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. The 24-Hour Reset: What to do After Drinking More than You Planned

    10h ago

    The 24-Hour Reset: What to do After Drinking More than You Planned

    The 24-Hour Reset: What to Do After You Drink More Than You Planned After a holiday weekend, vacation day, barbecue, or ordinary night that turns into more drinking than planned, it’s easy to wake up feeling foggy, anxious, disappointed, or stuck in shame.In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist podcast, Molly introduces the 24-Hour Reset: a practical framework for what to do after an off-plan drinking day. A reset does not mean alcohol’s effects are magically erased. It means you stop adding harm and start adding support.Molly explains what happens in the body after drinking more than planned, including how the liver metabolizes alcohol, why hangovers are more than dehydration, and how alcohol can affect sleep, mood, cravings, and next-day anxiety. She also explains why shame may feel like accountability, but often keeps the drinking loop going.You’ll learn the five parts of the 24-Hour Reset:Stabilize your body with water, food, rest, and gentle movement.Stabilize your brain by sticking with facts instead of identity attacks.Don’t drink to fix the effects of drinking if taking an alcohol-free day is medically safe for you.Do a 10-minute data review to identify when and why the plan changed.Make one next promise that is small, specific, and doable. The goal is not perfection. The goal is repair.Your body knows how to heal, and you know how to help it. Your liver is resilient. Your brain is plastic. Your nervous system can return to balance. But healing is not passive—you participate in it through the next best choice. Important note: If you drink heavily every day, have experienced withdrawal symptoms, or believe you may be physically dependent on alcohol, please consult a medical professional before abruptly stopping or taking alcohol-free days. Resources mentioned:Recovery and Reflection WorksheetSunnyside Med 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 ★

    32 min
  2. Think Thursday:  Your Luck Response

    4d ago

    Think Thursday: Your Luck Response

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly explores luck through the lens of Jim Collins’ book What to Make of a Life. Rather than looking at luck as something we either “have” or “don’t have,” this episode invites listeners to consider a more powerful question: What return am I creating on the luck I’ve been given? Molly breaks down Collins’ idea of different kinds of luck, including what luck, who luck, and zeit luck, and connects them to behavior change, mindset, identity, and personal agency. Luck may shape the events of our lives, but our response to luck helps shape the direction of our lives. In This Episode Molly explores:  Why luck is real, but not the whole story  How Jim Collins’ idea of “return on luck” applies to individual lives  The difference between a luck event and a luck response  Why the brain labels events as “good luck” or “bad luck” too quickly  How cliffs, fog, and turning points can reshape identity  The importance of “who luck” and the people who change our path  Why timing luck only matters when we are ready enough to respond  How even good luck can feel threatening to the brain  Why humility and agency are both essential for behavior change Key Takeaways Luck is not always something we control, but our response to luck is where agency begins. A setback, opportunity, diagnosis, loss, invitation, or chance meeting may become meaningful only through what we do next. Our brains are quick to interpret events, but the first story our brain tells does not have to be the final story. Not every hard thing needs to be turned into a lesson immediately. We can honor pain and still ask, “How do I want to meet this?” Relationships are one of the most powerful forms of luck. Sometimes one person can change the emotional weather around a goal. Timing matters, but timing alone is not enough. When timing luck appears, our willingness to respond matters. Reflection Questions  What luck am I labeling too quickly?  Who is part of my luck right now?  What would a high return on this luck look like? Resources Mentioned What to Make of a Life by Jim Collins  Jim Collins’ concept of “return on luck”  The ideas of cliffs, fog, fire, and hedgehogs in individual life paths Closing Thought Life may spin the wheel. It may open a door, close a door, reroute the path, or bring you to a cliff. But your response is where your life starts to become yours. ★ Support this podcast ★

