MENTAL HEALTH

When Use Becomes a Coping Tool

Davin Reed
Rhonda Howard
Lydia Armstrong

Author: Lydia Armstrong, PMHNP

Co-Author: Rhonda Howard, Ph.D.

Editor: Davin Reed

What It Means When Alcohol Is a Coping Tool

Using alcohol to cope doesn’t automatically mean you have an addiction. But it does mean alcohol has become your go-to strategy for managing difficult emotions, stress, or situations.

Instead of processing emotions, you numb them. Instead of addressing problems, you escape them. Instead of developing healthy coping skills, you rely on a substance.

This isn’t a moral failing. It’s a pattern. And patterns can be changed.

How It Starts

Most people don’t set out to use alcohol as a coping tool. It happens gradually:

  1. You have a stressful day. You pour a drink to “unwind.”
  2. It works. You feel calmer, less anxious. The stress fades.
  3. Your brain makes a connection: Stress → Alcohol → Relief
  4. The pattern repeats. Bad day? Drink. Anxiety? Drink. Can’t sleep? Drink.
  5. It becomes automatic. You don’t consciously decide to drink to cope—it just becomes what you do.

At first, it feels harmless. One drink after work. A glass of wine to relax. A few beers to take the edge off.

But over time, the reliance grows. And what started as occasional relief becomes a pattern you can’t easily break.

Signs You’re Using Alcohol to Cope

You might be using alcohol as a coping tool if:

  • You drink when you’re stressed, anxious, sad, or angry
  • You drink alone or in private to manage emotions
  • You drink more on hard days than good days
  • You feel like you “need” a drink after certain situations (work, arguments, social events)
  • You use alcohol to fall asleep
  • You drink to avoid thinking about problems
  • You feel uncomfortable with emotions unless you’ve had a drink
  • You tell yourself “I deserve this” as justification for drinking
  • You get irritable or anxious when you can’t drink
  • Other people have expressed concern about your drinking

If several of these resonate, alcohol has likely shifted from recreational use to emotional crutch.

What Alcohol Is Replacing

When alcohol becomes a coping tool, it’s filling a gap. It’s doing something your brain needs—but in an unsustainable way.

Ask yourself: What is alcohol giving me?

Stress Relief

If you drink to “decompress,” alcohol is replacing healthy stress outlets like exercise, breathwork, rest, or talking to someone.

Emotional Numbing

If you drink to stop feeling, alcohol is replacing emotional processing. You’re avoiding pain, grief, anger, or sadness—emotions that need to be felt, not buried.

Social Ease

If you drink to feel comfortable in social situations, alcohol is replacing confidence and social skills. You’ve learned to rely on it instead of building genuine comfort.

Sleep Aid

If you drink to fall asleep, alcohol is replacing sleep hygiene, relaxation techniques, or addressing underlying sleep disorders.

Escape

If you drink to forget your problems, alcohol is replacing problem-solving, therapy, or life changes you need to make.

Reward System

If you drink because “you’ve earned it,” alcohol is replacing healthier ways of celebrating or treating yourself.

Once you identify what alcohol is replacing, you can start building real tools to meet those needs.

Why It’s Not Sustainable

Using alcohol to cope might work in the short term, but it breaks down over time:

Tolerance Builds

Your brain adapts. What used to take one drink now takes two, then three. You need more to get the same effect.

Rebound Effects

Alcohol suppresses emotions temporarily, but they come back stronger. You drink to reduce anxiety, but you wake up more anxious. You drink to feel less sad, but the next day, the sadness is heavier.

You Stop Developing Real Skills

Every time you drink instead of coping in a healthy way, you reinforce the pattern. You don’t learn how to manage stress, regulate emotions, or solve problems sober.

Physical and Mental Health Deteriorates

Over time, alcohol use impacts your liver, brain, sleep, mood, and overall health. The thing you’re using to cope ends up creating more problems.

Dependency Risk

The more you rely on alcohol to cope, the higher your risk of developing alcohol dependence or addiction.

Building New Coping Tools

Replacing alcohol with healthier coping tools doesn’t happen overnight. But it’s possible.

For Stress Relief:

  • Deep breathing or box breathing (4-4-4-4)
  • Progressive muscle relaxation
  • Walk outside for 10-15 minutes
  • Journal about what’s stressing you
  • Call a friend or vent to someone safe

For Emotional Numbing:

  • Sit with the emotion for 5 minutes without trying to fix it
  • Name the emotion out loud: “I feel sad. I feel angry.”
  • Cry if you need to—let it out
  • Write about what you’re feeling
  • Talk to a therapist about processing emotions

For Social Ease:

  • Practice going to social events sober (start small)
  • Bring a non-alcoholic drink to hold
  • Have an exit plan if you feel uncomfortable
  • Focus on one-on-one conversations instead of large groups
  • Work with a therapist on social anxiety

For Sleep:

  • Develop a bedtime routine (same time every night)
  • Avoid screens 30 minutes before bed
  • Try magnesium, melatonin, or herbal tea (check with a doctor)
  • Use a white noise machine or meditation app
  • Address underlying sleep disorders (insomnia, sleep apnea)

For Escape:

  • Engage in a hobby that absorbs your attention
  • Watch a movie or read a book
  • Exercise (even a 10-minute walk helps)
  • Call a friend or support person
  • Work with a therapist to address the problems you’re escaping

For Reward:

  • Treat yourself to something non-alcoholic (dessert, a bath, a new book)
  • Celebrate accomplishments with experiences, not substances
  • Build a list of “reward” activities you can turn to

The key is to practice these tools before you’re in crisis. Build them into your routine so they become automatic—just like drinking became automatic.

When to Get Help

If alcohol has become your primary coping tool, professional support can make a huge difference.

Consider reaching out if:

  • You’ve tried to cut back but can’t
  • You feel dependent on alcohol to function
  • Your drinking is affecting your relationships, work, or health
  • You’re drinking more than you intend to
  • You experience withdrawal symptoms when you don’t drink (shaking, sweating, anxiety)
  • You’re using alcohol to cope with trauma, depression, or severe anxiety

Support options include:

  • Therapist: Specializing in substance use or co-occurring mental health disorders
  • Addiction counselor or treatment program: Outpatient or inpatient
  • Support groups: AA, SMART Recovery, Refuge Recovery, Tempest
  • Doctor: For medical supervision, especially if you’re physically dependent

You don’t have to hit “rock bottom” to deserve help. If alcohol is interfering with your life or mental health, that’s enough.

You deserve coping tools that actually work—tools that don’t create new problems while solving old ones.

Last Reviewed:
Oct 25th 2025

Rhonda Howard, Ph.D.