With great vulnerability comes great power. Tom Holland is redefining the film industry and masculinity. Most commonly known for his leading role in the globally celebrated Spider-Man franchise, Tom Holland sat down with Amy Poehler on the Good Hang Podcast and opened up about his journey with sobriety. Candidly, Holland reflects on his reasons for putting down the bottle.
“So I quit drinking because I had a problem, and I just couldn’t put it down. It was affecting my professional life, my personal life, and my health. So I decided to pack it in, and I got through that first year, which I think was the toughest challenge that I’ve ever been on.”
Tom Holland is Wired Differently
In an interview with IGH, Holland described how being diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia often causes him to face challenges in his professional life. He observed that when someone gives him a blank canvas for a character, it can be slightly intimidating.
Fame amplifies pressures most of us will never fully understand, and while it may not have been the only force driving Holland’s complicated relationship with alcohol, ADHD, and dyslexia significantly raise a person’s susceptibility to substance abuse — a vulnerability that fame, success, and a camera-ready smile can all too easily mask.
Studies have shown that individuals with ADHD are more likely to abuse substances, with the addictive substance acting as a tonic to racing thoughts and hyperactivity. People with ADHD commonly have additional mental health disorders, such as anxiety, depression, and dyslexia.
When the Body Starts Keeping Score
Tom Holland spoke with unguarded honesty on the Jay Shetty podcast about how alcohol had impacted his health and overall quality of life. Like many Brits, he experienced an especially boozy Christmas, and as a challenge to himself, Holland decided to commit to a Dry January. Before he knew it, he was waking up thinking about having a drink.
“I was waking up thinking about it; I was checking the clock when it was 12. And it just really scared me. I was just like, wow, maybe I have a bit of an alcohol thing.”
With this realization, he decided to ‘punish’ himself by extending his Dry January into February as well. According to Holland, he believed that if he could stay sober for two months, then he could prove to himself that he didn’t have a problem.
Yet, after two months had gone by, Holland admitted that he found himself still really struggling,
“I felt like I couldn’t be social, like I couldn’t go to the pub and have a lime soda. I couldn’t go out for dinner and I was really, really struggling,” says Holland, “I started to really worry that maybe I had an alcohol problem.”
Alcohol ages you

Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
After his jarring realisation that this may be a serious personal issue, Holland committed to six months of sobriety.“And by the time I got to June first, I was the happiest I’ve ever been in my life. I could sleep better; I could handle problems better. Things that would go wrong on set that would normally set me off, I could take in my stride. I had such better mental clarity. I felt healthier… fitter.”
The social relationship with alcohol must be reevaluated. It is an incredibly normalised and addictive substance that seriously threatens the body’s most vital systems. Heavy alcohol consumption is a leading risk factor for both acute and chronic disease. Accelerating conditions that erode quality of life over time. By disrupting cardiovascular health and increasing the likelihood of sleep disorders such as sleep apnea, alcohol quietly dismantles the body’s ability to rest and repair itself.
Most importantly, the overconsumption of alcohol negatively impacts one’s cognitive abilities over time, creating a growing crisis in the ageing population. Prolonged drinking habits have been proven to compound cognitive impairments in older adults. It robs people of mental clarity and independence. In short, no amount of short-term relief is worth the long-term cost of alcohol on the human body.
Tom Holland: What made letting go a little easier
Everyone’s relationship with substances is different.
Various cognitive and socio-cultural factors come into play when your body is determining how well you can handle your liquor. We must remain aware and accountable for ourselves. We could be allowing substances to make decisions for us, especially when it comes to bodily health.
Committing to lifelong sobriety is not an easy decision to make for most people. Tom Holland shared a valuable piece of advice he received from Robert Downey Jr. in an interview with Men’s Health UK.
“Downey has a phrase called hugging the cactus, which is essentially embracing the ugly sides of your character, and if you hug the cactus for long enough, those ugly sides will become the best parts of your new self. And I think that’s a really great phrase for anyone who’s trying to get sober or accept the parts of you that are perhaps not as great and not letting your past define you.”
Tom Holland’s journey is a quiet revolution. In an industry built upon maintaining appearances, he chose raw honesty. Holland has not only transformed his own life; he has permitted an entire generation of young men to do the same.

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