    16 min
  3. When Drinking Less Feels Hard:  Alcohol Keeps Me Going

    6d ago

    When Drinking Less Feels Hard: Alcohol Keeps Me Going

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist podcast, Molly wraps up the series When Drinking Less Feels Hard by looking at the final Alcohol Core Belief: Alcohol Keeps Me Going. This belief often shows up as boredom, restlessness, wanting “one more,” drinking when you’re home alone, not wanting the night to end, or feeling like alcohol is the thing that makes an ordinary evening feel more interesting. Molly explains why the deeper issue is not “I’m bad at stopping,” but rather, “My brain believes alcohol helps me keep the night going.”  Molly also shares a final reminder about Mostly Dry July-The Daily, a 31-day program with a private daily podcast, daily videos, weekly group coaching calls, and support for prioritizing alcohol-free days without all-or-nothing thinking.  In This Episode  Why Alcohol Keeps Me Going can be a sneaky Alcohol Core Belief How boredom, restlessness, and “one more” drinking keep the loop going  Why alcohol can make an ordinary evening feel like it has more purpose  How dopamine, prediction, and familiar cues create urges  Why alcohol myopia makes “one more” feel convincing  The difference between a promise and a plan  How to create a “stopping ritual”  Why drinking less cannot be the only plan if alcohol has been filling your time, space, or sense of interest Key Takeaway Alcohol may feel like it keeps you going, but it may actually be keeping you from noticing what you need: rest, interest, connection, nourishment, or permission to stop. Listener Practice Choose one moment when alcohol tends to “keep you going.” Maybe it’s when you’re home alone and bored, after the first drink, late at night, or when you don’t want the evening to end. Ask yourself:  What do I think alcohol is keeping going?  What am I trying not to transition into?  What do I actually need right now? Then use the See, Soothe, Separate, Shift process: See: I’m having the thought that alcohol will keep this going. Soothe: Of course my brain is offering that. I’ve practiced this pattern. Separate: The fact is I want more of something. The story is that another drink is the way to get it. Shift: I can ask what I actually need before I decide whether to drink. Resources Mentioned Mostly Dry July-The DailyAlcohol Core Beliefshttps://www.facebook.com/groups/alcoholminimalistsLow 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 ★

    29 min
  4. Think Thursday: Why Looking Back Can Help You Move Forward

    Jun 25

    Think Thursday: Why Looking Back Can Help You Move Forward

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly explores reminiscing as more than nostalgia. After returning from a family reunion, she reflects on how shared stories can reconnect us with earlier versions of ourselves and remind us of the courage, humor, resilience, and connection that are still part of who we are.  Key Points  Reminiscing is not just remembering events; it is reconnecting with identity, meaning, and emotion.  Autobiographical memories help us understand our personal life story and the versions of ourselves we have been.  Family stories can preserve shared identity by reminding us what we value, what we survived, and how we belong to one another.  Healthy reminiscing can support behavior change by reminding us that our current emotional state is not the whole story.  Reminiscing is different from rumination. Rumination loops in shame or regret, while reminiscing helps us integrate the past with curiosity and compassion.  The past can be a courtroom or a library: rumination puts us on trial, but reminiscing helps us retrieve something useful. Science Mentioned  The hippocampus helps organize memory and context.  The medial prefrontal cortex is involved in self-reflection and personal meaning.  The default mode network becomes active when we think about ourselves, our past, our future, and the stories that shape our lives.  Erik Erikson’s stage of integrity versus despair describes the process of looking back over life and making meaning from both joys and losses. Think Thursday Invitation  Take ten minutes to intentionally reminisce.  Look through old photos, listen to a meaningful song, ask a family member to tell a story, or think about a place you used to love.  Ask yourself:  What version of me was present in that memory?  What mattered to me then?  What does this memory remind me is still part of me?  What is one small way I could bring that version of myself into today? Closing Thought Looking back is not always about wanting to go backward. Sometimes reminiscing helps us gather pieces of ourselves we forgot we could bring forward. ★ Support this podcast ★

