Alcohol Minimalist: Mindful Drinking & Behavior Change

Molly Watts, Mindful Drinking & Behavior Change Coach

Join coach Molly Watts on the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast to explore mindful drinking, behavior change, and mental wellness. This show offers science-based strategies to help you break drinking habits and overcome anxiety linked to alcohol use. Whether you're an adult child of alcoholics or seeking peace with your drinking, discover tools for lasting change without shame or guilt. New episodes every Monday and Thursday. Becoming an alcohol minimalist means: Choosing how to include alcohol in our lives following low-risk guidelines. Freedom from anxiety around alcohol use. Less alcohol without feeling deprived. Using the power of our own brains to overcome our past patterns and choose peace. The Alcohol Minimalist Podcast explores the science behind alcohol and analyzes physical and mental wellness to empower choice. You have the power to change your relationship with alcohol, you are not sick, broken and it's not your genes! This show is intended for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. If you are physically dependent on alcohol, please seek medical help to reduce your drinking.

  1. Think Thursday: Sleep, Mental Health & The Science of Flourishing

    3 DAYS AGO

    Think Thursday: Sleep, Mental Health & The Science of Flourishing

    Sleep, Mental Health, and the Science of Flourishing This week on Think Thursday, Molly revisits a topic that has shown up many times on the podcast: sleep. But this conversation takes a different angle in recognition of Mental Health Awareness Month. Drawing from recent research from the National Sleep Foundation, Molly explores the connection between sleep and “flourishing” — not just the absence of anxiety or depression, but the ability to feel emotionally well, resilient, hopeful, connected, and capable in daily life. In this episode: Why sleep is foundational to emotional regulation and mental healthHow sleep deprivation impacts the amygdala and prefrontal cortexThe relationship between sleep, dopamine, impulsivity, and behavior changeWhy exhaustion has become normalized in modern cultureMolly’s personal experience tracking sleep with an Oura ringHow alcohol impacts REM sleep, recovery, and sleep qualityThe concept of “sleep debt” and why recovery sleep mattersA fascinating sleep technique called cognitive shuffling and how it may help calm an overactive brain at nightKey takeaway:Sometimes what feels like a motivation problem, mindset problem, or emotional resilience problem may actually be an exhausted nervous system asking for restoration. Referenced research:National Sleep Foundation Sleep in America Polls (2023 & 2025) If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, rate, and review the podcast. It helps more people discover the show and supports the mission of helping people better understand their beautiful, brilliant human brains. ★ Support this podcast ★

    14 min
  2. Revisiting: The Five Things I Needed to Change Before I Could Change My Drinking

