[Guest blog by SMART Facilitator Kelly Scullin, CPCC, SHRM-SCP]
Dry January is a popular challenge where participants abstain from alcohol throughout January to reset habits and improve health. That’s true—but also incomplete. What many people discover, sometimes to their surprise, is that the real gains of Dry January have very little to do with alcohol itself. Instead, they notice that interrupting a habit long enough to see what’s underneath it builds skills that support longer-term learning. In other words, if January were a gym, these would be the muscles you accidentally built—whether you meant to or not.
And you’re not alone in being curious about what you might learn. Alcohol consumption in the U.S. has been steadily declining for years, with participation in alcohol-free challenges like Dry January continuing to grow. Across age groups, more people are experimenting—not because they’ve hit a breaking point, but because they’re interested in how small changes affect their sleep, mood, energy, and focus.
Curiosity, not crisis, is doing a lot of the work here.
1. Emotional regulation
Alcohol is a fast-acting emotional modifier. Take it away, and emotions tend to arrive… unfiltered. Dry January often brings clearer access to stress, boredom, irritation, loneliness, or even joy. That’s not a failure of coping—it’s an opportunity to practice staying present without immediately fixing or numbing what shows up. Each time you feel something and don’t automatically react, you’re strengthening emotional regulation: the ability to notice emotions without being run by them. That skill is useful everywhere—work, relationships, parenting, leadership—not just around drinking.
2. Discomfort tolerance
This is the big one. Dry January quietly trains your capacity to sit with urges—to notice the internal “want” without immediately acting on it, and to let discomfort rise and fall on its own. Discomfort (or frustration) tolerance is what clinical psychologist Dr. Becky Kennedy calls “the Learning Space”—the space between not knowing and knowing, the space where growth and resilience are built. Research on behavior change consistently shows that learning to ride out urges rather than eliminate them—increasingly stretching that space between stimulus and response—is one of the most durable skills people can develop. The urge passes. You remain. Tolerance, not willpower. Once you’ve experienced that a few times, it’s hard to unknow.
3. Planning ahead
Outside of planning for alcohol itself, drinking often removes—or numbs—our desire to plan ahead. Dry January brings that capacity back online. You start thinking ahead about social events. About what you’ll drink instead. About how you’ll respond to questions like, “Can I get you a drink?” When you notice the learned reflex to reach for a drink after a long day, you begin to think differently about how you’ll wind down or reward yourself.That’s foresight.
You’re strengthening the ability to anticipate challenges and develop a personal playbook for navigating them more skillfully, rather than relying on last-minute decisions or using alcohol to sidestep challenges (which, alcohol or no, tend to stick around). Over time, this kind of planning shows up as better boundaries, fewer reactive choices, and more follow-through in other areas of life. Ultimately, it supports SMART’s fourth point: living a balanced life.
4. Values-based decision-making
One of the quieter shifts many people notice during Dry January is this: decisions start to feel more intentional. Without alcohol in the mix, choices get evaluated against values instead of momentum. Sleep matters. Health matters. Presence matters. So does connection. Dry January doesn’t tell you what your values are—but it creates enough space for them to speak up. That’s a skill worth keeping.
5. Self-trust
This might be the most lasting gain of all. Each time you offer yourself compassion and make a decision aligned with your intention—especially when it’s inconvenient—you build trust with yourself. You cast a vote for the You you are becoming. Not the brittle kind of trust that depends on perfection or external validation, but the resilient kind that says: I can pause. I can choose. I can adjust. I can trust myself. That trust doesn’t disappear when January ends.
You don’t have to keep going—but you might want to
Here’s the part that often surprises people: once these skills are palpable, many decide they’re worth keeping around. Not because anyone told them they should. Not because abstinence suddenly became an identity. But because life feels more manageable when emotional regulation is stronger, discomfort is survivable, planning is easier, values are clearer, and self-trust is intact. Dry January doesn’t demand permanence; it offers practice. You don’t have to keep going—but you might want to, because these skills don’t belong to January. They belong to you. They’re useful long after the month ends.
And, I dare say—they look good on ya.
To find an in-peron or online SMART meeting, visit our SMARTfinder HERE
