Two years ago, I made a decision that fundamentally changed the trajectory of my health, my mindset, and my life: I gave up alcohol thanks to learning about how to rewire my mindset to quit alcohol from James Swanwick (Check my podcast interview with James here). At the time, I just knew I was sick of the brain fog, the low-level anxiety, and the sluggish mornings. I felt an intuitive pull toward a cleaner life, and the results of quitting alcohol have been nothing short of miraculous.
But I recently had a massive realization that completely validated my choice.
I was listening to a deep-dive episode of the Huberman Lab Podcast featuring Dr. Andrew Huberman, a neurobiologist at Stanford School of Medicine. He broke down exactly what alcohol—even in low-to-moderate amounts—does to the human brain and body. Hearing the hard science behind what I had intuitively felt was mind-blowing.
If you are sober, sober-curious, or simply wondering if that nightly glass of wine is actually harmless, you need to watch this video.
(Embed Video Here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkS1pkKpILY)
Here are the biggest scientific realizations I took away from Dr. Huberman’s breakdown, and exactly why stepping away from the bottle is the ultimate biohack.
1. Alcohol is Literally Brain-Shrinking Poison
We often hear that a glass of red wine is good for the heart because of resveratrol. Dr. Huberman quickly dismantles this myth. To get enough resveratrol from wine to actually benefit your health, you would have to drink lethal amounts of alcohol.
Instead, the reality of ethanol (the alcohol we drink) is stark:
It is a cellular toxin: Because alcohol is both water- and fat-soluble, it passes freely into all the cells and tissues of your body, including crossing the blood-brain barrier.
The poison byproduct: Your liver converts ethanol into a highly toxic molecule called acetaldehyde, which damages and kills cells indiscriminately.
Brain shrinkage: A massive UK Biobank study of over 30,000 adults revealed that even low-to-moderate drinking (just one or two drinks a day) leads to a thinning of the neocortex—literally shrinking your gray and white brain matter.
2. The Illusion of Stress Relief and “Hangxiety”
How many times have you heard someone say, “I need a drink to unwind”? I used to say it myself. But the science shows alcohol actually does the exact opposite.
Regularly drinking alcohol changes the neural circuitry between your brain and body, specifically the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. When you consume alcohol regularly, your baseline levels of cortisol (the stress hormone) increase.
What this means for you:
You feel more stressed and anxious when you aren’t drinking.
Your resilience to everyday stress drops significantly.
That feeling of post-drinking anxiety—often called “hangxiety”—is a direct result of elevated cortisol and disrupted hormones.
Quitting two years ago didn’t just eliminate my hangovers; it lowered my daily baseline stress. I finally feel emotionally regulated without needing a substance to force me to relax.
3. Destroying the Gut-Liver-Brain Axis
We all know alcohol is used in hospitals to sterilize surfaces because it kills bacteria. Well, when you drink it, it acts the exact same way inside your digestive system.
Alcohol indiscriminately wipes out the healthy, vital bacteria in your gut microbiome. This destruction causes the lining of your gut to become compromised (leaky gut syndrome), allowing bad bacteria to escape into your bloodstream. Combined with inflammatory markers released by your liver as it struggles to metabolize the toxins, this creates a massive inflammatory cascade in your body.
Ironically, this inflammation reaches the brain and actively disrupts the neural circuits that control impulses, which actually makes you crave more alcohol.
4. The Myth of the “Nightcap” and Pseudosleep
If you have ever used a glass of wine or a beer to help you fall asleep, you aren’t actually getting real rest. Dr. Huberman highlighted that when alcohol is present in your brain and bloodstream, the architecture of your sleep is entirely disrupted.
Alcohol blocks slow-wave deep sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep—the two phases critical for mental and physical recovery. Instead of genuine, restorative sleep, alcohol induces what sleep scientists call “pseudosleep.” You are essentially putting yourself into a low-level hypnotic trance where you micro-awaken multiple times a night without even realizing it. This scientific fact perfectly explained why I used to wake up feeling completely drained, and why my mornings are now filled with endless, clear energy.
5. Wrecking Your Hormones (The Estrogen Spike)
One of the most shocking, yet least talked about, effects of alcohol is how it hijacks your hormones. Dr. Huberman explained that the toxic metabolites of alcohol actively increase an enzyme called aromatase.
Aromatase is responsible for converting testosterone into estrogen. Whether you are male or female, alcohol accelerates this conversion across multiple tissues in your body.
For men: This unnatural spike in estrogen can lead to diminished sex drive, increased body fat storage, and even the growth of breast tissue (gynecomastia).
For women: This hormonal disruption is heavily linked to a significant increase in estrogen-related cancers. In fact, Dr. Huberman noted that ingesting just 10 grams of alcohol a day (about one drink) can increase the risk of breast cancer by 4 to 13%.
6. The Tolerance Trap
Tolerance isn’t a badge of honor; it is a sign of neurological disruption. When you first start drinking, you get a quick spike in dopamine and serotonin (the feel-good chemicals), followed by a slow drop.
As you build tolerance, the “feel-good” window shrinks, while the negative, depressive effects lengthen. You end up drinking more and more just to reach a baseline of feeling “okay,” while simultaneously punishing your body with higher amounts of acetaldehyde.
The Good News: Your Body Can Heal
Listening to this podcast, my biggest realization was a deep sense of gratitude for my past self. By choosing to quit two years ago, I gave my body the time it needed to heal.
Dr. Huberman points out that after 2 to 6 months of complete abstinence, the neural circuits related to habitual behavior and impulsivity can return to normal. You can actively repair your gut microbiome by incorporating low-sugar fermented foods (like kimchi and sauerkraut) and utilizing safe, deliberate cold exposure to help spike dopamine naturally.
If you’ve been on the fence about your relationship with drinking, let the science be your sign. There is no biological benefit to alcohol, but the physical and mental rewards of leaving it behind are infinite.
If you are ready to heal your brain, reclaim your energy, and transform your life, learn more about how to quit drinking and join a community that truly supports your new lifestyle.
The post The Terrifying Truth About “Moderate” Drinking: Why Quitting Alcohol Was the Best Decision I Ever Made appeared first on Addicted 2 Success.