    6 DAYS AGO

    Revisiting: The Five Things I Needed to Change Before I Could Change My Drinking

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast, Molly revisits episode 100: “5 Things I Had to Change Before I Changed My Drinking.”  Originally released in November 2022, this conversation is just as relevant today because lasting change doesn’t begin with the perfect drink plan. It begins with mindset. Molly shares the five foundational shifts she had to make before she could create a peaceful relationship with alcohol. From giving up the need to know she would succeed, to no longer using fear, failure, timing, or life circumstances as reasons to stay stuck, this episode is a practical and compassionate reminder that changing your drinking habits starts with learning how to work with your beautiful, brilliant human brain.  This episode is especially timely for Mental Health Awareness Month because it focuses on the thinking patterns, beliefs, and emotional habits that often keep people trapped in the cycle of overdrinking, guilt, and self-doubt. Molly reminds listeners that fear and doubt are normal—but they don’t have to be in charge.  In This Episode, You’ll Learn  Why you don’t need to know you’ll succeed before you begin.  How fear and faith both ask you to believe in something you can’t yet see.  Why telling yourself “this is going to be so hard” makes change feel even harder.  How to trade all-or-nothing thinking for small, doable steps.  Why waiting for the “right time” keeps you stuck in conditional success.  How to stop letting mistakes, disappointment, and failed attempts derail you.  Why complaining about your genetics, history, job, stress, or life circumstances keeps the focus on the problem instead of the solution. Key Takeaways 1. You don’t need certainty to get started. Molly shares that when she first began changing her drinking habits, she had plenty of evidence from her past that suggested she might fail. The shift came when she stopped treating fear and doubt as reasons not to act. Instead, she chose to move forward one day at a time. The question becomes: What can I do today that is just a little bit better than yesterday? 2. Stop rehearsing how hard change will be. When you repeatedly tell yourself changing your drinking will be miserable, impossible, or too hard, your brain naturally wants to avoid trying. Molly encourages listeners to meet themselves where they are and ask a more useful question: What can I do to make this easier? That question opens the door to education, small wins, and doable plans instead of all-or-nothing pressure.  3. Stop waiting for the perfect time. There will always be holidays, stress, travel, hard days, celebrations, and unexpected challenges. Molly calls out the trap of “conditional success”—believing life has to calm down before you can take care of yourself. Instead, she encourages “deliberate success”: deciding how you will support yourself no matter what is happening around you.  4. Failure cannot be the reason you stop. Mistakes are not proof that you can’t change. They are information. Molly reminds listeners that they get to try as many times as they want, and that disappointment is already present when you aren’t trying. The goal is not to avoid every mistake. The goal is to have a plan for how you will respond when things don’t go as planned. 5. Quit using your life as the reason you overdrink. Molly shares that she had to stop complaining about her genetics, her mom, her history, her job, and her life. Not because those things didn’t matter, but because focusing only on the obstacles kept her from finding solutions. Changing your habits is not just about counting drinks. It is about what is happening in your mind. Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA: Healthy men under 65: No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week. Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week. One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink. Abstinence from alcoholAbstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past. Benefits of “low-risk” drinkingFollowing these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work. ★ Support this podcast ★

    22 min
  3. Think Thursday: Living Alongside Mental Illness-The Hidden Impact on Your Brain & Behavior

    30 APR

    Think Thursday: Living Alongside Mental Illness-The Hidden Impact on Your Brain & Behavior

    Episode Summary What is it like to live with someone who is struggling with their mental health? In this Think Thursday episode, Molly explores the often-overlooked experience of living alongside mental illness—and how growing up with or caring for someone with emotional unpredictability can shape the way your brain processes safety, relationships, and control. This conversation is especially relevant as we enter Mental Health Awareness Month, offering both insight and compassion for those navigating these complex environments. What You’ll Learn  The difference between having mental illness and living alongside it  How emotional unpredictability shapes the nervous system  Why you may feel hyper-aware of other people’s moods  The role of the reticular activating system in “reading the room”  How neuroplasticity reinforces patterns like monitoring, anticipating, and adjusting  The critical difference between being responsive and feeling responsible How to begin shifting from external control to internal grounding Key Takeaways  Your brain adapts to the environment it experiences  Growing up with or living alongside mental illness can wire heightened awareness  Emotional sensitivity is not a flaw—it is adaptation  You can care deeply about someone without taking responsibility for their emotional state  Awareness is the first step toward creating new patterns and responses Resources Mentioned If this episode resonated with you, support is available: 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline Call or text 988 for free, confidential support 24/7 National Alliance on Mental Illness Education, support groups, and resources for individuals and families Mental Health America Free mental health screenings and tools for self-care and support Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration National Helpline: 1-800-662-HELP (4357) for substance use and mental health resources World Health Organization Global data and resources on mental health Connect + Next Steps If this episode spoke to you, share it with someone who might need it. And as we move into Mental Health Awareness Month, take a moment to check in—not just with others, but with yourself. ★ Support this podcast ★

