Adsolution wrote:Keane wrote:But again it's not really who you are. I'm not gonna drink so I'm more appealing to someone else. If they can't get along with me without beer then chances are it's not someone I'd spend much time with.
You won't know unless you try it, right? If you don't think you'll become an addict after your first couple drinks, then there's no harm in giving it a shot. If it's something that's active in your mind, then maybe you should wait until you're in a situation where, say, your friends are all getting a drink and you could join them, before making up your mind about whether you will enjoy the experience or not. Stop thinking about it as something 'artificial' or 'immoral', because it isn't any more immoral or artificial than the way music affects you.
Haha, well knowing myself I can easily see it turning into an addiction.
spiraldoor wrote:I'm not satisfied with all of my relationships being merely "good". Sometimes I like to have really deep and honest conversations with my close friends, which is much easier and more enjoyable when drunk. Yes, others enjoy my drunken company more, but I also enjoy theirs more. Another factor is how incomparably fun it is if you're with the right people, but you might not understand this until you've experienced it.
I don't consider it impossible to say something deep and honest without being drunk, but I won't argue it as it is true that I don't know and that alcohol does make one more interactive.
spiraldoor wrote:Money is absolutely a valid concern. I've spent quite a lot of mine drinking lately. If money's an issue for you, I'm afraid I have no rebuttal, but I can say without reservation that there's nothing quite like a great night out with really great friends.
But that ist fucks with your brain is not even something to think about?

Simply ignoring it because it doesn't do serious damage to you now or because you drink "moderately" sound to me more like excuses. It's like people who smoke and then put something around the "Smoking kills" sticker to allow them to continue their false believe that nothing bad is gonna happen. Until they have lung cancer. Like I said a while back, if you put two men next to each other which have lived identical lives but one has been drinking for the past fifty years and the other hasn't there's not gonna be no difference when it comes to their health. And it's easy to say you'll quit when you get at a certain point in life but when I see someone like my grandfather still getting drunk I question how much longer he'll be around.