Cold turkey

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Revision as of 23:17, 1 June 2025 by imported>Languagelover3000 (Reaction to being served cheap meat: Rephrased sentence so that it doesn't seem like it's saying "some researchers" posit this hypothesis when it in fact none are mentioned.)
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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Cold turkey refers to the abrupt cessation of substance use in the context of substance dependence, as opposed to gradually easing the process through reduction over time or by using replacement medication. Sudden withdrawal from drugs such as alcohol, benzodiazepines, and barbiturates can be extremely dangerous, leading to potentially fatal seizures. For long-term alcoholics, going cold turkey can cause life-threatening delirium tremens.[1] In the case of opioid withdrawal, going "cold turkey" is extremely unpleasant but less dangerous.[2][3] Life-threatening issues are unlikely unless one has a pre-existing medical condition.[3]

Etymology

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The origin of the phrase "cold turkey" in the sense of unpleasant withdrawal is a matter of some debate and ambiguity.[4]

Reaction to being served cheap meat

Scholars of 19th-century British periodicals have pointed to the UK satirical magazine Judy as the catalyst of the evolution in the phrase's meaning. The journal's issue of January 3, 1877, featured the fictional diary of one John Humes, Esquire, a Scrooge-like miser who disapproves of Christmas. When Hume is invited to stay at his cousin Clara's as a part of her household's celebrations, he is shocked to be served slices of cold turkey on the evening of his arrival. That cold turkey is poor substitute for the roasted and dressed dish is played for comic effect. The dissatisfied barrister stays several days nonetheless, and with each passing day, he is more and more shocked to be served cold turkey each day. The story ends with Hume, disgusted at having been treated so badly, removing Clara from his will and testament.[5]

A possible hypothesis is that Hume's behavior towards Clara - excluding and excommunicating her in retaliation for her ongoing ill-treatment of him - became known as "the cold turkey treatment", and that word quickly spread from London to the rest of Britain, and finally the United States.

An early print appearance of "cold turkey" in its exclusionary sense dates to 1910, in Canadian poet Robert W. Service's The Trail of '98: A Northland Romance: "Once I used to gamble an' drink the limit. One morning I got up from the card-table after sitting there thirty-six hours. I'd lost five thousand dollars. I knew they'd handed me out 'cold turkey'..."

"Talking turkey"

Another possible origin relates to the American phrase talk turkey, meaning "to speak bluntly with little preparation".[4][6][7][8] The phrase "taking cold turkey" has also been reported during the 1920s as slang for pleading guilty.[9]

Goosebumps

The term is also attributed to piloerection or "goose bumps" that occurs with abrupt withdrawal from opioids, which resembles the skin of a plucked refrigerated turkey.[3][10]

The similar term "kick the habit" alludes to the muscle spasms that occur in addition to goosebumps in some cases.[10]

Usage

A term appears in its contemporary usage in a December 1920 New York City medical bulletin:[11] Template:Quote Another early printed use, this one in the media to refer to drug withdrawal occurred in the Daily Colonist in British Columbia in 1921:[12]Template:Quote

The Plastic Ono Band released the song "Cold Turkey" in 1969, which was lyrically inspired from brief heroin addictions endured by John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

See also

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References

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  2. Opiate withdrawal. Medline Plus — NIH.
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  6. "cold turkey Template:Webarchive" definition, Dictionary.com.
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  9. Statistical Report. New York (N.Y.). Police Dept. Page 192. 1924.
  10. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  11. The Narcotic Drug Problem Arthur D. Greenfield. December 1920. Monthly Bulletin of the Department of Health in the City of New York, Volume 10
  12. Movers and Shakers: A Chronology of Words that Shaped Our Age, by John Ayto