which she did, and she’s never looked back.   In this Episode Like many teenagers Ellen was quite shy with self esteem issues and found that alcohol helped her relax and have fun She enjoyed the buzz and was soon chasing that feeling Her first experience of drinking was Alcopops which are between 4 and 8% alcohol If you listened to last week’s podcast you will have heard marketing expert Nigel Jones explain how we are groomed by the alcohol industry to drink alcohol from a very early age – groomed to be their lifelong customers Of course alcohol tastes unpleasant to a first time drinker – so they get round this problem by flavoring the alcopops to taste like cola or lemonade Teenage girls are particularly vulnerable to the harmful effects of Alcopops and drinking before the age of 18 will increase the likelihood of dependence as we get older When she thinks back to those years of teenage drinking Ellen realises that for her “fun and alcohol” became so closely linked she couldn’t imagine one without the other – a situation that continued for the next decade For many of us alcohol is perceived as the “gateway to fun” and Ellen talked about the “false promise of alcohol” Millions of us bought into this false promise and it took me decades to realise that alcohol is just 10% ethanol and 90% marketing! The fun comes from the people who are with and the environment you are in When Ellen went off to Uni she was expecting to find lots of other enthusiastic drinkers but soon realised that not many of her contempories were in her league – she was the ringleader - always the one wanting to make every social event about drinking! By her second year at Uni she had found a weekend job in a bar and had started to enjoy drinking alone, at work and at home By her early 20’s a bottle of wine a night was the norm She went through a period of unemployment when she was 25 and that was when she totally “lost it” as she puts it She treated the pub as a social club and went there every day, she met someone who invited her to his house to continue drinking and sleep over if she needed to She would often drink to oblivion and wake up not quite knowing where she was Ellen would lie to her boyfriend and parents about where she had spent the night Fortunately Ellen got a job which put some kind of structure into her life so her drinking was confined to weekend binge drinking Then came Covid so home drinking became the norm as the pubs were closed As she no longer had access to the pub she recreated her comfort zone in her spare room A home pub – complete with beer mats, signage and bar snacks! The pubs were busy delivering containers of alcohol people’s homes so the drinking could continue in spite of lockdown As the UK gradually opened up again drinking was allowed in outside in beer gardens Ellen was so excited by this development that she drank to blackout the first 3 times she went to the pub! In spite of this she maintains she wasn’t physically addicted – her addiction was more psychological If you listen to Tribe Sober podcast episode 48 you can hear Molly Watts explaining why only 10% of dependent drinkers are physically addicted – for the rest of us its psychological Ellen began to hover around rock bottom – she lost her wallet, she lost a weekend, she was refused service in a bar… More importantly though she was beginning to lose patience with the chaos that alcohol was creating in her life – the constant threat of blackout or doing something stupid was wearing her down She was coming to the conclusion that alcohol was taking away an awful lot more than it was delivering After three boozy weekends which she describes as “hideous” she decided to quit completely She didn’t even contemplate moderation so unlike many of us she didn’t have to waste years in the moderation trap When she decided to quit she was 30 years old with a wedding coming up She told her friends and family and the fact that nobody questioned her decision would indicate that they realised that Ellen had a drinking problem She’d been scrolling IG and was excited to find a vibrant, diverse community with lives like hers but all the better for not including booze She did a few sober stretches and started to sample the benefits of sobriety She found a sober role model in Millie Gooch – Millie is the same age as Ellen and explained how to navigate festivals and bottomless brunches without alcohol She didn’t even bother to wait for the “perfect date” when she had no plans – after all she always had plans She was fully aware that there is never a perfect time to stop drinking and that she had to do it now! Ellen began to work on her mindset She treated every event as a challenge and rather than saying “I can’t” she started to say “what if I try?” She started to realise that fun was more about who she was with and what she was doing She started to see through the false promise of alcohol She started to question various aspects of her drinking and began to see a pointlessness in it Ellen was sober for her wedding and honeymoon and remembers every wonderful moment You can follow her on IG @thesobercrow – I’ll put the link in the shownotes   More Info Subscription membership – you can join up HERE. To access our website, click HERE. If you would like a free copy of our “Annual Tracker” or our e-book 66 Days to Sobriety, please email [email protected]. If you would like to come to our Saturday afternoon Zoom Cafe as a guest and meet our community, just email [email protected].   Episode Sponsor This episode is sponsored by the Tribe Sober Membership Program.  If you want to change your relationship with alcohol then sign up today Read more about our program and subscribe HERE   Help us to Spread the Word! We made this podcast so that we can reach more people who need our help.  Please subscribe and share. If you enjoyed the podcast, then please leave us a 5-star review on Apple podcasts. Take a screenshot of your review, and DM it to Tribe Sober’s Instagram page – see PS below for instructions. We’ll send you something special to say thank you! We release a podcast episode every Saturday morning. You can follow Tribe Sober on Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and Instagram. You can join our private Facebook group HERE.   PS: How to Leave a Rating/Review in Apple Podcasts (on an iOS Device) Open the Podcasts app. EASY. Choose “Search” from the bottom row of icons and enter the name of the show (e.g. Recover Like a Mother) into the search field. Select the show under Shows (not under Episodes). Scroll down past the first few episodes until you see Ratings & Reviews. Click Write a Review underneath the displayed reviews from other listeners. You’ll then have the option to rate the show on a 5-star scale and write a review (you can rate without writing too but it’s always good to read your experience).

