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Going Cold Turkey From Everything

The way to quit carbs, booze, coffee and more when you’re in a hurry

Cold turkey — the classic, all-in method of quitting something suddenly and totally — is a term supposedly coined by heroin addicts. It takes its name from the combination of goosebumps and “cold, clammy skin” during withdrawal that makes people feel like a slab of turkey straight from the fridge.

While you hopefully won’t experience anything quite that drastic this Thanksgiving, the holiday does often require us to suddenly — if briefly — give things up when we stay with family. Maybe you’re a gym rat who’s spending seven days far from the nearest workout spot; maybe you’re a habitual pot-smoker who’s going to have to go without while staying at your puritanical in-laws’ house; maybe you’re just suddenly on a health kick after seeing how ripped your cousin is, and trying to give up fat.

Whatever the case, we asked addiction therapist Matthew Bruhin, CEO of Apex Recovery, for the best ways to do so cold turkey.

Carbs

Going cold turkey from carbs can be rough, according to Bruhin. “You’ll absolutely go through a period where you’re not feeling too good,” he says. That includes headaches, feeling listless and even peeing more as your body gets rid of the excess glucose and sodium it’s been storing. One way to combat this is to start exercising — the more you exercise, the less you’ll crave carbs, he says. This is because carbs and exercise can both elevate your levels of serotonin and endorphins (your body’s natural antidepressants). So if you’re getting them from exercise, you’re less likely to go searching for them in a bag of chips or candy.

If you’re only cutting out sugar or sweets, going cold turkey is no problem, but if you’re totally going off carbs— no mashed potatoes, no corn bread, no joy in general — Bruhin recommends only doing so with the help of your doctor or a nutritionist.

Fat

Giving up burritos or cheeseburgers is one thing, but cutting out all fats from your diet is generally a bad idea. It’s obsolete science, in fact: The anti-fat crusade of the 1980s and 1990s, in which people subsequently binged on carbs, was a catastrophic milestone in the nation’s obesity epidemic. Nowadays, most research attests to the crucial nature of healthy fats — nuts, fish, avocados, olive oil, etc. “Fats are extremely important for brain function and brain health,” Bruin says. “Also, hormones basically live off fat. I usually encourage people to never go off of all fats.”

If you’re mainly interested in cutting out the unhealthy fats — red meats, dairy, lard, tropical oils, fast food — the best method is the same as for carbs: Start exercising. The more you exercise, the more you aim for personal improvement in other areas of your life. Eating unhealthy fats sabotages your hard work and defeats the purpose of exercising, so cutting them out is an important part of developing a new lifestyle and set of habits.

Caffeine

Caffeine is “extremely addictive,” Bruhin explains. “In its purest form, it’s more stimulating than cocaine.” With that in mind, he recommends taking three to seven days to detox yourself: Cut back to only one coffee a day, and swap it out for some green tea on all your other regular coffee breaks — it has less caffeine, but has plenty of other benefits (antioxidants and other nutrients), minus the anxiety that caffeine can bring on. Just be ready to deal with headaches and agitation for a few days.

Nicotine

Just set a date and do it. Bruhin says you could use medications — e.g., gums or patches — to come off of smokes, or you could draw down your daily number of cigarettes slowly. But in his experience, cold turkey seems to work best. “Withdrawals from nicotine aren’t so bad; they seem to deal more with just irritability than the physiological symptoms of withdrawal from caffeine,” he says. In other words, if you’re planning on quitting cigarettes and coffee, maybe do one at a time.

Booze

Are you spending time at a teetotaler’s house this Thanksgiving? Good luck with that. Alcohol is a very difficult substance to quit, and if your tolerance or addiction to it is strong, Bruhin doesn’t recommend going cold turkey at all. “Alcohol is a lot different than other substances — you gain a physiological tolerance such that, if you go cold turkey from alcohol and you’ve been drinking long enough and in a great enough volume, you’ll go through an alcohol-induced seizure and you could die,” he says. “That happens relatively frequently.”

Of course, not everyone has an actual addiction, but if your body’s literally telling you that you need a drink — as in, you experience shakes or tremors — Bruhin says it’s all right to have one. He explains that he’s told people to bring an airplane-size bottle of liquor for these situations, or to have a beer in the morning if you must. Detoxing from alcohol is an extremely serious business and is best done with the help of professionals. “If you start to experience shakes or tremors, that’s an indication that you’re physiologically dependent; do not stop drinking. You’ve got to have medical supervision in order to do that,” he says.

Exercise

Bruhin — along with plenty of other experts— recommends time away from exercise every once in a while to let your body rest and recover, and prevent you from burning out on working out. If you must, though, you can do other things to either get your blood pumping, or just give you some headspace: Going on walks, doing yoga and meditating are all decent substitutes when working out isn’t an option. You might even be less stressed, knowing you don’t have to get your workout in. “Let your body rest, and you’ll probably gain more from your exercise afterward,” Bruhin says.

Weed

According to Bruhin, marijuana is one of the most difficult drugs to detox from. This is because it remains active in your body far longer than almost anything else: It stores in your fat tissue, so you get a slow release of it over several weeks (which is also why you need to quit, as we all know, for 30 days or so when you’re facing a drug test). With this in mind, you might experience withdrawal symptoms like irritability or sleep disturbance. If you’re an occasional smoker, cold turkey is fine, but if you’re the type to wake and bake or smoke throughout the day, try dialing down your dosage steadily over the course of the preceding week. You’ll still be cranky and may have trouble sleeping, but at least it’ll only be temporary.

Turkey

If you want to get rid of your actual cold turkey, take this advice on Thanksgiving dinner sandwich-creation from Chicago chef Ashlee Aubin, a six-time Michelin Bib Gourmand winner:

“Thanksgiving leftovers actually make the best grilled cheese sandwich,” he says. “Layer Swiss cheese, pulled turkey meat, stuffing and cranberry sauce between buttered white bread. Grill until the cheese is gooey. Then dunk the sandwich in hot gravy.”

Good luck trying to go cold turkey from that.