by pops1 » Tue Dec 10, 2013 10:20 am
I identify with you so much...& I rather suspect there are a lot more of us in the same boat. I have been grappling with the same problem that seems to have crept up on me, so a couple of months ago I resolved to delve in to the (shocking) facts about drinking a bottle of wine a night, the health impact, financial, & physical, & printed this off to stick on my 'drinks' cabinet in the kitchen. It did work for a while, but then came off & I conveniently ignored the issue...your post has given me an uncomfortable reminder. Anyway, this was my 'STOP DRINKING NOTE TO SELF' :
STOP!
THINK BEFORE YOU REACH FOR THAT DRINK!
A bottle of 12% wine a day @ £7.00 approx=
- £49 a week…£2,500 a year
- 600 calories a night, 4,200 calories a week…218,400 calories a year = fat bum, big belly, flabby thighs…bingo wings
- 9 units of alcohol (4 times the safe amount)
This can cause:
• Cancer of the throat, oesophagus or larynx. Regularly drinking two large glasses of wine (ABV 13%) or two pints of strong lager (ABV 5.2%) a day could make you three times as likely to get mouth cancer.
• Breast cancer in women. Regularly drinking just above the guidelines increases the risk of getting breast cancer by around 20%
• A stroke
• Heart disease or an irregular heartbeat, which can lead to a heart attack
• High blood pressure
• Liver disease such as cirrhosis and liver cancer. If you regularly drink just above the lower-risk guidelines, the risk of liver cirrhosis increases 1.7 times
• Pancreatitis
breast cancer (in women) - for every 10 grams of alcohol ingested (about ¾ of a drink), a woman's chance of developing breast cancer goes up by 9%. So, five drinks a day, increases a woman's chance by almost 50%. Note that in Italy where alcohol consumption is fairly high, 11% of breast cancers are due to alcohol
cancer of the mouth, throat (pharynx), and swallowing tube (esophagus) - unlike the case for cardiovascular disease, where modest consumption of alcohol seems to confer some protection, even occasional and one-drink-per-day ingestion of alcohol are associated with a 12 and 37% increase respectively in the risk of cancer of the esophagus.
inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) - this is a very nasty illness which you don't want to get. It is considered to be one of the most painful conditions that someone can have (up there with kidney stones and labour). Pancreatitis has the potential for many complications, none of which are good news or very pleasant for the patient. It can also kill you. About 10% of chronic alcoholics will develop pancreatitis at some stage. In fact, anyone who goes out boozing places themselves at increased risk for pancreatitis, albeit just for a day or so. But consider someone who drinks every day. Their risk of pancreatitis will stay elevated.
Alcoholic cirrhosis happens to 1 in 10 heavy drinkers after 10 years. Youre a heavy drinker. 1 in 10 is horrible odds.
So give me one good reason to have a drink now….?
Stop it today and the future you will thank you for it…
I haven't read all the related posts but suspect I am not the only one for whom this resonates... Would anyone else be up for a little local support group...? Not sure how one would go about setting something like this up...in a confidential manner...(I have also used a pseudonym
) Maybe a private contact address...?
I identify with you so much...& I rather suspect there are a lot more of us in the same boat. I have been grappling with the same problem that seems to have crept up on me, so a couple of months ago I resolved to delve in to the (shocking) facts about drinking a bottle of wine a night, the health impact, financial, & physical, & printed this off to stick on my 'drinks' cabinet in the kitchen. It did work for a while, but then came off & I conveniently ignored the issue...your post has given me an uncomfortable reminder. Anyway, this was my 'STOP DRINKING NOTE TO SELF' :
[color=#BF0000][b]STOP!
THINK BEFORE YOU REACH FOR THAT DRINK![/b]
A bottle of 12% wine a day @ £7.00 approx=
- £49 a week…£2,500 a year
- 600 calories a night, 4,200 calories a week…218,400 calories a year = fat bum, big belly, flabby thighs…bingo wings
- 9 units of alcohol (4 times the safe amount)
This can cause:
• Cancer of the throat, oesophagus or larynx. Regularly drinking two large glasses of wine (ABV 13%) or two pints of strong lager (ABV 5.2%) a day could make you three times as likely to get mouth cancer.
• Breast cancer in women. Regularly drinking just above the guidelines increases the risk of getting breast cancer by around 20%
• A stroke
• Heart disease or an irregular heartbeat, which can lead to a heart attack
• High blood pressure
• Liver disease such as cirrhosis and liver cancer. If you regularly drink just above the lower-risk guidelines, the risk of liver cirrhosis increases 1.7 times
• Pancreatitis
breast cancer (in women) - for every 10 grams of alcohol ingested (about ¾ of a drink), a woman's chance of developing breast cancer goes up by 9%. So, five drinks a day, increases a woman's chance by almost 50%. Note that in Italy where alcohol consumption is fairly high, 11% of breast cancers are due to alcohol
cancer of the mouth, throat (pharynx), and swallowing tube (esophagus) - unlike the case for cardiovascular disease, where modest consumption of alcohol seems to confer some protection, even occasional and one-drink-per-day ingestion of alcohol are associated with a 12 and 37% increase respectively in the risk of cancer of the esophagus.
inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) - this is a very nasty illness which you don't want to get. It is considered to be one of the most painful conditions that someone can have (up there with kidney stones and labour). Pancreatitis has the potential for many complications, none of which are good news or very pleasant for the patient. It can also kill you. About 10% of chronic alcoholics will develop pancreatitis at some stage. In fact, anyone who goes out boozing places themselves at increased risk for pancreatitis, albeit just for a day or so. But consider someone who drinks every day. Their risk of pancreatitis will stay elevated.
Alcoholic cirrhosis happens to 1 in 10 heavy drinkers after 10 years. Youre a heavy drinker. 1 in 10 is horrible odds.
[b]So give me one good reason to have a drink now….?
Stop it today and the future you will thank you for it…[/b][/color]
I haven't read all the related posts but suspect I am not the only one for whom this resonates... Would anyone else be up for a little local support group...? Not sure how one would go about setting something like this up...in a confidential manner...(I have also used a pseudonym :oops: ) Maybe a private contact address...?