
As the title says, you must drink the whole time that you are thinking of your answer. Drink While You ThinkĪll you have to do is name a celebrity, but their name must begin with the first letter of the previously named celebs last name. AlcohockeyĪ similar game to beer pong, get hockey table (or make one) and cut 6 cup sized holes each end of the table, put 6 cups of drink in the spaces and play hockey! Drink each time the other player scores. Spoiler alert: it’s not.We all know that the majority of uni is spent partying so if you’re getting bored of beer pong, here’s some other drinking games that you could try that you may not have thought of. This book should be required reading for every scared person wondering, should I stop now? From hangovers, to blackouts, to the joys of new beginnings, Sarah gives vulnerable and concrete advice for anyone worried that sobriety means an end to all things fun. Drinking Games packs a punch: not the gross alcoholic kind but the kind that leaves you feeling breathless. With the warmth, wit, and wisdom of the venerable friend we all desperately wanted, Sarah draws you into how alcohol defined her relationships with body image, the wellness industry, and her family, and the clarity she gained when she found sobriety. "Sarah Levy gives sobriety a makeover in Drinking Games. Amanda Eyre Ward, New York Times bestselling author of The Jetsetters and The Sober Lush May we all find what Levy (and I) was searching for in every cocktail: ‘the deepest, purest, and most genuine belief that everything was going to be okay.’” I know that Levy’s wise and honest memoir, Drinking Games, will connect with readers who are asking themselves if their life might be a bit brighter and truer without alcohol. “Like Sarah Levy, by giving up the battle with booze, I have found a new world of self-respect and grace.
Life drinking game how to#
Cat Marnell, New York Times bestselling author of How to Murder Your Life

Drinking Games explores both the vulnerable emotional core of one woman's relationship with alcohol and how empowering it is to walk away. Christie Tate, New York Times bestselling author of Group Levy's Drinking Games is a must-read for anyone curious about the many ways in which sobriety can transform a life." For anyone who fears that sobriety equals stagnation, boredom, and a stunted life shuffling from one dank basement recovery meeting to the next, prepare to have your mind blown.

By turns hilarious and harrowing, Levy generously shows readers how she left behind a party girl lifestyle filled with hollow relationships and unfulfilling work and built a sober life filled with comfort, care, and deep, authentic attachments to herself and others. This up close look at Levy's life before, during, and after her decision to stop drinking alcohol offers readers a glimpse at all of the ways a life can transform once sobriety is in place. "Sarah Levy's Drinking Games is more than one woman's captivating story of letting go of a destructive relationship to alcohol. reads like an intimate conversation between friends." This emotional excavation will inspire anyone navigating addiction."

" Bracing and insightful.offers equal measures of introspection and hope. In this intimate and darkly funny memoir, she stumbles through her twenties, explores the impact alcohol has on relationships and identity, and shows us how life’s messiest moments can end up being the most profound. Sarah takes us by the hand through her personal journey with blackouts, dating, relationships, wellness culture, startups, social media, friendship, and self-discovery. It’s an examination of what our short-term choices about alcohol do to our long-term selves and how they challenge our ability to be vulnerable enough to discover what we really want in life.Ĭandid and dynamic, this book speaks to the all-consuming cycle of working hard, playing harder, and trying to look perfect while you’re at it. And only she could save herself.ĭrinking Games explores the role alcohol has in our formative years, and what it means to opt out of a culture completely enmeshed in drinking. But Sarah had a secret: her relationship with alcohol was becoming toxic. She was 28, living in New York City, working a great job, and socializing every weekend.

On paper, Sarah Levy’s life was on track. Part memoir and part social critique, Drinking Games is about how one woman drank and lived - and how, for her, the last drink was just the beginning.
