On The Controversial Zach Top Quotes on Sobriety

If this is the worst “controversy” Zach Top has to deal with in his career, he will be sitting pretty. And that comes with the caveat if it should even be considered a controversy at all.
That’s not to let Zach Top off the hook, though. What he said was certainly inconsiderate, and an ill-advised opinion that comes from a rather uninformed perspective. But you can definitely run the risk of making too much of something said in passing on a comedian’s podcast, especially when it’s taken out-of-context and meme-ified to create shock value, as it was in this instance.
For those that might not be aware, Zach Top was trending on Wednesday (5-13) after appearing on comedian Bert Kreisher’s “Bertcast” podcast on May 12th. Just over halfway through the conversation, the topic turned to sobriety, with Zach Top saying at one point,
“Keep yourself healthy enough that you can drink all your life. I don’t want to be… sobriety is such a fad, trendy thing right now. The next person I hear say they got sober, I want to hit them in the head. We don’t need that. Just be a normal guy and drink a normal amount. You can do it your whole life. You’re fine.”
For many people, Zach Top is right. If you maintain a healthy balance with alcohol in your life, it is harmless, if not beneficial, helping to bring out the joy in life. But obviously, that’s not everybody. Many people can’t achieve that balance, and the only way to keep a healthy equilibrium with alcohol is to abstain completely.
Zach Top goes on to say about sobriety,
“There’s a little bit of attention seeking in it, a lot of times… just do it. If you actually feel that way, it’s a bit of a disease. People do stuff just to be recognized for it versus (doing it for themselves). There’s a difference between doing something just for the love of doing it, and then doing it so that you can post a video and get a bunch of affirmation and a bunch of likes. If you are doing it just for the love of doing it, you don’t have to talk about it as much.”
Zach Top is not wrong to say that sobriety is currently a trendy thing. You can find dozens of news articles and studies that confirm this. And he’s probably not entirely incorrect when he says that some people are performative about their sobriety to garner attention for themselves. People are constantly pandering for attention on social media over a host of things, including touting their sobriety.
But there’s also people who publicly broadcast their sobriety and/or their milestones on their sobriety journey to inspire others who might be struggling with alcohol or substance abuse to find a better balance in their lives. Also, sobriety is a decision one makes that often affects social interactions and friend/family circles. Publicly broadcasting this information is a way for sober people to stay committed to themselves, and let people close to them know this is a decision they’ve made, and to respect it.
Zach Top shouldn’t have said what he said. He was jawing off with Bert Kreisher who’s known for being a drunk and shirtless yahoo, and said something that doesn’t take into account the serious, sometimes catastrophic, and sometimes outright deadly battles certain people wage with alcohol. I’m sure at some point someone who knows about these things that Zach respects will reach out to him, and give him some counsel about it. Zach doesn’t deserve to be canceled. He deserves to be informed.
It’s also fair to point out that what really drove the conversation was a meme from Country Chord, which kid of presented Zach’s words as if he was making a standalone proclamation for a podium as opposed to a conversational moment with a comedian.

As the top comment beneath the meme on X said, “Zach Top was not referring to alcoholics in his statement. He was referring to folks who choose to ‘go sober’ just because it’s trendy or healthy. He’s saying that if you have the privilege of being able to drink without it becoming an addiction, then do it. It’s a sentiment I share, but I agree it was a boneheaded way to say it.”
Can we all just be honest and say that Zach Top has never come across as an especially deep guy? That’s why his songs often don’t come with the gravity some desire from him. Unlike other songwriters, Zach doesn’t seem to have to wrestle with demons, including alcohol. And good for him. He’s a super talented musician, and thankfully doesn’t have to deal with the challenges many of this contemporaries, predecessors, and heroes had to.
But just because you don’t have to wage a battle with alcohol on a daily basis doesn’t mean others enjoy that same outcome. It’s a good thing that society is opening up to people finding sobriety, and celebrating it when it results in positive outcomes for individuals. Sure, some make a big, performative deal about sobriety, including many of your favorite musicians. But if that’s what helps keep them on the straight and narrow, so be it.
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May 14, 2026 @ 6:50 am
He’s right.