    21 min
  5. When Drinking Less Feels Hard: Alcohol is My Reward

    Jun 22

    When Drinking Less Feels Hard: Alcohol is My Reward

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist podcast, Molly continues the series When Drinking Less Feels Hard, looking at the real-life challenges that make drinking less feel difficult through the lens of Alcohol Core Beliefs. This week’s focus is the belief Alcohol Is My Reward—the thought that shows up at the end of a hard day, a long week, while cooking dinner, on vacation, or anytime alcohol feels like the treat you’ve earned for getting through something. Molly explores why this belief can feel so reasonable, how the brain learns to associate alcohol with reward and transition, and why drinking less can feel like deprivation when alcohol has become the main way you mark completion, rest, or pleasure. Before the episode, Molly also shares a reminder about Mostly Dry July-The Daily, which includes daily support, weekly group coaching calls, weekly brain boosts, and a private daily podcast to help you practice drinking less with peaceful mindfulness and without all-or-nothing thinking.  www.mollywatts.com/mostly-dry-july   In This Episode Why alcohol can become tied to end-of-day and end-of-week ritualsHow the brain learns to predict alcohol as a rewardWhy “I deserve this” is often a clue, not a problemThe difference between true reward and coping in disguiseHow alcohol can represent completion, freedom, pleasure, or feeling like something is finally yoursWhy expanding your reward system is essential for drinking lessHow to use See, Soothe, Separate, and Shift with the belief Alcohol Is My RewardKey Takeaway You deserve reward, pleasure, rest, and celebration. But alcohol may not be the reward you actually deserve. The reward you deserve is one that restores you, supports you, and helps you feel cared for in the moment and proud of yourself later. Listener Practice Choose one reward-drinking moment: the end of the day, Friday night, cooking dinner, vacation, or after finishing something hard. Ask yourself: What am I trying to reward?What do I want this reward to give me?Will alcohol actually give me that, or is there another way to create it more honestly?Then practice creating one real reward before alcohol. It might be quiet, rest, movement, food, connection, or a nonalcoholic ritual. Resources Mentioned Mostly Dry July-The DailyAlcohol Core BeliefsSee, Soothe, Separate, ShiftAlcohol Minimalist Facebook groupLow 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 ★

    33 min
  6. Think Thursday: What Juneteenth Teaches Us About Memory, Truth & Freedom

    Jun 18

    Think Thursday: What Juneteenth Teaches Us About Memory, Truth & Freedom

    In this Think Thursday episode, Molly reflects on the meaning and importance of Juneteenth, observed on June 19th. Rather than approaching the holiday as a historian, she explores Juneteenth through the lens of memory, truth, freedom, and the stories a culture chooses to remember. Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, and announced freedom to enslaved African Americans there, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. This episode invites listeners to consider the difference between freedom declared and freedom actually delivered, and why that distinction still matters. Molly connects Juneteenth to the broader Think Thursday themes of awareness, learning, collective memory, and behavior change. Just as personal transformation requires honest awareness, cultural growth requires a willingness to tell fuller, more truthful stories. In This Episode Molly explores: The historical significance of Juneteenth and why June 19, 1865, matters Why freedom on paper is not the same as freedom in lived experience How national holidays act as moments of public memory Why Juneteenth did not begin when it became a federal holiday in 2021 How Black communities preserved and celebrated Juneteenth for generations The connection between memory, truth, and collective identity Why fuller truth can create deeper compassion, dignity, and responsibility How discomfort can be part of learning and expanding our understanding Key Reflection Juneteenth is both a celebration and a remembrance. It honors freedom, resilience, and generations of Black Americans who carried this history long before it received broader national recognition. It also asks us to look honestly at the ways freedom has been delayed, denied, and unevenly experienced. Questions to Consider What did I learn about Juneteenth growing up, and what did I not learn? What does this holiday ask me to remember more fully? How can I honor freedom not just as an idea, but as something that should be real in people’s lived experience? Closing Thought Memory matters. Truth matters. Freedom matters. Juneteenth reminds us that remembering is not passive. It is a choice, a practice, and part of how we become more honest, more awake, and more human. ★ Support this podcast ★

    14 min
  7. When Drinking Less Feels Hard:  Alcohol is Fun & Everyone is Drinking!

    Jun 15

    When Drinking Less Feels Hard: Alcohol is Fun & Everyone is Drinking!

