TLDR: When alcohol lowers your level of consciousness and presence, the pain body—your accumulated psychological wounds and reactive patterns—rises to the surface. What people call "losing control" while intoxicated is actually the loss of awareness itself. Without conscious presence, you stop acting from clarity and instead operate from unconscious pain, reactive emotions, and stored hurt. Understanding this mechanism reveals why alcohol and other consciousness-lowering substances trigger behavior that feels out of character or regrettable: you are literally not present.
What Is the Pain Body and How Does It Relate to Consciousness?
The pain body is not a physical entity but a reservoir of accumulated psychological pain, trauma, and negative emotion stored in the body and mind. It includes unprocessed hurt from childhood, past relationships, shame, anger, and fear—anything that was felt but never fully resolved. This pain exists in a semi-dormant state, waiting for conditions that lower your conscious awareness to activate it.
Consciousness, in this framework, means presence—the quality of being aware in the present moment, able to observe your thoughts and emotions without being completely identified with them. When consciousness is high, you have choice. You can notice an emotion arising without acting on it automatically. You can pause before responding. You maintain a degree of inner space between stimulus and reaction.
The pain body thrives in the absence of this awareness. It is, in a sense, unconscious material. As long as you remain present and aware, the pain body cannot fully control your behavior because you are observing it rather than being consumed by it.
How Does Alcohol Lower Consciousness?
Alcohol is a depressant that affects the central nervous system and suppresses higher brain functions. But from a consciousness perspective, what matters is not just the neurochemistry—it is the subjective collapse of awareness. Alcohol dampens the quality of presence that allows you to observe your mind and emotions with any distance or clarity.
When you drink, the executive function—the part of consciousness that monitors, evaluates, and makes deliberate choices—becomes less accessible. Your sense of "I" becomes thinner, less present. The inner observer that normally watches your thoughts and feelings begins to fade. This is experienced as relaxation or disinhibition, but what is actually happening is a dimming of awareness itself.
In this dimmed state, you lose the capacity to notice patterns before they control you. You cannot step back from an emotion. You cannot pause before speaking. You cannot access the part of yourself that knows better. You are no longer piloting your own behavior from a place of awareness—you are being piloted by whatever is closest to the surface: usually, the pain body.
Why Does the Pain Body Activate When Consciousness Drops?
The pain body is always present, but it is normally held in check by conscious presence. Think of consciousness as a light and the pain body as shadow—the stronger the light of awareness, the smaller the shadow. When that light dims, the shadow expands and fills the space.
Alcohol creates exactly the conditions the pain body needs to operate freely. Without the observing presence that normally creates some distance, the pain body no longer encounters resistance. Old wounds, grievances, shame, and anger—all the material that was suppressed or avoided during normal consciousness—suddenly have room to move and express themselves.
This is why someone who is normally kind may become aggressive when drunk. It is not a new aspect of their personality emerging; it is the pain body—perhaps shame, perhaps suppressed rage—finding expression through the lowered consciousness. The person is not choosing this behavior; it is being expressed through them because awareness is absent.
What Is Really Happening When You "Lose Control"?
The common phrase "losing control" typically refers to saying or doing things you regret after drinking—embarrassing statements, poor decisions, aggressive outbursts. But this phrase misdiagnoses what is actually occurring. You are not losing control; you are losing consciousness.
Control implies there is a "you" that is trying to restrain or direct behavior. But if consciousness itself is absent, there is no "you" there to exercise control. Instead, you are identified with the pain body, flowing with its patterns and reactions as if they are your authentic self.
The difference is crucial. When consciousness is present, you can exercise will and choice—you can say "I feel angry, but I choose not to act on it." When consciousness is absent, there is no stable "I" available to make that choice. The pain body is not being suppressed; it is being fully expressed because nothing is observing it and creating space around it.
What feels like uncontrollable behavior is really automatic behavior—the automatic expression of stored psychological material that has no conscious witness to interrupt it. Your actions may feel spontaneous or compulsive because, from the perspective of your aware self, they are: they are arising from a place where awareness is absent.
How Does This Explain Regrettable Behavior After Drinking?
When you wake up the next day with a hangover and memories of what you said or did the night before, consciousness has returned. Now you are looking back from a place of presence at actions performed from a place of absence. This creates a strange discontinuity: you genuinely feel as though "that wasn't me," and in a real sense, it wasn't—it was you without consciousness, you without the presence that normally defines your sense of self.
The regret that follows is not regret about having made a mistake in judgment. It is regret about having been absent. The recognition is: "I was not here. The pain body was here, expressing itself through this body and voice, but the aware 'I' had stepped away."
This is why punishment or shame about what happened while drunk often does not lead to lasting change. The person is trying to use will and judgment to control future behavior, but the real issue was the absence of consciousness in the first place. Will alone cannot solve the problem because will requires the presence of a conscious self. What is needed is not willpower but restored awareness—the simple return of the light of presence that keeps the pain body in its place.
The Deeper Pattern: Any Substance That Lowers Consciousness Activates the Pain Body
Alcohol is just one example, though a common one. The principle applies to any substance or state that dampens consciousness: excessive sedatives, certain drugs, or even unconscious states triggered by trauma or dissociation. Whenever consciousness drops, the pain body rises. This is not a moral judgment about drinking—it is simply an observation about how consciousness and the pain body relate to each other.
Understanding this principle clarifies why people sometimes use alcohol or other substances in the first place. If someone has a large, active pain body—significant stored pain, grief, or rage—they may use alcohol not to escape consciousness but to anesthetize the pain body itself. The alcohol lowers consciousness, which normally keeps the pain body dormant, but it also lowers the capacity to feel pain. In this way, alcohol can seem like relief, because it creates a state where both the pain body and awareness are suppressed simultaneously.
However, the pain body is not eliminated by being suppressed. It is simply waiting. And if consciousness continues to be lowered regularly through substance use, the pain body becomes increasingly active and influential in your baseline functioning, even when you are not intoxicated.
Where to Go From Here
If you recognize yourself in this description—if you have experienced regrettable behavior while drinking or find yourself concerned about what happens to your behavior when consciousness drops—the path forward is not restriction or punishment but the cultivation of presence. This can happen through meditation, mindfulness practice, or any activity that strengthens your capacity to observe your thoughts and emotions without being identified with them.
The goal is not to eliminate the pain body (which is not really possible—it is part of the human condition) but to strengthen consciousness so that the pain body has less control over your actions. Even small increases in presence create distance between the pain you carry and the choices you make.
Additionally, working with the pain body directly—through therapy, somatic practices, or honest self-inquiry—can reduce the intensity of the accumulated material waiting to express itself. As the pain body becomes smaller and less active, the risk that it will take over during moments of lowered consciousness also decreases.
The recognition itself—that what you call losing control is actually losing consciousness—can be liberating. It shifts the focus from trying to control your behavior to deepening your presence. And that, paradoxically, is what actually restores your capacity to choose.