May 14, 2026 @ 6:51 am
As one who has watched persons I love, including a son and a brother, struggle with alcoholism, I can state with confidence that Zach Top is either a clown or an idiot, maybe both. Which would explain, I guess, why his most profound songs are about half an inch deep on their best days.
May 14, 2026 @ 8:53 am
Well said
May 14, 2026 @ 6:16 pm
Edgy
May 15, 2026 @ 7:26 am
edgy
May 15, 2026 @ 9:08 pm
“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.”
May 18, 2026 @ 7:41 am
He will walk it back one day when he has to go to rehab
May 21, 2026 @ 2:00 pm
Or maybe he hasn’t seen what you’ve seen. Inexperience doesn’t necessarily equate to idiocy or shallowness.
May 14, 2026 @ 6:53 am
These are pretty dumb comments nonetheless Trig. My wife has been sober for 15 years now, because if a medical condition that drinking worsens so she doesnt and feels better, just because drinking is part of Zachs “normal life” doesnt mean it has to be part of others. But also, alcohol is one of two consumed products that is known to cause cancer (along with processed meats), so bashing people that are correct in saying no alcohol is healthier is quite revealing.
Of course ZT isnt going to be cancelled and you didnt really need to have this interview to know what the guy who wrote ” Cold Beer and Country music” and “aint in it for my health” thinks, but let’s not pretend any part of what he said was remotely intelligent. In the end he comes off looking like an idiot. As you alluded to, thats on brand for a lot of these guys tho anyways so i guess it doesnt matter
May 14, 2026 @ 8:43 am
The biggest health risk is talked about the least, and that’s not getting enough sleep. Seed oils are another big problem and they are in EVERYTHING. Completely agree on proccessed meats and I cut them out of my regular diet. Nearly everything in a grocery store is crap and most people are clueless of this. It takes concerted effort to switch enriched grains to Ezekiel bread or organic rice, replace sweets and junk food with fruit, and eliminate foods with seed oils. If someone’s diet habits are average – anything that tastes good is bad for you.
What makes the podcast format work is that the conversations are informal almost like they are between friends. I don’t think it’s right to take comments made on a specific podcast and then hold them up on the national stage as if he said it on a CBS morning show or whatever. I get that social media is now the main news source for people, but it gets it’s news by cherry picking content and taking it out-of-context to appease the gladitorial algorithm.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:01 am
Great point Strait. Podcasts like that have a very niche audience , often of like- minded listeners. The comments were intended for that smaller audience no doubt. Bottom line, we all say dumb things from time to time..its human and sometimes depending on the context of the conversation we use hyperbole to make points. Pretty sure this is the case here.
But, we now live in an era where social media stans, influencers and media in general, play ” gotcha games” with anyone who is famous. Its a daily pursuit for millions. Its gonna be a learning lesson for Top im sure.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:04 am
Oh wow, he has a conflicting opinion, let’s burn him at the stake.
/s
May 14, 2026 @ 7:11 am
Sorry, Woog, but I said he had expressed a stupid, not a “conflicting,” opinion. Believing that the earth is a flat is a conflicting opinion, but at least it’s a harmless one.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:10 am
No… Zach Top said this?
The ‘Beer for Breakfast’ guy?
The Banquet poster boy?
Unbelievable.
I’d argue its even more of an eye roll…now stay with me here, to be the guy that makes being an obese alcoholic your calling card. Walking on stage, taking your shirt off and slamming your drink, or sipping your Coors accepting an award. Same shit.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:11 am
::Clutches pearls::
Just FYI: I have addicts and “drinkers” in my family. I was not hot & bothered over Bert & Zack.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:17 am
Why is “drinkers” in scare quotes here?
May 14, 2026 @ 8:57 am
Why are you fighting everyone on here? Say your peace and move on. Not everyone here is fight you.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:19 am
There are kernels of truth to his statement. It’s a bit dismissive sounding even if it’s clearly not aimed at sobriety for the need of it. Example A in the last 20 years is Jason Isbell. Cody Jinks clearly needed sobriety. Ashley McBryde’s sobriety journey is very moving. Zach Top clearly wasn’t talking about people like those 3. Now, I don’t know who’s pursuing it because it’s trendy but I’m sure some do. That’s how people are.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:28 am
Is that how Zach Top maintains his portly figure?