Most of our Tribe Sober members are quite mature – like me ;-)  They drank socially in their 20’s and 30’s and it was only later in life that they found themselves becoming dependent. But now and again we come across a younger person and my guest this week is Ellen Newstead who is in her early 30’s.  She was smart enough to realise at an early age that alcohol was messing up her life and that she would be happier and healthier without it. Ditching the booze at 30 changes your future - and that’s exactly what she did. Ellen’s drinking career was short but it was intense and she very sensibly decided to get sober for her wedding – which she did, and she’s never looked back.   In this Episode Like many teenagers Ellen was quite shy with self esteem issues and found that alcohol helped her relax and have fun She enjoyed the buzz and was soon chasing that feeling Her first experience of drinking was Alcopops which are between 4 and 8% alcohol If you listened to last week’s podcast you will have heard marketing expert Nigel Jones explain how we are groomed by the alcohol industry to drink alcohol from a very early age – groomed to be their lifelong customers Of course alcohol tastes unpleasant to a first time drinker – so they get round this problem by flavoring the alcopops to taste like cola or lemonade Teenage girls are particularly vulnerable to the harmful effects of Alcopops and drinking before the age of 18 will increase the likelihood of dependence as we get older When she thinks back to those years of teenage drinking Ellen realises that for her “fun and alcohol” became so closely linked she couldn’t imagine one without the other – a situation that continued for the next decade For many of us alcohol is perceived as the “gateway to fun” and Ellen talked about the “false promise of alcohol” Millions of us bought into this false promise and it took me decades to realise that alcohol is just 10% ethanol and 90% marketing! The fun comes from the people who are with and the environment you are in When Ellen went off to Uni she was expecting to find lots of other enthusiastic drinkers but soon realised that not many of her contempories were in her league – she was the ringleader - always the one wanting to make every social event about drinking! By her second year at Uni she had found a weekend job in a bar and had started to enjoy drinking alone, at work and at home By her early 20’s a bottle of wine a night was the norm She went through a period of unemployment when she was 25 and that was when she totally “lost it” as she puts it She treated the pub as a social club and went there every day, she met someone who invited her to his house to continue drinking and sleep over if she needed to She would often drink to oblivion and wake up not quite knowing where she was Ellen would lie to her boyfriend and parents about where she had spent the night Fortunately Ellen got a job which put some kind of structure into her life so her drinking was confined to weekend binge drinking Then came Covid so home drinking became the norm as the pubs were closed As she no longer had access to the pub she recreated her comfort zone in her spare room A home pub – complete with beer mats, signage and bar snacks! The pubs were busy delivering containers of alcohol people’s homes so the drinking could continue in spite of lockdown As the UK gradually opened up again drinking was allowed in outside in beer gardens Ellen was so excited by this development that she drank to blackout the first 3 times she went to the pub! In spite of this she maintains she wasn’t physically addicted – her addiction was more psychological If you listen to Tribe Sober podcast episode 48 you can hear Molly Watts explaining why only 10% of dependent drinkers are physically addicted – for the rest of us its psychological Ellen began to hover around rock bottom – she lost her wallet, she lost a weekend, she was refused service in a bar… More importantly though she

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This episode was published on January 21, 2023.

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Most of our Tribe Sober members are quite mature – like me ;-)  They drank socially in their 20’s and 30’s and it was only later in life that they found themselves becoming dependent. But now and again we come across a younger person and my guest...

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