From my lived experience, a 48-year-old woman, who has been a personal trainer for over 25 years, who lifts heavy, coaches women through menopause, and cares deeply about strength, muscle, and long‑term health--I believe enjoying wine in moderation does not make you unhealthy, irresponsible, or bad.
I study wine. I appreciate it. I respect it. What matters is HOW you drink, not whether you drink. I teach moderation. Real moderation. The kind that applies to everything you eat and drink. Not restriction. Not fear‑based messaging. Not the internet’s obsession with extremes. For this conversation, I am using wine as the example because it is what I am known for. It is what I study. It is what I love. But the principles apply to any alcohol. The drink is not the point. The behaviour is.
Disclaimer
This message is not intended for anyone dealing with alcohol or substance use issues. If you struggle with control, dependency, or negative consequences from drinking, this framework is not for you. Seek professional support that aligns with your needs.
Moderation is built on one idea: you can enjoy all foods and drinks without swinging into excess or restriction. You do not need to eliminate carbs, sugar, wine, or restaurant meals. You need predictable patterns that keep you steady.
Most women do not struggle because they do not know what is healthy. They struggle because they bounce between extremes. Clean eating followed by overeating. Sober months followed by chaotic weekends. Moderation removes the pendulum swing. Wine fits into this exactly the same way food does.
What Healthy Wine Intake Looks Like
Moderation is not vague. It is structured and intentional.
MY realistic pattern: * this works for ME!
Four alcohol‑free days per week
One to two glasses on the days I choose
Approximately five 5‑oz pours per week * sometimes it’s 2-4, sometimes it’s 1.
Dry, lower‑alcohol / sugar wines
Not drinking to get drunk
No escalation over time
No late‑night overeating triggered by alcohol
No next‑day regret or performance drop
This mirrors the same principles you use with food: predictable intake, mindful choices, and no moralizing.
Wine as a Ritual and a Study
I believe in approaching wine with curiosity and respect. I am a student of wine. I love the history, the culture, the geography, the process. I have been to France twice, I am already planning my third trip, and I frequent the Okanagan because I genuinely enjoy learning about wine, not just drinking it.
When I study something, I do not abuse it. I appreciate it. I savour it. I slow down. I treat it with intention. That is why wine fits so naturally into my Moderation framework. It is mindful. It is deliberate. It is grounded in curiosity, not escapism.
For me, wine can mark the end of a meal. It can slow down the pace of my evening. It is something I enjoy and respect, not something I use to disconnect. When I approach wine as both a ritual and a subject of study, moderation becomes automatic.
My Personal History With Alcohol
I also think it is important to share my personal history with alcohol so women understand the context I am speaking from. I come from a family that did not drink much. My father was able to have a single beer some nights after work. I have never seen him drunk. My mother rarely drinks, and when she does it is one or two, and I have never seen her drink to get drunk. Both of my siblings do not drink aside from at Christmas or a Family gathering most times, they turn it down.
So my personal experience with alcohol is a very healthy one. I did not grow up around abuse, chaos, or dependency. I understand that someone who came from a family of alcoholics may feel angry or misunderstood when I talk about moderation. I am not dismissing their experience. I am speaking from mine.
Why Wine Works for Me
Not because I think everyone should drink wine, but because it is simply an example, for me, of a mindful treat that helps me maintain my weight with little effort. Not because it helps me lose weight, but because it takes the edge off my cravings so I do not have to rely exclusively on willpower to avoid eating more and worse crap later.
Wine is not a weight loss tool and I would never advocate someone begin drinking it if they do not already. That is silly. The science on alcohol is murky, but it’s clear that limiting intake is important for overall health. This doesn’t mean zero alcohol for otherwise healthy people who want to live their best life fyi.
Permission Over Restriction
Cultures with the lowest rates of binge drinking do not moralize alcohol. They normalize moderate enjoyment. Wine is part of the meal, not a tool for escape. It is sipped, not slammed. It is appreciated, not abused.
This is the same pattern you see with food in those cultures. Permission reduces excess. When nothing is off‑limits, you do not binge. You do not hide it. You do not turn it into a reward or a rebellion. Moderation is built on this principle.
The Online Extremes Do Not Apply
There is a loud corner of the internet that insists alcohol is poison or that any drinking means you are out of control. I get that. I hear them. And for many people, that is true.
But it is also true that those extreme messaging tactics are designed for people who struggle with alcohol, not for the large percentage of the population who quietly drink mindfully, moderately, and without negative consequences.
The same goes for food. The sugar‑is‑toxic crowd and the carbs‑make‑you‑fat crowd are not talking to women who eat consistently and intentionally. They are talking to people stuck in extremes.
If you are not chasing intoxication, not escalating your intake, not using alcohol to cope, and not experiencing harm, you are drinking responsibly.
Wine and Women’s Health
Women deserve honest, balanced information, not fear tactics.
Here is what matters:
Wine affects sleep, recovery, and appetite in some women. Know your personal response.
Dry wines have lower residual sugar and fewer calories than sweet wines.
Moderate wine intake does not automatically sabotage fat loss or strength goals.
Consistency matters more than perfection.
Your relationship with wine is defined by behavior, not by internet narratives.
Wine is not a health food. No one is saying that. Understand the difference.
You need to be honest about your serving size. A five ounce pour is very different from a restaurant pour or a heavy home pour. Accuracy matters.
This is the same conversation you have about food. Know your body, stay consistent, and avoid extremes.
Resources:
If you want to learn more about moderate drinking and evidence‑based alcohol guidance, here are two resources I trust. They do not sugarcoat it. It is a drug and it is not healthy if you abuse it.
Final Thought
Promising yourself that you will give up alcohol entirely or limit yourself to one drink twice a week is all well and good, until you break that promise again and again. The guilt that follows, and the stories you tell yourself about failing, erodes self‑esteem and leads to more behaviours that do not align with your goals.Instead, be realistic.
Can you halve your alcohol consumption?
Can you reduce it by two thirds?
Can you choose to be the sober driver when you go out with friends?
What are practical ways to drink less while still feeling good and honouring your goal of drinking less?
Set a standard that is realistic and stick to that. Stop choosing what looks “better” on paper but gets tossed the moment real life happens.
The Bottom Line
If you do not have an issue with substances or dependency, you can enjoy wine and still hit your goals. You can enjoy all foods without swinging into restriction or overeating. You can build a healthy relationship with alcohol and food that supports your life instead of complicating it.
Moderation is a skill. It is not perfection. It is not abstinence. It is not fear‑based messaging. It is predictable patterns, mindful choices, and self‑trust.
This is what Moderation looks like in real time: permission, structure, and self‑trust.
If you are someone who enjoys wine and lives a moderation lifestyle, or you want to move away from all‑or‑nothing thinking, I would love to hear from you.
Greetings from Comox Valley! We went for a hike and later enjoyed some drinks at a local pub. It was a great day filled with wonderful memories. Here’s what I wrote about the Torresella Extra Dry Prosecco I enjoyed: “TASTING NOTES: Fresh and balanced, straw-yellow in color, it has a delicate aroma of green apples and white flowers. The flavour is subtle- very fresh, with notes of pears, apples, and citrus.” *told you I am a student of wine x
