parties and drinking

Nov 16, 2009 20:52

Well it is that time of year folks. The time where there are lots of family gatherings for Thanksgiving, Christmas, and lets not forget New Years. Now with that in mind I am sure there will be alcohol at some of the gatherings especially at the New Years Eve parties though I am sure there are some out there that do parties without the alcohol. ( Read more... )

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Comments 5

x_mog November 17 2009, 11:38:05 UTC
Eh... Well, we usualy have beer at all the get-togethers, party or not. ^.~ Personaly I don't care so long as I don't have to drink it. Nobody who drinks in our family gets too crazy or mean. (Their all goofball drinkers.) So it's not a problem.

Around here it isn't what makes the party, but rather just something that often comes with it. lol

My family really doesn't need alcohol to be loopy anyway. ^.~;

I say so long as no one gets hurt and everyone paces themselves it's not a problem. To each their own.

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smithsassistant November 17 2009, 15:35:27 UTC
I agree and your family has the right idea. Alcohol will always be around I just do not think people should use it as the only means to have fun at parties or any other time.

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purpion November 18 2009, 14:10:41 UTC
It's not just in America or in American culture that uses alcohol for social gatherings. For millennia it has been used to "break the ice" so to speak for many cultures during trade agreements and for political discussions to help relax the parties involved. Mead was used often in European cultures before the use of barley and hops were ever thought of being brewed.

The Egyptians had a type of beer that was given to the pharaohs and their courts to often ease stress as well as being made for the builders of the pyramids. The history of alcohol consumption spans ages. How it is used is up to the individual.

To answer your question, "Do any of you feel that our culture believes alcohol is what makes the party?" I firmly believe that the answer lies in how the individual views the social setting. Do they view parties as a means to social drink or do they view a part as means to unwind from a terrible year? I think there should be a little more expansion to this idea before I can continue. Otherwise, I'll just keep on rambling about ( ... )

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smithsassistant November 18 2009, 15:36:45 UTC
Very good points and they are certainly good questions to ask. My mom did not drink a lot and she of course let me have a sip or a small glass when we had dinner with wine. A family friend would let me have some of her beer too. They did this to teach me how to drink appropriately and how not to overdo it. I think upbringing certainly determines it somehow as well as the company one keeps. I am not sure about other cultures see drinking. I can only go on what I see here in America.

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purpion November 18 2009, 15:52:24 UTC
There is such a thing as familial culture which is why when we go to certain homes they have certain rules. It's this aspect of social behavior that also plays on how things are dealt with outside the familial cultural setting.

It's through this reasoning that we understand and adapt to settings in accordance to how we perceive how social setting should be through our familial culture.

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