Is humid January a healthy alternative to dry January?

We’re already over a week into January, and if you’re trying not to drink alcohol this month (a trend known as ‘Dry January’), it may seem like February can’t come soon enough. But some sober-curious influencers and health professionals say there’s another way: “Damp January,” which means cutting back on booze without eliminating it completely.

The term, which is trending on TikTok, is open to interpretation. For Shelly Rose, whose post on the subject has been viewed more than 450,000 times, this means “not dry, just not as wet as usual.” For Lauren Wilensky, who originally planned to do sober January, this means drinking only on the weekends, or maybe occasionally over dinner. Her video has 31,000 views and 2,286 likes.

“There has been a trend for years to reduce alcohol consumption after the holidays and at the start of the new year,” says Aimee Chiligiris, PsyD, a clinical psychologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City. That’s a good thing, she adds, because “it emphasizes wellness and provides an opportunity to improve health.”

What is Humid January?

The term Damp January, or sometimes dry January or semi-dry January, started making the rounds on social media towards the end of the pandemic. Before 2020, alcohol consumption was declining, especially among Gen Z consumers, industry research shows, but it shot up again by 54 percent during the pandemic, according to Nielsen data. Twenty months later, more than a third of consumers surveyed reported that they were still drinking more than before the emergence of COVID-19.

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