Alcohol myopia

Alcohol myopia is a cognitive-physiological theory on alcohol abuse in which many of alcohol's social and stress-reducing effects, which may underlie its addictive capacity, are explained as a consequence of alcohol's narrowing of perceptual and cognitive functioning.

It has three central traits:
 * Drunken Excess: the tendency for those who drink to behave more excessively.
 * Self-Inflation: the tendency to inflate self-evaluations.
 * Drunken Relief: the tendency for people who drink to worry less and pay less attention to their worries.