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Sunshinegirl11's avatar

Why are 20-30 year olds so obsessed with drinking culture.

Asked by Sunshinegirl11 (1110points) June 23rd, 2016 from iPhone

So I’m in college, and I just turned 21 in March. I’m not much of a drinker, never have been. I’m really introverted so if I do drink it is with my really close friend at her house or my house.

I just started a new chemistry program at school and am starting to get really close with my lab group. We hang out often after class. One thing I’ve noticed though is they LOVE to drink. They will have 5–6 beers every time we are together. They talk about alcohol 24/7, and it’s just so normalized for them. When I tell them that I’m not a big drinker, they call me “a good girl” or a “healthy girl”, and while I could take these as a compliment, it really only makes me feel like an outcast.

Now I have nothing against alcohol, but like I said, it does sort of make me feel like an outcast. They want to go bar hopping with me but that is just SO NOT ME! I’m scared to let them know that though…

I’m not sure if this is my insecurity about not drinking, or an insecurity about being an introvert in an extroverted culture.

Any advice? Any thoughts?

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11 Answers

imrainmaker's avatar

Don’t budge under peer pressure ..if you aren’t comfortable doing a particular thing don’t do it. Let them call you good girl or whatever. There always will be mix of people in every group who like to do certain things while others don’t. As long as they respect your decision it’s ok to be part of it otherwise you would be better off finding new friends..

RedDeerGuy1's avatar

I had the same problem. I called myself a designated walker and got free cola and no grief, and the drunks were supervised and got home safe.

Seek's avatar

It’s college. Bunch of kids in a culture that simultaneously glorifies alcohol and partying culture while stigmatizing it and banning them from taking part until they’re least equipped to handle the introduction of that stimulus.

In the past and in other countries the first group a person drank around was their family. Dad would take the boy down for his first pint at 16. Kids have watered wine with dinner in many countries to this day.

Here? We wait until they’ve been adults for three years before they can have their first legal taste. That makes anyone who partakes before “bad” for violating the law, and anyone who waits behind the curve and in some cases anxious to “catch up”.

It all breaks down to your own personal taste. If you don’t want to, don’t. I’m an introvert myself.

Let’s be honest: You’re probably paying a lot of money to go to school. If you’re not, someone is paying a lot to send you there. Your choice to not partake in partying culture can only help your studies.

The bars will be there after you graduate, and when you have a kickass job you can afford to go to the ones that don’t smell like stale vomit.

JLeslie's avatar

Most of my college friends drank like fishes. I didn’t drink, and in turn I often was the driver. I wasn’t a big “bar” person, but I was a dance club girl. In the dorm I still hung out with friends when they drank. It didn’t really matter. Just sometimes it was boring for me if the people were very drunk.

Don’t drink for them. I had way more money to spend because I wasn’t spending it on alcohol.

Buttonstc's avatar

Always be true to yourself and you can’t go wrong. Drinking just to fit in is just about the worst reason.

If you were truly an outcast, they wouldn’t be associating with you at all. Some people (and I’m one of them) just never develop a taste for alcohol and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. Plus, it could make you quite sought after as a designated driver.

But even without that, just be yourself. It sounds as if even tho they may refer to you as a good girl or healthy, they appear to be accepting of your preferences to not be drinking as much as they do. And thats as it should be.

Don’t compromise yourself for the sake of others. Just continue to be your own unique person.

Haleth's avatar

A lot of people who really talk up drinking are insecure themselves and just trying to fit in. In college, people are just starting to get a sense of who they are, and it’s the first time being in a new environment as an adult. There’s a lot of pressure to fit in and be cool.

Alcohol does two things for your social capital as a college student. 1) It lets people reassure their peers that they fit in, and 2) it lowers inhibitions, so you don’t have to worry about social awkwardness as much.

The way to go against this is to have a strong sense of yourself. Be very aware of the other things you bring to the table, whether it’s your fun personality, unique interests, intelligence, or morality. If you’ve got a lot going on outside of drinking, it makes a big difference.

