Listen

Description

01:10 Music Intro
01:50 Amount of alcohol in a standard drink
03:24  Negative impacts of alcohol
10:00 Drinking socially 
14:58 Alcohol and vibration   
17:45 Sober curious 
24:00 Things you're tying NOT to do

 Clear patterns have emerged between alcohol consumption and the development of the following types of cancer
Cancer.gov: Head and neck cancer, esophageal, liver, breast, colorectal. Evidence is accumulating that alcohol consumption is associated with increased risks of melanoma and of prostate and pancreatic cancers

What happens to cancer risk after a person stops drinking alcohol?

Most of the studies that have examined whether cancer risk declines after a person stops drinking alcohol have focused on
head and neck cancers and on esophageal cancer. The cancer risks eventually decline, although it may take years for the risks of cancer to return to those of never drinkers.

SOLUTION:
Harvard.edu In addition, studies suggest that moderate drinking (as discussed below) may be linked with a lower risk of: Heart attack, the most common type of stroke, death due to cardiovascular disease, diabetes, gallstones.

“Moderate” alcohol consumption per the CDC: 1 drink or less per women and 2 drinks or less per day in men