Essay On Drinking Age

Words: 1442
Pages: 6

I’m now 25 and almost 5 years sober. But that morning in 2010, I was a college freshman with a serious drinking problem. In my teens, I followed my older brother into our parents’ liquor cabinet and discovered how unafraid and sociable I could be with a little alcohol. Before I even had a driver’s license I was blacking out nearly every time I drank. My parents were my biggest fear, so I would drink whenever and however much I could. Alcohol made me feel alive, I was terrified of who I would be without it. First year of college, I would drink faster and faster, trying to outdo the last time. I would wake up to the harsh morning light with a night of removed memory. It felt as if someone else had been in possession of my mind and body; he had taken over. I often gauged the drunkenness on if could walk straight line or make it upstairs. If my wallet, keys and cellphone remained in the pockets of my pants, the night was not lit enough. A black eye …show more content…
Drunk driving was linked to young drinkers behind the wheel acting as a way for those who supported the increased drinking age main argument. Since the changes have been in place others have reasoned against the hypotheses for many years. Jennifer Warner claims states with strict drinking laws have a decreased number of drunk driving fatalities. She argues tough laws against fake ids and enforced minimum drinking age has curbed the number of drinking related accidents. On the other side, Gabrielle Glaser argues the decrease in driving incidence is in effect from new seat belt regulations and tougher DUI laws. Glaser understands the reasoning behind the original idea of the law but defended her side with studies from around the world. She states driving accidents have decreased tremendously over the past 30 years, including Canada would has a lower drinking