It might not hurt to make some other friends focused around different interests. Last, if you let the bartender know that you’re the DD, they’ll often give you free non-alcoholic drinks all night. :)

cazzie's avatar

You are allowed to go out and just drink water or soda. I gave up all alcohol a few times for just over a year. One time it was for health reasons the other I was pregnant and breastfeeding. Hang out. Have fun.

Zaku's avatar

The pattern of teasing people with minor ad hominem “attacks” about the people who aren’t aligning themselves with a group’s behavior and opinions is just a common defense pattern of people and groups, common to more serious alcoholics and drug users, and younger students and older people on any number of subjects and opinions. It’s worth developing the skill of discerning what part of such defensive comments is just defensiveness. Usually most or all of it is mainly a comment on the speaker’s own soreness from being polarized in that group’s perspective, and/or is a defensive reflection of criticisms the group receives from the outside.

I’ve been around drinking groups and it seems to me that unless you can immerse yourself in the group and its mindset(/delusion?), from my own perspective, it’s generally a huge annoying waste of time except just for spending time becoming more attached and familiar with them. It involves hours of hanging around in noisy places with semi-drunk people who all feel a need to act like what they’re doing and saying is interesting and cool and hip and fun and sophisticated, even though often I can hardly make out the words people are saying unless they are very loud and at the right pitch to penetrate the noise, and then unless I’m also somehow really tuned into them, I think what they have to say is generally empty and annoying in one flavor or another, unless I luck out and find someone whose drunk personality I actually find fairly entertaining, which is rare, and more likely if I’ve drunk a bit too much. I understand the appeal if you find people you like and find entertaining and non-boring when they’re drunk, and if when sober you find that experience worth the rather large investment in time and money and energy and health impact.

It tends to be a pretty high impact in all those ways, especially when they keep talking about little more than their addiction even during the day.

Almost all such groups though I’ve decided are not worth my time, unless they only do it rarely and/or they’re functional and precious outside the drunk state. Even then, I tend to usually not join them on their nights of hanging around in bars.

Oh, and as for why young adults (especially in the USA) often seem obsessed with drinking culture, I’d say it’s because it’s a new option for them, and seen as adult and edgy and cool and mainstream. The image is supported by TV and movies and advertisements, which present staged scenes where people are drinking and smiling and being attractive and wealthy and carefree and apparently saying endless really witty things to each other and liking each other and being oh so happy. So exploring the new option of going to bars and hanging around trying to achieve that seems valid – at least a fair chunk of the culture seems to buy it.

And yes, there is also the very strong US culture bias towards extroversion and social interaction, which tries to shame introverts and make social interaction always a positive thing and doesn’t really get introverts. That meshes pretty well with righteously validating the endless empty drunken hangout experience.

I tend to prefer one or two occasional glasses of wine in a quiet place with a few interesting people.

Of course, that’s my perspective talking, and I’m starting to show my ad hominem biases…

SmartAZ's avatar

At that age they are desperate to get started on a life, and it is very tempting to think about being as happy as the people in a beer commercial. To make it even harder, it is a fact that people who drink a little regularly make more money than people who drink too much or people who don’t drink at all.

Hypocrisy_Central's avatar

One thing I’ve noticed though is they LOVE to drink. They will have 5–6 beers every time we are together. They talk about alcohol 24/7, and it’s just so normalized for them.
Of all the things one can point to, the basic is it they are chasing some happiness they lack. People have a void, and when they cannot identify or refuse to identify why, they have to try and compensate with booze, drugs, drinking, sex, gambling, being adrenaline junkies and the likes. With some booze is the distraction of choice because it is so widely acceptable. I guess as a whole the younger culture does not have the wisdom of live experience to know they are chasing rabbits down many holes.

batman86's avatar

I’m 23 and was never THAT into alcohol. I grew up being allowed to try sips of alcoholic beverages, so when the time came to legally drink, it wasn’t very exciting. When I was 18 my mom would let me have a glass of mikes hard lemonade, but I couldn’t leave the house after.

So I think a lot of it is how you were raised. Along with that, kids feel a sort of maturity, because they are finally old enough to drink, meaning they believe that they are now considered an adult. Now for those that are in there late 20s to early 30s, it may be that they are trying to stay youthful and hip.

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