Troy Terwilliger’s Reviews > Quit Like a Woman: The Radical Choice to Not Drink in a Culture Obsessed with Alcohol > Status Update
Troy Terwilliger
is 5% done
When you look at it through that lens, drinking heavily isn't a random aberration; it’s almost the logical conclusion of participating in the culture. It takes the crushing weight of shame off the individual and asks: Why have we built a society where you have to medicate yourself just to fit in or survive it?
— Jun 26, 2026 05:25AM
Like flag
Troy’s Previous Updates
Troy Terwilliger
is 95% done
When alcohol has been the mandatory baseline for every social interaction, every reward, and every transition from "work mode" to "relax mode," removing it leaves a massive, echoing crater. Whitaker’s approach to filling that void isn’t about finding a direct substitute for drinking; it’s about reinventing how you interact with the world.
— Jun 27, 2026 02:16AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 93% done
The Shift in Socializing: "Fun" stops being about staying out until 2:00 AM in a loud, crowded room enduring conversations you won't remember. Instead, it shifts to high-quality, authentic connection—early morning coffee dates, shared projects, traveling with a clear head, and being fully present with people who don't require you to be medicated to enjoy their company.
— Jun 27, 2026 02:15AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 92% done
The Power of Grounding and Food: Instead of using a chemical shortcut to decompress, she emphasizes leaning heavily into the grounding, sensory aspects of life. This includes things like long baths, complex skincare routines, diving into nature, and cooking elaborate, deeply satisfying meals. Food, baking, and non-alcoholic flavor profiles become rituals of comfort rather than just fuel.
— Jun 27, 2026 02:15AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 91% done
Reclaiming True Pleasures: Whitaker talks about returning to the things you actually loved before alcohol took over the wheel—childhood hobbies, sensory experiences, and creative outlets that don't require numbing out to enjoy. It’s about shifting from consumption-based entertainment to active engagement.
— Jun 27, 2026 02:14AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 65% done
It makes you realize why just telling someone to "use willpower" or "go to a meeting" doesn't work if their blood sugar is in the gutter. You have to feed the machine properly before you can even begin to fix the driver.
— Jun 26, 2026 02:53PM
Troy Terwilliger
is 64% done
She wasn't just fighting a mental obsession; her physical body was locked in a metabolic trap. If 95% of people misusing alcohol are dealing with this blood sugar rollercoaster, it means millions of people are treating a biochemical famine with a metabolic toxin, thinking it’s an emotional defect.
— Jun 26, 2026 02:53PM
Troy Terwilliger
is 31% done
Dopamine—chocolate, sex.. alcohol is like taking an antidepressant with a trick inside that requires an unwanted prescription required to maintain that balance. Too much pleasure means homeostasis through adding more anxiety… depressants work this way. Chemically mixing up your internal compass.
— Jun 26, 2026 06:58AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 26% done
Society protects the substance at all costs because admitting alcohol is a destructive, addictive toxin means everyone else has to look at their own exhausting management game.
— Jun 26, 2026 06:40AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 25% done
Alcoholism is self-diagnosed. The insanity, is that when she abused it and had fun with others she was fine. When she stopped drinking, she was labeled, othered and looked down on.
— Jun 26, 2026 06:39AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 22% done
The Litmus Test: Carr explicitly tells his readers not to stop drinking until they finish the book. It’s a brilliant psychological trick because it lowers the reader's defenses. Whitaker takes this literally, reading chapter after chapter about how alcohol is literal poison while actively pouring herself another glass.
— Jun 26, 2026 06:28AM