    12 min
  4. Alcohol Awareness Month:  What Alcohol Awareness Really Means

    27 APR

    Alcohol Awareness Month: What Alcohol Awareness Really Means

    As Alcohol Awareness Month comes to a close, Molly reflects on what alcohol awareness really means and why it is about more than fear, labels, or all-or-nothing thinking. Drawing on this month’s episodes about alcohol facts, moderation support, and alcohol-free alternatives, she reframes awareness as something empowering: a way to make more honest, informed choices about your relationship with alcohol.  In this episode, Molly explores why awareness begins with informed truth, why the “middle ground” of drinking deserves more attention, and how support does not have to be one-size-fits-all. She also shares how alcohol-free alternatives can help preserve ritual while supporting change. The result is a hopeful conversation about clarity, choice, and taking the next right step.  In this episode, Molly discusses:  What Alcohol Awareness Month really means  Why awareness is about honesty, clarity, and choice rather than labels  Why the drinking “middle ground” deserves more attention  What Molly took away from her conversations with Moderation Management and Curious Elixirs How alcohol-free alternatives can support change  Why learning what a standard drink actually is can be a powerful first step  How awareness helps us move beyond cultural myths and into a more honest conversation about alcohol’s role in our lives Key takeaways  Awareness is not punishment. It is power.  You do not need a label to begin paying attention.  You do not need a dramatic story to deserve support.  The next right step does not have to be dramatic.  Information creates choice, and choice is what allows change to begin. Resources mentioned Moderation ManagementNIAAA Alcohol Treatment NavigatorCurious ElixirsSunnyside Med Molly’s coaching and support options Questions to consider after listening  What is alcohol costing me?  What do I believe alcohol gives me?  What am I defending?  What would change if I stopped waiting until it got worse?  What kind of relationship with alcohol actually fits the life I want to live?Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA: Healthy men under 65: No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week. Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week. One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink. Abstinence from alcoholAbstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past. Benefits of “low-risk” drinkingFollowing these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work. ★ Support this podcast ★

    21 min
  5. Think Thursday: The Story Your Brain Tells First

    23 APR

    Think Thursday: The Story Your Brain Tells First

    Your brain doesn’t wait to tell a story about your life—it creates one in real time. In this Think Thursday episode, Molly builds on the foundational concept of “the gap and the gain” and takes it one step further. Instead of focusing on how we reinterpret our past, she explores how the brain assigns meaning in the moment—and how those interpretations quietly shape identity, behavior, and long-term change. By understanding how your brain predicts, labels, and stores experiences, you can begin to create space between what happens and what you decide it means—unlocking a more effective and sustainable approach to behavior change. What You’ll Learn:  Why your brain is constantly interpreting—not just observing—your experiences  How predictive processing shapes the meaning you assign to events  The role of the amygdala and emotional tagging in forming your personal narrative  Why you don’t remember what happened—you remember what you decided it meant  How repeated interpretations become identity over time  The connection between dopamine, motivation, and perceived progress Why missed goals aren’t the problem—but how you interpret them might be Key Takeaway: Behavior change doesn’t just depend on what you do—it depends on the meaning your brain assigns to what you do. The moment something doesn’t go as planned isn’t the problem. The story you tell about that moment is what determines what happens next. A Simple Practice to Try This Week: The next time something doesn’t go the way you planned:  Notice your immediate interpretation  Pause before labeling it as “good” or “bad”  Ask yourself: “Is that the only way to see this?”Creating that small amount of space allows you to choose a more useful interpretation—one that keeps you engaged instead of shutting you down. Final Thought: The gap and the gain help you reinterpret your past. But the real shift happens when you recognize that you are shaping that story in real time—moment by moment, meaning by meaning. ★ Support this podcast ★

    12 min
  6. Alcohol Awareness Month: How Curious Elixirs Is Redefining What Drinking Less Can Look Like with J.W. Wiseman

    20 APR

    Alcohol Awareness Month: How Curious Elixirs Is Redefining What Drinking Less Can Look Like with J.W. Wiseman