May 14, 2026 @ 7:32 am
It’s a weird topic because not drinking alcohol is the one healthy decision people ask you to justify. You tell people you don’t drink they also why. Nobody would ask why if you said you quit smoking or quit drinking soda.
Unfortunately drinking is bad for you (to be clear I drink too) and much of our social gatherings are built around it. I think many people don’t like having to think about the thing they do that is obviously bad for them both health wise and all the other downsides that come with it.
May 14, 2026 @ 8:18 am
This is so true. What’s even harder to justify than not drinking at all is trying to justify to other people that you’re limiting yourself to one drink. Thankfully most bars have RedBull and regular sparkling water because I still need to consume something.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:33 am
My view is that the comments come from ignorance and immaturity. I also think they were defensive and wanting to justify their lifestyle. There might be a smidgen of truth in what he said, but most of the people I hear talking about sobriety truly needed it (Jinks and Felker come to mind). I also don’t think these comments should or will have any long term impact on his career.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:36 am
I do think much more offensive than this is jelly roll’s whole schtick where he talks about his sober journey as a marketing ploy while being plainly not sober and not wrestling with it either. Just straightforward not even trying to hide it lying to people.
May 14, 2026 @ 7:47 am
Apparently, impersonating a 90’s Neo-Traditional country artist is a fade, too.
In all seriousness, I admire the functioning (and not so functional) alcoholics and I admire the sober. It’s the SOB’s in the middle that annoy the hell out of me.
May 14, 2026 @ 8:01 am
It’s not a controversy in the slightest because he said that on the podcast of a famous comedian who is known for being a drunk and taking his shirt off onstage. I initially understood the context of his statement to not be about people with alcoholism or with a serious problem. People looking to get sober aren’t watching f’n Bert Kreischer’s podcast and taking him seriously.
Zach Top is wrong about alcohol but it’s in his brand and he’s allowed to be wrong. He’s also 28 and when I was 28 I was regularly having 10 drinks in a night. 28yr olds are stupid. He’s wrong because what he considers “a normal amount of drinking” is too much. I can tell that by the fact he’s overweight – he’s drinking a lot and conversely eating a lot. When I used to drink I thought the “healthy” direction to have one drink a week as absolutely insane but now that I go months inbetween a single beer…I understand it.
May 14, 2026 @ 8:38 am
Something always strikes me funny about people who make statements on large, public platforms criticizing other people for engaging in “attention seeking” behavior.
May 14, 2026 @ 8:51 am
My 28 year old self agrees with him. My 60 year old self knows better now, and I am grateful that I figured it out before literally dying from my alcohol addiction.
When I was 28 I drank like Zach does, and had a wonderful, fun time. I also thought I was invincible, and smarter than everyone else on the planet. “Those other people are drunks who can’t handle alcohol the smart way that I do.”
I was dead wrong.
May 14, 2026 @ 11:39 am
Right on Brent. And who knows, maybe Zach will eventually find out for himself why some people reach a point where they realize they need to get sober. I was one of them, too.
May 14, 2026 @ 9:03 am
He’s young!! He has a lot of learning ahead of him. I’ll take a drinking Zach Top over a sober Tucker Wetmore every single day of the week. Zach is a regular guy–people need to stop being the conversation police, FFS. This is America. If you want to eat fried chicken at 8am from the convenience store deep fryer every morning of your life, so be it. It’s your heart attack, not mine. We don’t need to shame anyone for their indulgences or opinions of such things.
May 14, 2026 @ 9:29 am
The numbers of people killed on highways by drivers drunk on fried chicken is indeed staggering. Thank you for drawing our attention to this problem.
I might add that the role of fried chicken in street violence and domestic abuse is also insufficiently appreciated. The statistics are even more alarming when it comes to alcoholics who eat chicken even as they’re imbibing liquor to excess.
