A Problem with Drinking (probably the opposite of what you think)

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Jegsimmons

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Nov 14, 2010
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triggrhappy94 said:
So, like many not-manly men, I'm cursed with the inability to get past the taste of beer. I've never made it past half a bottle on my own. I'm normally able to take a good first drink, but after that the taste limits me to just sips at a time. Between me and friends, we normally just have beer.
Any suggestion on how to get past the taste, or condition myself to like.
I wouldn't know, i just refuse to drink because i have alcoholics on both sides of my family and i'm very likely to become addicted quick.So i just don't bother.
And if you don't like the taste. don't bother, doesn't make you less of a man, you know what you like and how you like it. Being a individual is how you be manly.
 

lumenadducere

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May 19, 2008
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ThongBonerstorm said:
lumenadducere said:
if you look at the top beers inside the US, pretty much every one of them is terrible. Also, if Miller Lite is beer then i have a sweet garden hose to show you.
Uh-huh. As I said, all the big brands are the ones that make it abroad. There's a reason that they're big, and they're also the ones that are bad. Just because I didn't out Miller specifically doesn't mean it isn't included in that list.

Why are those beers our top-selling beers? I don't know. Probably a combination of marketing, being cheap, and being available everywhere in the nation (whereas the smaller guys aren't). But those "top beers" are only top in terms of sales, and are in no way indicative of the rest of the brewing industry inside the US. Again, the big names being bad doesn't mean that the rest of our brews are bad. It seems I cannot reiterate that point enough.
 

bad rider

The prodigal son of a goat boy
Dec 23, 2007
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Depends on the beer, start on Tuborg, then move on to Stella. Avoid French beer, I assume they piss in it before they send it to England, at least judging by taste I'd say so.
 

kloiberin_time

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Jan 27, 2011
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Ignoring the age issue I will echo your sentiment. I thought I hated beer when I was younger. Then I found Trappist and Belgian white beers. Chimay Triple, Delerium Tremmons and others I love occasionally, although I usually default to a whiskey and 7. Or just Knob Creak, seriously the aged oak scotch barrels it is aged in give it a wonderful oakey flavor. Anyway I am digressing.

Keep trying different beers (once you are of age) and you may stumble upon one you love. Belgian beers, wheat beers and Guinness (which is its own type, never let ANYONE tell you different) work for me but might not for you.
 

Daffy F

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Apr 17, 2009
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I'm not really interested in alcohol, and I have a close friend who is the same, so we still have each other's company if other people feel like getting drunk.
 

AgentNein

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Jun 14, 2008
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zerobudgetgamer said:
AgentNein said:
maybe he wants to experience the bonding that goes on between friends who share a beer or three? It can be good times.
Spacelord said:
the wonderful world of beer can truly be life enriching.
I would love for someone to explain this to me. As much as I can see the "bonding" and "life enriching" factors of alcohol, to me the "activity" of drinking is no different than any other possible form of group interaction, albeit with the side effects of slowly poisoning your body, hindering your ability to make sensible decisions whilst imbibing, and after certain quantities turning the imbibers into slobbering morons screeching like banshees and/or requiring a level of managed care to rival that of defusing a time bomb.
I have to admit, I find this to be a tremendously dim view of drinking. Bad experiences with drinking and drunkards in the past? That's understandable. But not everyone handles it in that way.

Me and my friends on the other hand have a fairly positive relationship with alcohol. We never devolve into these gibbering monkeys you speak of, Rarely if ever have I woke up the next day with serious regrets as to my actions (ahh, those tend to follow my forays into the whiskeys and vodkas). My actions when drinking, even when drunk aren't a WHOLE lot different than my actions whilst sober. This goes the same for our friends. Now we may exist in a pretty cool umbrella of people (I'm constantly thankful for this), but in the end no one ends up trying to drive somewhere when they've been drinking, no one tries to start fights, no one ends up with sexual encounters they regret the next day, no one is trying to take advantage of anyone else, and thank god no one is trying to play "beer pong". They would be kicked out post haste. The worst that comes of it is listening to music entirely too loud.

As far as the bonding thing goes, yes alcohol tends to lower those forcefields we have up, and allow us to connect on levels that we may not normally. Alcohol has at times only strengthened these friendships.
 

ElectroJosh

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Aug 27, 2009
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Pelgrims said:
Belgium, belgium belgium, The worst beer here tastes like the best beer brewed anywhere else!
Well said, now I love a variety of beers, but it was Belgium beers that made me realise I could like it.

Seriously the whole taste of beer may be offputting and that may not change (nothing to worry about) but there is a possibility that you are drinking rubbish beer. To be honest the most popular brands are usually either terrible or boring. I am not saying beer can't be good and popular but often it is big because it is generic or it is cheap to make (these two factors are not mutually exclusive).
 

zerobudgetgamer

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Apr 5, 2011
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AgentNein said:
I have to admit, I find this to be a tremendously dim view of drinking. Bad experiences with drinking and drunkards in the past? That's understandable. But not everyone handles it in that way.

Me and my friends on the other hand have a fairly positive relationship with alcohol. We never devolve into these gibbering monkeys you speak of, Rarely if ever have I woke up the next day with serious regrets as to my actions (ahh, those tend to follow my forays into the whiskeys and vodkas). My actions when drinking, even when drunk aren't a WHOLE lot different than my actions whilst sober. This goes the same for our friends. Now we may exist in a pretty cool umbrella of people (I'm constantly thankful for this), but in the end no one ends up trying to drive somewhere when they've been drinking, no one tries to start fights, no one ends up with sexual encounters they regret the next day, no one is trying to take advantage of anyone else, and thank god no one is trying to play "beer pong". They would be kicked out post haste. The worst that comes of it is listening to music entirely too loud.

As far as the bonding thing goes, yes alcohol tends to lower those forcefields we have up, and allow us to connect on levels that we may not normally. Alcohol has at times only strengthened these friendships.
Yes. Far more bad experiences than I care to mention. Suffice it to say I've never really seen a positive relationship with alcohol in my lifetime. But I will say this, as fortunate as you and your friends may be, I have both friends and family members who have lost jobs - some of them the best jobs they ever had - because of alcohol.

And as for "lowering those forcefields we have up," why can't you just lower them yourself? This is one BIG reason why I don't understand the need for alcohol. If I want to converse about a subject that will "allow me to connect on a level that I may not normally" my only hesitation is with those around me. I WANT to talk about this subject sober, and under most circumstances I'll try to, but some people just won't allow themselves to unless, like you say, they need a beer or two to open up. So, to me at least, alcohol is a hindering factor to friendships, since you "need" it in order to strengthen them.
 

Android2137

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Feb 2, 2010
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lithium.jelly said:
Or, possibly, stop drinking it until you're old enough. According to your profile, you're only sixteen.
What this guy said. Please wait until you are your country's legal drinking age or older. And if 16 IS the legal drinking age where you live, then... umm... does it HAVE to be beer? Will your friends seriously make fun of you and question your masculinity if you drink something else? If that's the case, you don't need beer; you need new drinking buddies.
 

Adam Galli

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Nov 26, 2010
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You should try as many beers as you can and maybe you'll find one that you like. Different beers have different flavors. Personally, for example, I think Miller (any kind) is disgusting, Budweiser is alright, and Molsen is the nectar of the gods.