Jump to content

Drink Yourself Healthy - The dipsomaniac?s guide to everlasting life.


Recommended Posts

Our conversation on another thread about gout got me thinking about the positive health effects of alcohol. Who wants to focus on the bad all the time? We have all heard about a glass of wine or a pint of the black stuff being good for you.


So I?ve been on the internet and found some highly scientific stuff about what drinks are good for you.


In order to get the full benefit of the products available in your local wine shop it will take some dedication but here is the list of what you will need to drink every day:



1 pint of Guinness ? It has antioxidants which reduce heart clots and heart attacks. Although the thing everyone believes about it containing loads of iron is bollocks.


1 pint of beer ? It contains mineral silicon for your bones.


1 glass of white wine ? Antioxidants again but these ones are good for your lungs.


1 glass of port ? It doesn?t have any major health benefits but it does contain antioxidants and you can?t get too many of those.


2 glasses of red wine ? This stuff is the tits when it comes to beneficial booze. That?s why you should have 2 glasses just for good measure. It contains B vitamins, potassium, iron and antioxidants of all the colours of the rainbow. It protects you against heart disease, Alzheimer's, diabetes, strokes and it helps you sleep.


1 glass of sherry ? It helps produce good cholesterol which is good because it does for the bad cholesterol.


1 glass of whisky ? To prevent stokes and cataracts and supports the Scottish economy which will in turn stop the Scots from invading England, marching on London, coming ?round yours and being very bad for your health indeed.


1 glass of brandy ? More antioxidants. In fact good quality brandy is apparently about as good for you as taking a vitamin supplement.


Finally 1 glass of Baileys ? It isn?t really good for you but the cream and sugar help slow down alcohol intake and after 9 other drinks that will probably be handy.






Disclaimer: If you are reading this and you think that it is actually sound medical advice and not the just the booze deprived ravings of a demented office worker, or in anyway properly researched, you are probably drunk and should go for a lie down.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Just astonishing - how do they do it? Well done for being so on the ball. 
    • Shocking - so fast. Machines can have a false device for inserting your card into and then they retain it. Your bank should return your money 
    • FYI East Dulwich neighbours: I was in the middle of a cash withdrawl at the cashpoint at the Tesco Express on ED road (the one next to the Esso petrol station) when a man appeared beside me waving his hands over the screen and saying not to use it because it had just taken his card. He then dissapeared and I cancelled the withdrawl. No card was returned. It took me literally 30 seconds (max) to realise something wasn't right and 'freeze' the card on my mobile/banking app. I immediately got a txt message from my bank saying a transaction had just been declined, and then another. I logged in to app and £251 had already been taken. This all happened increadibly quickly - the whole incident from first encounter to money being taken and me freezing card was probably around 3 minutes. The guy must have somehow seen me put my PIN number in. It's possible there was some kind of card skmming involved, but I don't know for sure. The man was around 5ft 6/7, black and wearing a covid-type face mask. I don't remember what clothes he was wearing. I got the feeling (mainly from his voice and eyes) that he wasn't young - maybe mid-30s to mid-40s (but I can't be sure). Obviously I repoted to police. 
    • It would be incredible if the community supported small businesses rather than a chain (Gail's being a very large chain).   Sadly, consumers don't realise their power - as you can see also by the number of coffee cups etc that are still being bought and contribute to landfill - it' not hard to be responsible, just inconvenient.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...