Safe Drinking
If you're planning on drinking think ahead.
Most importantly - remember you don't have to be drunk to have a good time.
Set yourself a sensible limit and stick to it.
Try and eat a meal before drinking and drink plenty of water - alcohol is dehydrating.
Buying in rounds can make you drink more than you want - try to drink more slowly and skip rounds.
Choose your drink - modern low alcohol drinks are much more palatable, be wary of extra strong brews - most are twice as strong as ordinary beers.
The reason you feel rough after heavy drinking is largely due to dehydration and the effects of breakdown products of alcohol still in your system. Alcohol is essentially toxic - drink enough and you die.
It is broken down by the liver to waste products such as acetaldehyde - some research suggests that apart from dehydration this may be responsible for the worst of your hangover.
· Headaches and dry mouth -Alcohol is a diuretic, which means it makes the body lose water (and explains why you're constantly going to the loo). So although you've drunk a large volume you are essentially dehydrated - leaving you with such a sensitive head and sandpaper tongue.
· Nausea and trembling - alcohol is an irritant to the stomach - so you feel a little delicate and may be sick. Your blood sugar levels may have dropped in the wake of the alcohol onslaught making you feel weak and shaky.
· Irritability and tiredness - triggered by the fact that waste products are still in your system. Let alone you've had a late night - lacked refreshing dream sleep - and your body is desperately trying to sort itself out.
I DON'T CARE!
JUST TELL ME HOW DO I PREVENT AN HANGOVER?
Essentially the key is to reduce irritation to the stomach lining, prevent dehydration, and reduce the total alcohol consumed over a given period.
1. Firstly eat a meal before you start drinking. A meal that is digested slowly will protect the stomach from the irritating effects of alcohol.
2. A glass of milk also helps and will slow down the absorption of alcohol.
3. Drink plenty of water. Whilst you're partying having water or other non-fizzy soft drinks in between each alcohol drink not only reduces dehydration but limits the amount of alcohol you drink. Avoid fizzy drinks because they increase the amount of alcohol getting into the blood stream.
4.Try not to mix your drinks - because you're only adding to the number of toxins that your body has to deal with. Apart from alcohol, chemicals called congeners are found in all fermented drinks. These chemicals can increase hangover symptoms. The general rule is that darker drinks, such as red wine, whisky and brandy have more congeners than lighter drinks such as white wine, vodka and gin. Remember though that drinks such as vodka have little taste and it is very easy to overdo the alcohol by knocking back vodka mixers that go down as easy as an orange juice.
5. Pace yourself - If you can pace your drinking, and know when enough is enough, you'll avoid that hangover altogether.
Before you finally go to bed - drinking a pint of water, fruit juice or a sports isotonic drink at the end of the night before you go to sleep can help prevent headaches in the morning. If you can stomach it a light snack such as a piece of toast will help prevent that trembling feeling associated Remember that although drinking can help you feel relaxed and reduce your inhibitions - there are consequences of drinking which you may later regret - the hangover, the splitting headache the bad guts the short lived madness and laughter the expense and embarrassment of the night before. Apart from these common effects there is evidence to show that after heavy drinking you are more likely to sustain an injury needing a trip to casualty, more likely to have unplanned unprotected sex, and to be involved in a fight or scuffle.
If you are with a mate who becomes very drunk stay with them, help them home and be sensible...
A drunk + black coffee = a wide awake
drunk
A drunk + exercise = a tired drunk
A drunk + a cold shower = a wet drunk
IN AN EMERGENCY - if you are with someone who becomes unconscious or very difficult to rouse.. don't leave them unattended and seek medical help if you are unsure what to do.
If you are someone who drinks heavily most days and gets regular hangovers, it might be a good idea to seek advice on cutting:
Remember
· You don't need to be drunk to be
likeable
· Be clear about your boundaries and
stick to your own limit
· Pace yourself - or choose smaller
drinks - a half instead of a pint
· Don't drink on an empty stomach
· Remember that underage drinking has
legal consequences
· Skip rounds, or chose an alcohol-free
drink during some of
them
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