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Doing the Dry January challenge? This sober life coach has tips for how to succeed.
发布日期:2024-12-19 09:58:44
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Dry January is a thing. But if you want to go a month without consuming alcohol, you need to prepare now.

Among imbibers, between 15% and 35% may participate in Dry January, which began in 2013 as a public health campaign from Alcohol Change UK, a charity focused on reducing the societal and health effects of alcohol.

Dry January participants take the 31-day challenge for many reasons, with better health the biggest factor – about 90% abstain seeking health benefits, according to research firm Morning Consult, which tracks Dry January trends. About 73% do it to save money, the firm's surveys found.

The success of Dry January, along with other alcohol-free challenges such as Sober October, may be leading to fewer participants as there may be fewer drinkers, overall. That's because those who observe Dry January are increasingly likely to drink less in subsequent months, Morning Consult found. Roughly 3 in 10 drinkers say they expect to drink less in 2023 compared with 2022. 

What are the Dry January rules?What to know if you're swearing off alcohol in 2024

"Dry January is something that has gained a lot of popularity and there are a lot of positive outcomes that come from it," said Andrea Bell, a Bay Area life and health coach who runs a Dry January challenge at Oakland Hills Tennis Club in Oakland, Calif. "And there's a lot of momentum in the sober curious movement."

Along with interest in Dry January, there is, Bell said, "more of an openness to people living an alcohol-free lifestyle electively (and) …. more of a stigma attached to alcohol overuse than in the past."

Ready to take on the challenge? Here are Dry January benefits, tips and non-alcoholics drinks.

What are some benefits of Dry January

A month-long reprieve from alcohol can earn you some health benefits. Here's just some, according to The Cleveland Clinic, Alcohol Change UK, and UC Davis Health:

Tips for successfully doing Dry January

Whatever your reason for taking the Dry January challenge, here's some tips from Bell, who quit drinking alcohol in 2012, to help you succeed.

Mocktails and non-alcoholic drinks for Dry January

If you want to go alcohol-free for January – or have another booze-free option in your entertaining wheelhouse – there's a growing variety of mocktails, cocktails mixed without alcohol, and non-alcoholic beers and spirits.

Here's a few of the newer entries in the burgeoning non-alcoholic beverage market:

A note of caution: Mocktails and non-alcoholic beverages can make "not drinking (alcohol) more attractive," Bell said. However, for some, having a cocktail glass or non-alcoholic beer "could be triggering and may encourage them to want a 'real' cocktail," she said. "So you have to know yourself."

Contributing: Kayla Jimenez, Claire Reed and Diana Leyva of the USA TODAY Network.

Follow Mike Snider on X and Threads: @mikesnider & mikegsnider.

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