Alcohol Cravings: How to Tackle Your Desire for Drinks

Young woman in floral dress examining wine bottle in kitchen, representing the moment of decision when facing alcohol cravings and choosing healthier alternatives

Why Do We Crave Alcohol?

What is the difference between wanting to drink, alcohol cravings and being obsessed? The answers lie in different parts of our brains.

Cravings are something we talk about casually sometimes. We associate them with the strong urge to do something and label that craving for alcohol, sugar, or cigarettes.

Most of the time, it’s an exaggeration for effect. But for some people, cravings are a real and challenging part of daily life.

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Causes of Alcohol Cravings

A craving for alcohol is part of withdrawal. The full spectrum of withdrawal can last for months, but cravings might never fully go away. The most intense cravings happen in the first few months when we are still physically dependent. The longer we stop drinking, the less frequent cravings will be. Once the physical dependency passes, it can be triggered by certain situations, feelings and experiences.

To understand why it happens, we have first to know what alcohol does to our body when we drink too much regularly.

Your Body on Alcohol

When we start drinking, we know how it makes us feel. You might be relaxed, happier, and more confident. These feelings come from your brain’s reward system.

You might have heard of dopamine, serotonin and endorphins. These are chemicals that make us feel good.

They can come from everyday experiences. A walk on a beautiful day, spending time with someone you like, or even getting a job promotion are all-natural reward boosters.

The biggest impact might be one you haven’t heard of – GABA.

Scientific diagram comparing normal vs intoxicated brain synapses, showing how neurotransmitter disruption leads to alcohol cravings through acetylcholine receptor binding

GABA and Alcohol

If you have ever felt that terrible chest-tightening anxiety that comes with a hangover, low GABA levels are to blame.

GABA receptors are in our limbic system inside the amygdala. You might have heard of the amygdala. It controls our fears and anxieties. GABA is the good guy in this situation. It manages levels and keeps us on an even keel.

GABA controls our central nervous system. It sends signals to connect the different parts of our body and allow them to communicate.

This is why your brain and legs might not work together when you are drunk. Your brain isn’t communicating – I want to walk straight. Therefore, we sometimes fall when drunk or hurt ourselves unintentionally.

Having lots of GABA in your system makes you feel relaxed and calm.

Alcohol ‘pretends to be GABA’. That is how alcohol works. Alcohol directly interferes with GABA by reducing how much there is in our system.

This gives us the feel-good experience of having lots of GABA in our system without needing the real thing. That is what causes the relaxed and happy initial feeling of alcohol.

Hangxiety – Hangover Anxiety

So, what’s the problem? If you feel good, surely there isn’t one?

GABA withdrawal is the issue at hand. Because when alcohol acts like GABA, your neurotransmitters believe it. They think there is too much GABA in your system.

The feeling you get when drunk is not ideal if you think about it. You wouldn’t want to drive or go to work feeling relaxed and zoned out. Your body realizes this and tries to get back to normal.

To do this, it reduces the amount of GABA in your body to get you back to normal. This means instead of being relaxed and calm, you feel overexcited and often anxious.

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Short and Long-Term Cravings

If you only drink occasionally, your body eventually realizes GABA levels are low and sets it right.

Not so if you drink too much over a long time. Spending months or even years drinking regularly lowers your GABA levels to a stage that causes withdrawal.

This is the cause of cravings. Your body can correct the imbalance at a given time. That time increases, the worse the problem is.

Until your body does this, you will crave that feeling alcohol can give you. Sadly, this leads you to believe the only way to feel better is to drink again.

This may be true in the short term, but long-term low GABA, serotonin, and dopamine levels can lead to chronic anxiety, depression and other mental health problems.

Young woman in floral dress examining wine bottle in kitchen, representing the moment of decision when facing alcohol cravings and choosing healthier alternatives

Alcohol Cravings vs. Alcohol Obsession

Cravings are a physical and psychological need for something, in this case, alcohol. They only last until we have detoxed and have no alcohol in our system.

So why do we think we are craving long after we are sober?

The answer lies in the mind. Not in neurotransmitters this time but in the hippocampus. One of the most important parts of the brain, issues with the hippocampus, can leave us obsessed with a feeling we remember and how we think about our experiences.

Alcohol and what we believe it does FOR us becomes the focus of our obsessions. We convince ourselves that alcohol makes us happy and feel good.

Scientists believe that prolonged overuse of alcohol can shrink the hippocampus and contribute to addiction, anxiety and depression.

Breaking the Cycle

Cravings

The answer to cravings is hard but simple: stop drinking. The more you continue to drink, the worse the problem becomes. Drinking more might seem to help for a bit, but it only makes you sicker.

How to help alcohol cravings:

  • Avoid trigger situations, e.g. stress, social events, loneliness.
  • Change your pattern to avoid Alcohol.
  • Try Desistal supplements to help with insomnia, anxiety and nutritional deficiencies.
  • Occupy your mind with positive, healthy activities.
  • Avoid exposure to alcohol.
  • Don’t buy alcohol.

Obsession with Alcohol

Finding something else, healthier and, if possible, happier to fulfil our needs is the best way to curb obsession.

Attending counselling and therapy can relieve our symptoms and help us understand how we became obsessed with alcohol.

Focusing on our body and well-being is a great way to heal and stops us from obsessing about alcohol.

Supplements to aid with anxiety – one of the most common cravings and obsession symptoms – may help. Bacopa Monnieri has shown good results in studies related to GABA and anxiety behaviour from alcohol dependence.

If you want to cut down or stop drinking and manage alcohol cravings, Desistal can help you on your journey.

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Sources

Bacopa monnieri abrogates alcohol abstinence-induced anxiety-like behaviour

The role of GABAA receptors in mediating the effects of alcohol in the central nervous system

Hippocampal functional network: The mediating role between obsession and anxiety in adult patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder

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