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast, Molly talks with J.W. Wiseman, founder of Curious Elixirs, about the rise of craft non-alcoholic cocktails and why they matter so much for people who want a more peaceful relationship with alcohol. J.W. shares how his own desire to drink less led him to create one of the earliest brands in the non-alcoholic beverage space, long before “sober curious” became a mainstream term.  Together, Molly and J.W. explore the idea that drinking less does not have to mean settling for something boring, basic, or deprived—it can still feel elevated, flavorful, social, and deeply satisfying.  From the origins of Curious Elixirs in 2015 to the role of functional herbs, adaptogens, and intentional drink design, this conversation offers a fresh look at how non-alcoholic beverages can support people across the sobriety spectrum. Molly also challenges the common belief that a drink needs alcohol to be worth enjoying, reminding listeners that taste, ritual, and experience matter too.  In This Episode, You’ll Hear:  Why J.W. started Curious Elixirs before the term “sober curious” even existed  How non-alcoholic beverages can support a more intentional relationship with alcohol  Why flavor, ritual, and connection matter more than alcohol itself  How Curious Elixirs helped pioneer the craft, functional non-alcoholic cocktail category  The role of herbs and adaptogens in creating drinks that feel sophisticated and supportive  Why “less alcohol” does not have to mean “less fun”  How J.W.’s own drinking habits pushed him to rethink what he wanted alcohol to do in his life Key Takeaways J.W. explains that people do not need alcohol to have fun—they need connection, intention, and something that genuinely feels good in their body. That idea aligns beautifully with the Alcohol Minimalist philosophy: creating a relationship with alcohol that is conscious, peaceful, and free from all-or-nothing thinking.  This episode also highlights an important mindset shift: non-alcoholic drinks are not “less than.” They can be crafted, complex, beautiful, and worthy of the same appreciation people often reserve for alcoholic beverages. Molly and J.W. discuss how that reframe opens up more options for people who want to drink less without feeling like they are missing out.  And finally, J.W.’s story is a reminder that change often starts with curiosity. What began as a personal effort to cut back and reset his tolerance eventually became a company built to help others find more freedom and flexibility in how they drink.  About the Guest J.W. Wiseman is the founder of Curious Elixirs, one of the early leaders in the non-alcoholic cocktail movement. Before launching the company in 2015, he worked across media, marketing, and hospitality, including roles with NBC, Broadway, Thrillist, and Skillshare, before founding his own agency, Good Business.  Mentioned in This Episode Curious Elixirs The “sober curious” movement  Functional herbs and adaptogens Curious Red The Curious Elixirs flavor quiz  Molly’s idea of living “mostly alcohol-free” Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA: Healthy men under 65: No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week. Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week. One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink. Abstinence from alcoholAbstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past. Benefits of “low-risk” drinkingFollowing these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work. ★ Support this podcast ★

    41 min
  7. Revisiting-Think Thursday: How Mindset Impact's the Body's Biology

    16 APR

    Revisiting-Think Thursday: How Mindset Impact's the Body's Biology

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly revisits a timely conversation on mindset, neuroscience, and the biology of belief. Drawing on the work of Stanford health psychologist Dr. Alia Crum, she explores how our thoughts and expectations can influence physical outcomes, stress responses, and even the way we experience cravings and behavior change. The episode connects that research directly to becoming an alcohol minimalist by showing that lasting change is not just about behavior. It is also about how we think about our behavior.  In This Episode, You’ll Hear  Why mindset matters so much during stressful or uncertain seasons  How repetition and consistency help reshape the brain through neuroplasticity  The story that sparked Dr. Alia Crum’s research into the biology of belief  What the hotel housekeeper study revealed about belief and physical change  How reframing stress can change the way the body responds  What the “milkshake study” teaches us about expectation, biology, and perception  Why changing your relationship with alcohol is about more than willpower  How small decisions can reinforce a new identity and a more peaceful path forward Key Takeaways  Your mindset acts like a filter that shapes how you interpret and respond to life.  Beliefs can influence physical outcomes, not just emotions or motivation.  Stress is not always the enemy. How you frame stress can affect how you experience it.  Alcohol change work becomes more sustainable when it moves from restriction to intention.  Reframing “I can’t drink” into “I’m choosing not to drink because it aligns with my goals” creates a very different internal experience.  Every small choice matters. Each decision is a chance to reinforce who you are becoming. Studies and Ideas Discussed The hotel housekeeper study Housekeepers who were told their physically demanding work counted as exercise experienced measurable physical improvements without changing the work itself. The difference was their belief about what they were already doing. Stress mindset research Participants who viewed stress as something that could support performance reported fewer negative physical symptoms and felt more engaged. The milkshake study Participants drank identical shakes, but their bodies responded differently based on what they believed they were consuming, highlighting how expectation can influence biology. Practical Tools Molly Shares  Reframe challenges as opportunities to build resilience  Meet cravings with compassion and curiosity instead of judgment  Use visualization for 2 to 3 minutes each morning to mentally rehearse the person you want to become  Practice empowering affirmations  Repeat: “Every choice is a chance”  Keep a simple mindset journal or daily “gains” journal to reinforce progress Memorable Themes  Mindset can shape physical reality  Belief influences biology  Small repeated thoughts become beliefs  Beliefs drive feelings, actions, and results  Lasting alcohol change is built through consistent, intentional thinking  Your brain is not broken. It can learn, adapt, and change Listener Reflection  What belief can you shift today that would move you closer to your goals?  What would change if you saw each craving as an opportunity to practice resilience?  What might become possible if you treated every decision as a vote for the person you want to be? Closing This episode is a reminder that your thoughts matter, your beliefs matter, and your brain is always listening. When you practice new thoughts consistently over time, you create new beliefs. And those beliefs can help build a more peaceful relationship with alcohol, one choice at a time. ★ Support this podcast ★

