Blog: How changing my relationship with alcohol reconnected me with my values - RSA

Blog: How changing my relationship with alcohol reconnected me with my values

Blog 1 Comments

  • Picture of Laura Willoughby FRSA
    Laura Willoughby FRSA
    Co-founder of Club Soda - creating a world where nobody feels out of place if they are not drinking.
  • Drug & alcohol recovery
  • Fellowship

Laura Willoughby MBE, Co-Founder of Club Soda, explains how becoming sober enabled her to reconnect with important social values and why she is now helping others to do the same.

I have been bolshy for as long as I can remember. In 1985 on a school trip to London I reacted with outrage to the fact that no girls were going on a tour of the Arsenal stadium. As a result, I spent the most boring afternoon of my life looking around the first team's changing rooms. That was the start of my activism, and I soon got stuck into politics. Elected at 23 (ironically in Highbury), I spent the first half of my adult life being a young person in politics. I learnt lots, had amazing opportunities, and got the chance to change things.

So why do I feel that I wasted the best part of my thirties?

Life, I now realise, does not move along a neatly planned trajectory to more and more success, unless you are very well organised, totally devoid of self-doubt and lucky! I was always a pretty big drinker. I binged at university, then slowed down in my twenties, but by the time I hit my mid-thirties I was beginning to feel a bit lost, and unsure what I wanted to achieve with my life, so my drinking slowly increased. Then I ended up in a job I hated, a role where I felt embarrassed to tell people what I did - a big issue for someone whose self-identity was tied up with my career. It’s hard to get out of a job and find a new one if you have a raging hangover most of the time. I did not like who I had become.

So when I finally managed to stop, with a combination of a workshop, supportive friends, and switching my rebellious nature to the challenge of not drinking in boozy places, I realised there was a need for a service for people like me. Individuals who wanted to tackle their drinking habits themselves, but who still needed some help and guidance.

This was the genesis of Club Soda. We support individuals to change their drinking whatever their goal; to cut down, stop for a bit, quit, or stick. But starting Club Soda has brought home to me the biggest gain from changing my drinking - that I can live the values I aspire to because they are woven into the DNA of the business we have created.

Rather than just feeling lighter and clearer headed, the biggest personal benefit from changing my drinking is the energy and joy I get from reconnecting with the values I hold dear. Those things that initially got me active and engaged when I was 11. When I was drinking a bottle of wine a day my values and behaviours were at war with each other. Frankly, that was no fun. I wish I had noticed this disconnect before - it may have helped me to kick the habit sooner.

The most obvious manifestation of this is is my connection with other people. It was hearing real experiences that motivated me to action. When I was drinking, I began to feel that I was not a people person at all. I lacked the energy to really connect with what people were telling me. I was too focused on the next glass of wine, or drained by the hangover from the night before.

Once I quit drinking, my ability to concentrate on conversations increased hugely. I was energised by everyday interactions that I used to be too tired for, from a quick chat at the shop, to conversations with friends. The difference this makes to me (being a good old-fashioned extrovert) was amazing. I was finally living my values again.

I can see clearly now that for those of us who are mission-driven, alcohol can help us interact with others, relax and deal with the fact that we can’t solve every problem. But it can also dampen our enthusiasm, and sap the energy we have to make small, meaningful changes every day. Over time that can break your spirit.

Since quitting I have been interested in reframing activities I used to describe as ‘health goals’, and instead see them as barriers or contributors to living my values, both in the business I am developing and in my friendships. Going to the gym is not only about health, but also a tool that allows me to build my confidence and energy to make Club Soda develop faster. Mindfulness is not only about reducing stress, but about improving my listening skills so I can empathise better. Listening to Desert Island Discs every day is a way to relax, but relaxing also makes me more resilient when I get knocked back.

Club Soda’s aim is not to tell you what to do, but give you the right support if you have decided you want to do something about your drinking (a key value). So if you feel that bottle of wine is getting in the way of your dreams, then I hope you will join me, even if it’s just for an experiment for a month, like taking January off drinking.

RSA members can join our free bootcamp in London on January 5th 2016, and all members get a special discount for our online MOB programme, supporting you through a Month Off Booze.

Join the discussion

1 Comments

Please login to post a comment or reply

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Related articles

  • From Rat Park to Housing First

    Rosie Phillips FRSA

    To mark their 20th anniversary, DHI are running The Vision Project. Through a series of articles, podcasts and events during 2019, they are inviting people to contribute their ideas of how society can end social exclusion over the next 20 years. Here is an extract from Rosie’s blog. That can be read in full here

  • Blog: Why the War on Drugs is Failing

    Sunny Dhadley

    Sunny Dhadley FRSA explores why the war on drugs is failing, partly in light of a recent conference, ‘Drug Policy, Diplomacy and Global Public Health’.

  • Blog: Rethinking your drinking?

    Jackie Ballard FRSA

    Most of us will know someone who is having a Dry January. Four years after the charity Alcohol Concern launched the behaviour change campaign, Jackie Ballard FRSA highlights why they hope even more people will join in 2016.