May 14, 2026 @ 9:12 am
15 yrs sober because i was going to die or spend the rest of my life in jail/prison. God took that compulsion from me. That doesnt make me perfect. I thought so many things went hand & hand with drinking: music, fishing, events but thats not true. I still do all those things, i just remember them & have a few dollars in my wallet the next day. If u can drink & “dont have any problems” with it more power to ya! But i would offer that if you dont have fun doing those things without drinking…
May 14, 2026 @ 10:02 am
Why do people who drink alcohol care that other people don’t drink? It’s the only drug where you are out of place if you don’t do it. Alcohol causes so many problems, not just with health but so many others. People do the dumbest things when they are drunk. Alcohol is also a carcinogen, so there’s that. Drinking in moderation is no big deal for those who can. Some people can’t. Some people have an ‘on switch’ but no ‘off switch’. Those people probably shouldn’t drink. There are also several excellent NA beers out there now, and they taste great with zero alcohol. Athletic Brewing is my favorite.
May 14, 2026 @ 12:28 pm
I don’t feel that pressure to drink and “keep up” now but I certainly did in my 20’s and early 30’s. I drifted thru multiple groups of friends and work buddies where there was a level of competition on how much you drank. I don’t think it’s possible to tell everyone in their 20’s to never drink heavy but it’s something you have to put an expiration date on because it’s not healthy. Also people will naturally start making concessions on how “safe” they are to drive after drinking.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:18 am
Forget the beer talk, cancel him for hanging with the drooling fool Bert.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:30 am
He acted very juvenile on this one. Kind of a frat boy comment.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:32 am
People cannot say one goddam thing in this world without a bunch of people getting completely offended and hyper critical. If anybody is offended and taking seriously a 28 year old saying 28 year old shit on a party culture comedians podcast, you need to go touch grass. He’s not making a social issues statement. And yes, I’ve been touched by drunk drivers, death, people with liver failure, DV, and all the ugliness that can occur through the stuff…..I also can listen to the podcast and take it at face value and realize it wasn’t Zach Top issuing a societal indictment in his war against sobriety.
Slow news day, needed to stir up the boards.
May 14, 2026 @ 12:52 pm
^ this
Beyond the obvious “twenty something musician makes humorous banter on a comedian’s podcast” aspect, if you’re tuning into f**king Bertcast for life advice, you 100% deserve whatever outcome you end up with.
May 14, 2026 @ 3:23 pm
But he’s saying it on a platform to be heard. He wants the reaction – good and bad – to be in the news today. He knew what he was doing and we took the bait.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:42 am
that is a rough 28. he might want to tone it down a bit.
May 14, 2026 @ 10:57 am
I don’t know, kinda a shallow thing for ZT to say. He has to remember not everyone is a successful 28 year old country music singer that’s set for life. You just never know what someone else might be going through, why not give them the benefit of the doubt and let them celebrate there achievement getting sober, which for a lot is a daunting task. He put himself in a position to eat his words someday. Can you imagine if he got a drunk driving, public intoxication, made a drunken fool of himself in public or any other thing. Karma always comes around.
May 14, 2026 @ 4:40 pm
You think Top is set for life? Lol. He’s going to need a lot more hits and years of touring for that.
May 14, 2026 @ 6:08 pm
lol yes. He’s currently worth 2-3 million. Why wouldn’t he be? If he has a decent accountant and financial advisor plus he still has income from royalties and go tour as he pleases to help out…yeah he’s set up pretty well as long as he doesn’t screw it up.
May 14, 2026 @ 11:25 am
Top is right, and it’s fine that he says it. It’s called a “normal” view.
For those who have problems with the obvious, he isn’t saying everyone should:
drink like fish
drink and drive
make a billboard out of your choices
police everyone else’s speech.
I’ve seen neighbors die of cirrhosis. I drink less than I used to because my metabolism slowed down a little. I also like a good night’s sleep.
Be an adult in a free country.
May 14, 2026 @ 11:42 am
He is right…….and I don’t drink. I do respect those that are sober having been alcoholics and they should be proud. It does seem somewhat fashionable though to talk about it. Maybe understandable but so is what Zac says,
May 14, 2026 @ 11:47 am
Another day passes, and, surprise, somebody somewhere is offended. Oh, no!
