Archive for the ‘Quit Drinking’ Category

Alcohol Affects the Senses and Mental Clarity

Monday, May 18th, 2009

It has been known that alcohol taken in small or large quantities can greatly affect both our body and mind.

According to Dr. Brinton, mental acuteness, accuracy of conception, and delicacy of the senses, are all so far opposed by the action of alcohol, as that the maximum efforts of each are  incompatible  with the ingestion of any moderate quantity of fermented liquid. Indeed, there is scarcely any calling which demands skillful and exact effort of mind and body, or which requires the balanced exercise of many faculties that does not illustrate this rule. The mathematician, the gambler, the metaphysician, the billiard-player, the author, the artist, the physician, would, if they could analyze their experience aright, generally concur in the statement, that  a single glass will often suffice to take , so to speak,  the edge off both mind and body , and to reduce their capacity to something below what is relatively their perfection of work.

The said statement refers to the fact that even a single glass or a bottle of any alcoholic drinks could cause our body and minds to be distracted and kept off its normal processes.

The perfect example for this is an accident that happened a few days ago in a highway, a bus driver avoids collision with a truck making the bus bump into a post. The incident killed 10 people including bystanders. The truck driver made it alive and according to his statement he had 1 bottle of beer before going on with his trip.

Even with one glass or bottle your perception and control over your senses is already affected.

Alcoholics Anonymous: Refuge for Alcoholic

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Getting your life back together after an addiction is hard. Thank God for Alcoholic Anonymous who has helped a lot of people to turn their lives around. But it is not that simple, for us to help the people who have alcoholism, they first have to help themselves. They have to decide that they want to get help and stay sober.

Alcoholics Anonymous is one of the most useful and helpful organizations. They help people recognize that the alcohol they’re drinking is way beyond their limit and could kill them.

Some alcoholics don’t readily admit that they have a problem. Often, problems in their personal and professional lives occur first before they acknowledge the fact that they have a drinking problem. For others, they don’t reach the point of realization because it’s too late. Sometimes, we just can’t share stuff like this to our family and friends. That what Alcoholics Anonymous is for. You don’t have to tell anyone that you are undergoing therapy sessions unless you are ready. No judgments!

You can find Alcoholics Anonymous online or through your local phone directory. When you decide to contact them, you can be sure that no one will know about it except you and the organization.

This is a great help for those people who have finally recognized that they have a drinking problem. They can get help from AA and no one will have to know until you, yourself, is ready to share your experiences to the people you care about.

Alcohol Versus Heat and Temperature

Monday, March 16th, 2009

What is alcohol’s role in heat and temperature?

According to extensive studies and research, fats, starches and sugars are found to produce heat when combined with oxygen. The heat being talked about is the energy with which the body needs in order to move.

It has been found out that alcohol does not undergo combustion or is not transformed to become heat inside the body or become energy.

When we talk about temperature, alcohol reduces temperature. Doctors in Europe and America have proved that alcohol has an anti-pyretic effect in people with fevers. According to Liebermeister, one of the most learned contributors to Zeimssen’s Cyclopedia of the Practice of Medicine, 1875: “I long since convinced myself, by direct experiments, that alcohol, even in comparatively large doses, does not elevate the temperature of the body in either well or sick people.”

Therefore alcohol does not produce any kind of heat in the body thus lessens it plus it decreases a person’s power to withstand the cold temperature.

Alcoholic Behavior

Friday, January 16th, 2009

What are the classic behaviors of alcoholics?

  1. A person cannot control his drinking, no matter how many attempts he has made to stop and stay sober.
  2. There is an increasing dependence and tolerance of alcohol ingestion.
  3. Denial. A person fails to recognize and acknowledge that he or she is experiencing alcoholism.
  4. Blaming others for the problems they now experience.
  5. Important things are neglected.
  6. Friends and families are avoided.
  7. Aggressive and destructive behaviors occur.
  8. Physical symptoms manifest like: stomach upset, vomiting, hand tremors, hangovers, and blackouts.
  9. Neurologic symptoms manifest like shakes or tremors when experiencing withdrawal or when he can’t have a drink, hallucination or delirium tremors.
  10. Drinking starts out early in the day as soon as a person wakes up.

Effects of Alcohol to Internal Organs

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

What is the alcohol’s effect on the internal organs?

STOMACH. The stomach is the organ that digests the food that we eat. Alcohol inhibits the stomach to produce enough natural digestive fluid and fails to absorb and digest properly the food. There is also nausea emptiness, abdominal distention and dyspepsia which leads to loss of appetite for food and is more tempted to drink to ease the feeling.

LIVER. Frequent use of alcohol causes the liver to deteriorate. The liver has the capacity to hold and store substances, dangerous or not. In this case, alcohol is stored in the liver of an alcoholic which makes the person always influenced by it.

Proper dialysis and secretion of the liver is affected by alcohol. The vessels of the liver become dilated and there is a thickening of the tissues. Due to this, the membrane contracts and the organ shrink. Fatty liver may also occur because the liver is not functioning properly thus the fatty cells go into the liver.

KIDNEY. Excessive consumption of alcohol also has an effect on the kidney. Due to the alcohol, the kidneys lose its elasticity and its power to contract. Albumin from the blood easily passes through the membranes.

LUNGS. The lung vessels relax due to alcohol plus they are easily exposed to temperature variations which makes the lungs congested which may lead to death in alcohols especially during cold seasons.

HEART. Alcohol affects the heart by changing and thickening the membranes that surround the heart making them cartilaginous or calcareous. The heart valves lose their suppleness and the blood vessels lose its elasticity.

Because of the tissue changes that the heart has undergone, the muscular fiber are replaced by fatty cells or transferred into a modified muscular texture where the contraction power is reduced.

Because of the organ changes or deteriorations an alcoholic person experiences, they feel a “sinking” feeling due to organ power failure but they know that alcohol and other stimulants can help relieve the sensation.