Most stop drinking apps hand you a calculator — days sober, money saved, units avoided — and stop there. What actually decides how tonight goes is a much smaller question: does today end as an alcohol-free day or not? Daychain's avoid task type is built around exactly that question. You create one task — no alcohol — and the day completes when nothing is logged against it; abstaining, not acting, is what forges the link. That matters most in the moments the habit actually lives in: the after-work urge, the Friday invitation, the glass that "doesn't really count." A growing chain of alcohol-free days gives those moments a visible counterweight — you're no longer deciding about one drink, you're deciding about link forty-one. The day-boundary mechanic quietly does real work here too: your day doesn't have to flip at midnight. If your day boundary is set to the early hours, a moment of weakness at 1 a.m. still belongs to yesterday's link and today starts clean — the app's calendar matches the shape of a real evening, not a clock's. And because lapses are part of how quitting actually goes, Balanced chain mode plus a repair credit keep the system honest without being cruel: a slip is recorded truthfully as a broken or repaired link, never hidden, but it doesn't erase the six weeks that came before it — the previous chain segment stays on record as proof you can do this. If you're cutting down rather than stopping outright, the same avoid task works for defined alcohol-free days — say, weekdays — with the schedule handling the rest.
A Stop Drinking App Built Around Not Doing: Alcohol-Free Days as a Chain
Track alcohol-free days with Daychain's avoid task type — the day completes when nothing is logged against it, and a weak moment at 1 a.m. still belongs to yesterday's link.