    19 min
  8. Alcohol Awareness Month: 8 Facts Everyone Should Know About Alcohol

    13 APR

    Alcohol Awareness Month: 8 Facts Everyone Should Know About Alcohol

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast, Molly shares 8 evidence-based facts everyone should know about alcohol. From cancer risk and “safe” drinking limits to binge drinking, sleep, tolerance, and decision-making, this conversation is designed to cut through myths and mixed messages and help you think more clearly about your relationship with alcohol. This episode is not about fear, shame, or labels. It is about awareness. Because when we understand alcohol more clearly, we can make more honest, informed choices. In this episode, Molly discusses:  Why alcohol is a known carcinogen and how alcohol use increases cancer risk  Why there is no guaranteed safe amount of alcohol for anyone  What a standard drink actually is  Why many people unintentionally underestimate how much they drink  How binge drinking is defined by amount, not by whether you black out or pass out  Why most people who drink excessively are not alcohol dependent  How alcohol may make you sleepy but still disrupt sleep quality  The way alcohol affects judgment, reaction time, and decision-making  Why being able to “hold your liquor” is not a sign that alcohol is safer for you Also mentioned in this episode: Sunnyside, Molly’s top recommendation for a mindful drinking app  How positive reinforcement and honest tracking can support behavior change  Molly’s reflection questions for Alcohol Awareness MonthQuestions to consider after listening:  What is alcohol costing me?  What am I defending?  What do I want for my health?  What do I want for my peace?  What kind of relationship with alcohol actually fits the life I want to live? Low risk drinking guidelines from the NIAAA: Healthy men under 65: No more than 4 drinks in one day and no more than 14 drinks per week. Healthy women (all ages) and healthy men 65 and older:No more than 3 drinks in one day and no more than 7 drinks per week. One drink is defined as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof liquor. So remember that a mixed drink or full glass of wine are probably more than one drink. Abstinence from alcoholAbstinence from alcohol is the best choice for people who take medication(s) that interact with alcohol, have health conditions that could be exacerbated by alcohol (e.g. liver disease), are pregnant or may become pregnant or have had a problem with alcohol or another substance in the past. Benefits of “low-risk” drinkingFollowing these guidelines reduces the risk of health problems such as cancer, liver disease, reduced immunity, ulcers, sleep problems, complications of existing conditions, and more. It also reduces the risk of depression, social problems, and difficulties at school or work. ★ Support this podcast ★

    20 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Join coach Molly Watts on the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast to explore mindful drinking, behavior change, and mental wellness. This show offers science-based strategies to help you break drinking habits and overcome anxiety linked to alcohol use. Whether you're an adult child of alcoholics or seeking peace with your drinking, discover tools for lasting change without shame or guilt. New episodes every Monday and Thursday. Becoming an alcohol minimalist means: Choosing how to include alcohol in our lives following low-risk guidelines. Freedom from anxiety around alcohol use. Less alcohol without feeling deprived. Using the power of our own brains to overcome our past patterns and choose peace. The Alcohol Minimalist Podcast explores the science behind alcohol and analyzes physical and mental wellness to empower choice. You have the power to change your relationship with alcohol, you are not sick, broken and it's not your genes! This show is intended for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. If you are physically dependent on alcohol, please seek medical help to reduce your drinking.

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