    In this episode of the Alcohol Minimalist Podcast, Molly continues the series “When Drinking Less Feels Hard” by looking at one of the most common places drinking less can feel difficult: social situations where alcohol feels like part of the fun and everyone else is drinking. This episode explores two powerful Alcohol Core Beliefs: alcohol makes things more fun and alcohol creates connection. These beliefs often show up around dinners out, parties, weekends, vacations, celebrations, and those moments when you had a plan—until you were surrounded by other people drinking. Molly explains why the challenge is not simply being in a bar, at a restaurant, at a party, or on vacation. The deeper issue is that your brain may have learned to associate alcohol with belonging, ease, confidence, playfulness, and connection. When that belief is running in the background, choosing to drink less can feel like choosing a lesser version of the experience. But alcohol is not the source of your humor, warmth, courage, or ability to connect. Those parts of you already exist. In this science-forward episode, Molly breaks down how alcohol expectancies, social cues, dopamine, reward prediction, and alcohol myopia can make drinking feel automatic in social settings. She also shares how to challenge the thoughts that make alcohol feel necessary and how to build new evidence that fun, connection, and belonging are still fully available when you drink less. You’ll learn how to use the 4S process—See, Soothe, Separate, and Shift—to question the belief that alcohol makes everything better. Instead of relying on willpower in the moment, Molly encourages you to create a doable drink plan ahead of time, protect your awareness before alcohol narrows it, and practice proving to your brain that you can enjoy social situations without giving alcohol all the credit. In This Episode, You’ll Learn: Why social situations can make drinking less feel harder than drinking less at homeHow the beliefs “alcohol makes things more fun” and “alcohol creates connection” fuel desireWhy “everyone is drinking” can feel so powerful, even when you genuinely want to drink lessHow alcohol expectancies shape what you believe a drink will do for youWhy familiar cues like restaurants, vacations, Friday afternoons, and celebrations can trigger urgesWhat alcohol myopia is and why “I’ll decide later” is often not a strong enough planHow to separate the facts of a social situation from the story your brain is tellingHow to use the 4S process to challenge old beliefs and practice new onesWhy alcohol may be present during fun and connection without being the cause of either oneKey Takeaway: Alcohol may be present during fun, connection, celebration, and belonging—but that does not mean alcohol created those things. When you stop giving alcohol full credit for the experience, you can begin reclaiming your own confidence, humor, warmth, playfulness, and ability to connect. Drinking less is not about having less fun. It is about learning that fun was never dependent on alcohol in the first place. Mentioned in This Episode: Mostly Dry July: The Daily begins July 1st. Join Molly for daily support, coaching, and practical tools to help you create a peaceful relationship with alcohol throughout the month of July. Learn more at: https://mollywatts.com/mostlydryjuly/ Resources: Join the Alcohol Minimalist Facebook group for support, conversation, and real-life strategies for changing your drinking habits. Learn more about Molly’s programs and resources at mollywatts.com. 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 ★

    27 min
  8. Think Thursday: The Encodings You Haven't Discovered Yet

    Jun 11

    Think Thursday: The Encodings You Haven't Discovered Yet

    This week on Think Thursday, Molly explores a fascinating concept from Jim Collins' newest book, What to Make of a Life: encodings—the unique interests, abilities, and areas of engagement that make us come alive. Using the remarkable story of NFL legend and Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Alan Page, Molly examines how our lives may hold more possibilities than we realize and why the person we are today is not the final version of ourselves. Drawing connections to Benjamin Hardy's Personality Isn't Permanent and the science of neuroplasticity, this episode challenges the belief that our identities are fixed and invites us to remain curious about who we might still become. In This Episode:  What Jim Collins means by "encodings"  The surprising second career of Alan Page  Why identity is more flexible than we think  How neuroplasticity supports lifelong growth and discovery  The difference between your history and your potential  Why changing your relationship with alcohol can create space for new possibilities  How curiosity may be more important than finding a single purpose Key Takeaway Your past tells the story of what you've experienced so far. It does not define everything you're capable of becoming. There may be strengths, interests, and opportunities still waiting to emerge—and your next chapter may reveal a side of yourself you haven't yet discovered. Resources Mentioned What to Make of a Life by Jim CollinsPersonality Isn't Permanent by Benjamin HardyListen in and consider this question: What if the most interesting part of your story hasn't happened yet? ★ Support this podcast ★

    11 min
4.8
out of 5
158 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.

You Might Also Like