Allen Carr's Easyway To Control - Alcohol

The book walked him through the analogy. He saw himself as a fly, lured by the sweet nectar of the plant, sliding further down the wax-coated walls. The fly thinks it's enjoying a meal, but the plant is the one eating. James realized he wasn't "giving up" a precious crutch; he was stepping out of a trap.

He had tried "willpower" before. He’d done Dry January, white-knuckling his way through thirty-one days of deprivation, feeling like a martyr at every dinner party. By February 1st, he’d "reward" himself with a bottle of wine, and within a week, he was back at the bottom of the glass. Allen Carr's Easyway to Control Alcohol

As James read, the "Big Monster"—the physical withdrawal—was revealed to be nothing more than a slight, empty feeling, like being hungry for a meal you don’t actually want. The real enemy was the "Little Monster": the lifelong brainwashing that told him alcohol was a social lubricant, a stress reliever, and a sophisticated companion. The book walked him through the analogy