You know what’s trendy? Being offended, especially on behalf of someone else. I remember a time when the world wasn’t so soft, when people weren’t weak pussies, minded their business, and let others have their opinion (even it was dumb or misinformed). Now the majority constantly look for something to cry about it. It’s all about virtue-signalling these days.
If you’re someone who has struggled with addiction and overcame it. Good for you. It takes great courage and strength. You’ve got this. Carry on. If you’ve lost family members or friends to addiction, I’m sorry. For those like Zach, who seems a little light in the brain cell department, who don’t understand the disease of addiction, educate yourself or stay ignorant.
Why people put so much stock in what musicians, singers, actors, influencers, podcasters, all talking heads, really, have to say, is baffling to me. Learn to think for yourself and stop listening to idiots.
As far as this statement:
“…it is harmless, if not beneficial, helping to bring out the joy in life.”
Ask your doctors how ‘harmless’ and ‘beneficial’ social drinking is to your health. If you need drugs and alcohol to help “bring out joy” in your life, you’re doing it wrong. Joy is something you should be able to experience sober. I”m not saying no one should. drink, but let’s be honest about the effect even a small amount has on our health.
May 14, 2026 @ 11:56 am
I think what bothers me about Zach’s comments is extrapolating his point of view onto others. If this is how you feel about alcohol in relation to yourself, great, go for it, but don’t tell people they aren’t normal if they have a different relationship/experience with alcohol. I see this as a wider problem in our culture right now as this type of thinking applies to so many other “hot button” issues. We have so much more in common than we realize.
May 14, 2026 @ 12:26 pm
giant nothing burger
May 14, 2026 @ 12:31 pm
The first quote in the article from ZT was clever and funny enough in the setting.
The second one from him was over the top and missed the mark.
May 14, 2026 @ 1:19 pm
People on here mad that the “word police” are upset about what Zach Top said, but they aren’t upset that Zach was being the “word police” when he was upset about other people saying they were sober. If the people upset about Zach’s ignorant comment should stay quiet. Zach should have also stayed quiet. Nothing but blessings to all those who found sobriety from the horrible disease of addiction of any kind.
And also, why in the hell is Bert Kreisher still going on his 5 minutes of fame!
May 14, 2026 @ 2:10 pm
As someone who has been sober for 10 years, I am not offended.
People need thicker skin.
Keep killing it, Zach!
May 14, 2026 @ 10:24 pm
We can make him an honorary brit with that attitude.
May 15, 2026 @ 12:37 am
This comments thread really shows the Puritan inheritance in American culture. It’s as if the ghosts of the morally auster Puritans and the unapologetically cadish Caviliers are talking over each others heads.
May 15, 2026 @ 5:39 am
“I feel sorry for people that don’t drink. When they wake up in the morning, that’s as good as they’re going to feel all day.” – Frank Sinatra
People have been say crazy stuff about consumption of alcohol for decades.
May 15, 2026 @ 7:13 am
There’s genuine humor in Sinatra’s observation, which all of us who drink within reason will recognize. No one with a measurable IQ will read it, however, as a defense of alcoholism, Sinatra wittily reminds us why an alternative name for liquor is “spirits.”
May 15, 2026 @ 11:16 pm
That quote was from Dean Martin, not Frank Sinatra.
May 15, 2026 @ 9:09 am
I’m more interested in this part:
“People do stuff just to be recognized for it versus (doing it for themselves). There’s a difference between doing something just for the love of doing it, and then doing it so that you can post a video and get a bunch of affirmation and a bunch of likes.”
This is 100% the truth. It is “trendy” to not drink right now. And every asshole has to put a video on social media to tell the world how sober they are. Why? To get likes. This applies to much more than just this today. Everybody has to post everything on social media. “LoOk aT mE!!” I am SO sick of social media. It is a cancer, and has ruined society.
That was the real point I took from this.
I’m not even going to talk to the alcohol part itself, because it is clear by the comments here, I’ll just leave that part alone.
And I want to make this clear…I like one song by this guy (mainly because it sounds like early 90s country before the genre took a total shit), and he talked shit about my favorite artist of all time, Kenny Rogers. So I am NOT gong to defend him. But I agree with his point about doing things for attention and likes.
