Question: Please describe two popular authorities in your life to decide how you use alcohol. Explain how and why they shape you like this. The most powerful and influential man who imitated the use of alcohol in my childhood was a male relative. Until puberty, I do not fully recognize these effects. I do not know what alcoholism is when I was a child I think that Beefeater Jin from my relatives is stinking his Cologne. However, as I grew older and became exposed to the wider range of people and the environment, I noticed alcoholism.
I will say that I do not need to drink if I write down my relationship with alcohol spontaneously. After all, I have established a standard relationship with alcohol based on modern cultural standards. My family's drinking behavior seemed to be regular all the time and I followed the flock with colleges and early careers. I am a lucky childhood age; my family is economically stable and caring. For many people with a similar background alcohol is a daily characteristic of normalization in our lives. It has not been described as a problematic level of consumption in popular culture. My parents are drinking alcohol before the TV news is broadcast every day, but this practice is considered to be very standard, so I will use it as a good way to use alcohol soon I will internalize it.
Everyone has a different relationship with alcohol. I will not choose any lifestyle to anyone. I can only look back on the relationship with alcohol, and the experience I gave up after giving up. For those who maintain and maintain their own health balance - they have more power for you. "Socrates records that he can not dismiss, can not enjoy what is too weak to reject, and can not do anything more than it. A stamp of a man with a perfect invincible soul . - Marcus Aurelius, meditative
It is difficult to maintain a healthy relationship with a particular thing if you do not know what the healthy look and feel is. My relationship with alcohol is what I have asked and is my constant appeal to problematic drinkers. Their drinking made me disappointed and made me happy. They are talking about words I have heard since I was a child. For me, they are exciting and dangerous. We exchanged some interesting stories that we felt were dark - how much we drink on a particular occasion, the foolish things we are affected, the fun we have, and the memories I remember Not about the part. I tried to avoid them - or at least I wanted - they seemed to be a metaphor repeatedly occurring in stories that I call life. Perhaps this is how I try to reconcile my own devils; perhaps this is too much