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    The Sober CuratorThe Sober Curator
    Home - Sober Business Travel: How to Thrive on Work Trips
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    Sober Business Travel: How to Thrive on Work Trips

    Sarah AlaimoBy Sarah AlaimoJune 19, 20267 Mins Read
    Sober Business Travel_ How to Thrive on Work Trips
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    Early in my sobriety, I made a decision and never really revisited it. Business travel was going to stay part of my life, and so was sobriety, and the two would simply coexist. I did not see why they could not. I did not approach my first sober work trip with dread. I approached it the way I have approached every trip since, with a plan and a good attitude.

    My first work trip in sobriety was to Las Vegas. I was 23 days sober. Before I packed a single thing, I called the hotel and asked them to remove the minibar from my room. Not lock it. Remove it. The woman on the phone did not blink, which I have since learned is true of most hotel staff. They have heard stranger requests, and they will make the thing in your room disappear without comment if you ask.

    That call was not about fear. The trip itself was well planned and well orchestrated by then, which I was grateful for, since I had actually planned the event before I got sober. The minibar call was simply about setting the room up the way I wanted it, clearing one easy temptation out of reach so the trip could be about everything else.

    The plan for the first night was simple. I found a meeting and went to it before dinner. Then I met a colleague, one of the few people I had told, and we went out. We ate extraordinary food. We walked for hours. And somewhere along the Strip that night, I realized I was experiencing far more of the city than I ever had on the trips I spent drinking. I had been to Las Vegas before. I had never actually been to Las Vegas.

    The trips that followed

    That trip set a pattern I have kept for years. The dinners out with colleagues and the nights taking clients to a great meal had always been something I looked forward to, and sober, I looked forward to them just the same. What changed was how much of each place I actually took in. I started exploring cities for what they had to offer. I chased down the best meal in town. I looked up which friends lived wherever I was headed and made plans to see them. I found the fun workout, the early class, the long walk, the thing that made me glad to be awake the next morning.

    None of that had really registered before. Sober, I noticed the city I was standing in.

    I never expected sobriety to make the trips smaller, and it did not. If anything, deciding early that the two would simply go together is what made the whole thing easy. There was no internal debate to lose, no version of the trip I was grieving. There was just the trip, and me, fully in it.

    Come in with a plan

    If I had to distill what I have learned into advice for someone facing a first sober work trip, it would come down to one idea: arrive with a plan, and make the plan about what you are saying yes to, not only about what you are avoiding.

    A few things that have served me well over the years:

    • Call ahead. The minibar can go. So can the welcome bottle of wine waiting on the desk. Hotels do this all the time, and no one needs an explanation.
    • Find your footing on the first night. A meeting, a call with someone who understands, a walk before dinner. Something steady before anything social.
    • Tell one person. A single trusted colleague can change the entire trip. You do not need to announce anything to the room.
    • Book the good stuff. The dinner reservation, the museum, the morning workout class. Fill the hours you used to hand over to drinking, and the drinking stops being the thing the trip is about.

    The plan is not really about willpower. It is about giving yourself somewhere to put the time and the attention that used to belong to a bar.

    Photo Credit: depositphotos.com – save 20% use code SOBERCURATOR

    At the table

    The moment most people assume will be hard, and the one that almost never is, happens when the server comes around. I order what I want. A mocktail, a sparkling water, whatever nonalcoholic thing the bartender is proud of that night. In all these years, and in professional settings especially, I can count on one hand the number of times anyone has reacted to my choice.

    More often, the opposite happens. I am read as the steady one, the colleague still sharp at the end of a long client dinner, the person who remembers what was said over dessert. That has been a refreshing thing to learn about how the working world actually sees a sober professional.

    Honestly, I barely think about any of it anymore. There are so many good options now that ordering a drink takes no more thought than choosing an entree.

    And here is my favorite discovery, the one I will leave you with. While everyone else at the table was deliberating over a second glass of wine, I had already cornered the market on appetizers and dessert. Sober travel comes with a menu most people never bother to read all the way through.

    I read the whole thing.


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    How do you stay sober during business travel?

    Come in with a plan. Decide ahead of time how you will spend the hours that used to go to drinking, whether that is a meeting, a workout, dinner with a friend in the city, or a long walk. Call the hotel to remove the minibar, tell one trusted colleague, and book the things you are looking forward to. A trip built around what you are saying yes to is far easier than one built around what you are avoiding.

    Can you ask a hotel to remove the minibar from your room?

    Yes. Most hotels will empty or remove a minibar on request, and the staff will handle it without comment. Call ahead or ask at check-in. You can make the same request for a welcome bottle of wine left in the room.

    What do you order at a business dinner when you do not drink?

    Order what you actually want. A mocktail, a sparkling water, or a nonalcoholic option the bar is proud of all work well in professional settings, and most colleagues never react. Leaning into the appetizers, the entree, and dessert is one of the better-kept perks of dining out sober.

    How do you handle client dinners and work events without alcohol?

    Treat them as the relationship and the meal they are meant to be, rather than the bar. Being the steady, sharp person at the end of a long dinner tends to read as professional, not awkward. It helps to arrive with a plan for what you will drink, so the decision is already made before anyone asks.

    Is it hard to travel for work in early sobriety?

    It does not have to be. A first trip can feel daunting, but a clear plan makes it manageable, even at a few weeks sober. Finding a meeting on the first night, confiding in one colleague, and filling your free time with things you enjoy can turn a work trip into something you look forward to.

    sober business travel sober travel sober workplace travel sober traveling sober for work
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    Sarah Alaimo
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    Sarah Alaimo is a strategic HR leader, writer, sober mom, and recovery advocate passionate about building healthier lives from the inside out. Professionally, she is known for aligning people strategy with business goals to help organizations create strong, thriving workplace cultures. Personally, she is an international best-selling author of Pearls & Probation: Adventures of an Alcoholic Good Girl and a contributing author to THE x-fACTOR: The Spiritual Secrets Behind Successful Executives & Entrepreneurs. As a speaker, storyteller, and voice in the recovery community, Sarah shares candidly about sobriety, motherhood, resilience, and what it means to build a beautiful life in recovery.

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