May 15, 2026 @ 9:25 am
Several years ago my spouse and I made the devastating decision to go no contact with my parents. One of them is genuinely a narcissistic, controlling, psychological abuser.
Now it’s a trend to see people throw those words at anyone who disagrees with them or makes them feel uncomfy.
The resulting backlash is “anyone who goes no contact with parents is a selfish, ungodly, thin skinned little brat who is causing generational harm”.
It hurts, it obnoxious to see. Running away is one of the bravest things I ever did.
People being performative about it over dumb reasons created the backlash.
I agree with Trigger here. I have too much respect for ZT and his respect for Keith Whitley and Paul Overstreet to write him off. Did he say something dumb? Yes. But if every sobriety story was closer to Ashley McBryed or Evan Felker I don’t think this would be an issue. When your struggle becomes Instagram story content & People magazine glossy click bait then the whole world starts getting a little tired of it. Celebrities have always used rehab to rehab their image.
But again- considering his respect for Whitley, and Whitley’s well documented struggles this seems a bit tone deaf from him.
He has a major point though. Kinda lost in the more “shocking ” part of what it says.
Doesn’t matter if it’s eating gluten free, living on a farm, the person you are dating, being sober, or whatever it is. Trigger has pointed out how our attention is being farmed and how everything “authentic” (concert & album reviews, etc) are being manipulated into ads. We are all getting tired of the attention seeking aspect of all of it to be honest and THAT’S a conversation worth having I think.
May 15, 2026 @ 2:34 pm
My mother was an embarrassing belligerent alcoholic and my dad a social condescending butthole alcoholic. It runs heavy in my family. Guess what, that was a them problem. I like to have a drink or a few every now and then and I will not apologize for that because I don’t treat people like they did. I have lived 60 plus years proving to myself that I don’t and will not be like that when I drink. I’m so tired of people having their dang feelings on the edge of their extended finger tips, putting everything out their on social media and boxing a young persons career, who hasn’t even lived a substantial part of his life yet. He is afforded to make the mistakes and hopefully learn a thing or two while living. If you can’t drink then don’t (major battle for sure) and if you can drink, then have a drink or two but don’t be a loser pointing a finger at each just because one needs to stop and one doesn’t need too. I pray common sense finds its way back to civilization and regular folks just let stuff roll off their back again and quit reacting like they’re butt hurt.
May 15, 2026 @ 9:23 pm
Right me if I am wrong, but people who come forward about any form of sobriety that they claim to have may not be coming forward to make themselves look better. They could be coming forward as their way of trying to save the lives of other people out there, and not just the lives of those who drink. They are trying to save the lives of everyone else out there because anyone can be a victim of alcoholic activity. Considering how serious the subject of drinking is, any testimony that is put there out from a sober person can only help those who haven’t gotten to such a point in their lives yet. As for Zach Top, that young man must not care about growing a bigger fanbase which is sad with him still being the newer singer that he is still. What I want to know is if any other singers in country music will call him out on giving such an arrogant statement. 90s singer Mark Chesnutt, I believe is the newest country singer to come forward about getting cleaned up. He said that his recent medical issues were his wake-up call. How much of a drinker was he before he got sick? I don’t know. I just know that what Zach has said about having self-control was very inconsiderate when everyone is not going to have the same amount of self-control if they have any. Also, even if a person is just a here and there drinker, “feeding the meter” is what they are doing and one of these days, feeding it as much as they feed it WILL catch up with them. That right there may be what Mr. Mark is the perfect example of. God bless you and him and Zach and the other sober singers in country music always!!! Holly in east TN (a day one fan of Trace Adkins who has been in recovery since 2014) P.S. Joe Don Rooney of Rascal Flatts is another person who comes to my mind. This fall, it will be five years since the under the influence car accident that could’ve killed him. He has been clean ever since and I couldn’t be happier for him.
