Gabriella,
There you go - you get what I mean then. There are lots of people happier not being a Muslim, but they don't all need to commit to drinking to avoid being a Muslim, but you do.
I like drinking shots - it makes me happy. But I managed to stop because being a Muslim made me happier. Does being a Muslim make you happy but drinking make you happier?
You've missed it. I wasn't literally telling you I turn to drink to avoid Islam (good grief!), it was just an analogy in response to your:
"Also, Islam gives me an easy reason to not drink, and I feel happier not drinking but doubt I would have the will power or self-control to have stopped without the religious commitment."
First, whether or not your faith does that says nothing to whether any of its factual claims are
true. No doubt any manner of believers in any manner of gods find similar therapeutic benefits from those beliefs.
Second though, while you may find the side-benefit of not drinking to be helpful, that's to ignore that Islam is fundamentally a
faith system, and when lots of people share a faith system bad outcomes tend to ensue for reasons we're discussed exhaustively here. I don't suggest that you (or NS's sainted Mum for that matter) are about to put a bomb on a 'plane, but I do suggest that your benign beliefs are still rooted in and give intellectual cover to those who would do those things.
In other words, "but that's my faith" is the same defence at both ends of the spectrum, and if we can't say "so what?" to one, how can we say it to the other?