"If you don't feel bad about it, then it can't hurt you."
we can all agree he wasn't speaking about cirrhosis of the liver, or cancer, kidney stones, memory loss (can't feel bad if you don't remember), or any other health issues that happen when you drink everyday for years on end. i've never been honest with a doctor about how much i drink. i haven't been to a doctor for a real check up in almost a decade. but i'll tell you the truth, reader. if there's beer around in the morning, i'll probably drink it. if it's late night at a party and all the beer's gone, better hold on to yours, because i'll drink any open can or bottle i can get my hands on (sorry to all the friends who i've done this to...not really). i drink when i'm sad, happy, angry, confused, bored, or just apathetic, which maybe is an oxymoron since i obviously care about my alcohol intake.
Should teens drink at home with their parents?
i've drank with my parents since i was around 18. my mom used to buy me beer whenever she went grocery shopping. she still does when i come home for a visit, and i'm always very appreciative. it's an expensive habit, and it's nice when someone wants to buy you a drink. To quote Chuck Palahniuk in Invisible Monsters, "When you go out with a drunk, you'll notice how a drunk fills your glass so he can empty his own. As long as you're drinking, drinking is okay. Two's company. Drinking is fun. If there's a bottle, even if your glass isn't empty, he'll pour a little in your glass before he fills his own." my parents are alcoholics. my mom and stepfather's drink is wine. my father chooses beer. all will drink liqour when the mood strikes them. at sometimes, moods will strike more often than not. i love all these people, and i'm not blaming them in the least, i just want to be clear about where i'm coming as a drinker. i was always taught to respect alcohol and to call a cab or a parent when i couldn't drive home after a party. i can't say i always heed this advice, and i'm not proud of that fact. drunk driving is not condoned here. do what i say, not as i do.
"For most normal folks, drinking means conviviality, companionship and colorful imagination. It means release from care, boredom and worry. It is joyous intimacy with friends and a feeling that life is good. But not so with us in those last days of heavy drinking."

i don't know if i've reached those last days of heavy drinking, but how could i? all those cliches of never seeing your low until you've hit it. i can guarantee that this day is not close to my last day of drinking, and perhaps that rising sun to hit a sober eye will never arrive. i don't know why i'm even writing here. i'm not confessing out of guilt, and i don't expect any good advice to come out of this since i'm not apologizing for anything...yet. besides this introduction, i don't plan on writing for the sake of vanity. maybe i'm hoping i can remember something more, discover what i'm missing the next morning, what i avoid speaking to friends and family about. right now i'm sipping a tall boy, i've got another ready, and i'll probably go out tonight to the bar. if anything interesting happens, i'll let you know.

No comments:
Post a Comment