May 16, 2026 @ 4:06 am
Sober for 4 years over here, first time I take the time to make a public statement about it (don’t think writing here is too performative, haha). I don’t mind ZT’s comment, everybody is entitled to a dumb one now and then. But I like to offer a different point of view: everytime I’m out and I refuse a drink, people ask why. It was harder at the beginning than now but there’s a lot of social pressure about drinking. When you stop, people feel like you’re judging their behavior (I’m not) and want to act like them, aka « act normal ». ZT’s comment is part of that peer pressure. Like I said, I don’t care about it and I’m still gonna crank Cold Beer and Country Music, but it makes it harder for people trying to stop (for reasons that only concern themselves).
May 16, 2026 @ 10:54 am
There is a real weirdness about the whole thing. I quit drinking 26 years ago. I didn’t get sober, I just quit drinking. I would have been dead within a year if I didn’t…so I did. I didn’t find Jesus, or become an AA cult member or any of that shit. I didn’t follow steps or have a sponsor. I don’t “take it one day at a time” or collect chips. If I would have thought all that would be necessary I would have just died instead. I don’t agree with 100% of the statement, but I get where the dude is coming from.
May 16, 2026 @ 11:42 am
If you don’t mind me asking, how frequently of a drinker were you before you walked away from it and have you ever missed that part of your life at all? Obviously, you were never as dependent on the drink compared to those who are no stranger to the things that you say aren’t needed in your life to stay alcohol free. God bless you always!!! Holly in east TN P.S. Considering how hard it is for others to get clean, maybe you should look at it as a blessing that you don’t need to take it one day at a time like they have to.
May 16, 2026 @ 9:38 pm
I woke up every morning and ran to the refrigerator for a beer. I drank a couple while my coffee brewed. Then I had coffee and jack. Even though I had the skill to do good high paying jobs, I always went for shit jobs that allowed me to drink on the job. I drank all day at work. Then I went to the bar for a few hours after work, then home to drink until I passed out. So moderately frequent. I could feel myself dying, literally. I woke up coughing and gagging for hours every morning – I could feel my body shutting down.
When I quit I was sick for months – could barely get out of bed, quit my job. Once the withdrawl sickness went away – I just got on with life. Miss it? Sure – for a long time – rarely ever think about it anymore. I had to completely re-learn how to be a human. I spent my entire life from 14 to 31 drunk all day every day. Now it’s just something I used to was.
May 17, 2026 @ 9:35 am
You’re one of the fortunate ones who survived.
May 17, 2026 @ 3:40 am
About the only insightful quote from George Jones’ autobiography goes something like this; if you’re a drunk, you’re not seeking the help of other drunks (AA), they can’t help you since they are addicted themselves. You seek the help of the person who never drink, he’s used to handle life sober.
May 16, 2026 @ 10:58 am
I’ve been clean and sober since 1988 through AA and my daily relationship with God
But I couldn’t care less what Zach Top or any artist, athlete, politician, etc says about sobriety or anything else
I don’t look to cultural figures for help with my sobriety
May 17, 2026 @ 6:24 am
You shouldn’t look to cultural figures for any help.
Most of them aren’t worth their bones.
May 17, 2026 @ 9:33 am
But impressionable young fans might. It can be hard to avoid going along with the crowd when artists are making not drinking sound uncool.
May 17, 2026 @ 9:37 am
Those fans should learn to think for themselves.
May 17, 2026 @ 9:59 am
Of course they should but as I said, they’re young and impressionable.
May 17, 2026 @ 11:37 am
When I went to school during the 80’s and 90’s, we were taught to be critical. Examining articles in the paper – why is it written in this or that angle – or some text in a book or magazine. Don’t trust anything without questioning the agenda, not least the government.
These days, they teach my daughter the opposite. Trust the newspapers/tv news/NPR/government, they know what’s right or wrong.
The hippies ruined their children (my generation X). Now that their children (my generation) are in charge, it seems like we did a 180 turn from the questioning and protest our parent generation was so proud of (rightfully so, I’ve got to say, even tho their proposed solution often sucked).
May 17, 2026 @ 7:00 am
The irony is the fact that, presumably, he doesn’t realize that his drinking and smoking comes off as performative while complaining about people’s sobriety coming off as performative.
May 28, 2026 @ 4:30 pm
if there’s one more guy that grifts off the 90s country sound, I swear I’m gonna hit him in the head. its just so trendy right now