From the category archives:

the lost weekends

Tanya: Captain Hook

by anna on 11.06.2009

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Pirate keyboard via CrunchGear

Pirate keyboard via CrunchGear

“I should go out tonight, because I’d really like to get laid.”
“Tanya, it’s pirate party.”
“I know.”
“So?”
“So what?”
“Phi Delt, Tanya.”
“Yeah . . .”
“The water polo team.”
“Isn’t pirate party a date party?”
“Technically.”

“Well, how are we going to get in?”
“Renshaw.”
“How do you know? Besides, everyone will have dates.”
“Haven’t you heard? There’s no dating at Stanford.”
“When did you see Renshaw?”
“Narrative Technique.”
“You went to class?!”
“I resent your tone.”
“Well, who is Renshaw taking?”
“Nobody. That’s what I’m saying. Technically it’s a date party. Really, it’s just a party. With a guest list. That we’re on.”
“OK . . . it has been so long since I got laid.”
“It’s been three weeks, Tanya.”

You knew everything about Tanya’s sexual escapades, whether you wanted to or not, and you questioned how much of it was performed for the benefit of . . . someone? You had never met a woman who talked — thought — this way about sex, and you did not believe it. You did not trust that a woman would authentically start to track her sexual partners in this way, lining them up literally as notches on her bedpost, whose partners already numbered beyond her age in years. It was an act, you thought, but maybe there was part of you that allowed for error, since just because you could not understand did not make it automatically false. And so you went along with it, like you did with all of Tanya’s absurdities, because with all of them there were just as many fascinating things, strange tidbits that hinted at a past and experience beyond what you would ever know.

Tanya was the kind of person that nobody back home would ever meet, much less know like you did. Nobody from where you came from would be friends with this kind of a person, or be able to teach themselves her language, as you had. And that was what made it all worth the effort.

Getting Tanya out of her dorm on party nights had become a giant pain in the ass of late. As far as you could tell, Tanya’s reluctance to leave her room was connected to her exaggerated pre-party beauty ritual. Perhaps it was because she was anosmic, but Tanya seemed to feel it was crucial to stay in the shower for upwards of an hour at a time in order to truly get clean, a fact which had annoyed and frustrated you more than another person’s personal maintenance routine ever should be able to do. You had explained, rather rationally, to Tanya that soap merely needed to be afforded a brief opportunity in which to bond with dirt on skin and hair, perhaps scrubbed a bit, and then rinsed off. That more than, say, twenty minutes — tops! — was just superfluous time wasting and skin drying tomfoolery! To no avail. Tanya was convinced her routine was essential, and if she did not start it by 7pm, the likelihood of her ever making it out was very low.

Tanya’s three-hour pre-party beauty regimen annoyed you because it often meant the difference between (over-)drinking alone or (over-)drinking with company. Because for you, the niceties of beauty routines ought rightfully be cut-cornered to the greater good of going out and drinking in a socially acceptable context. Perhaps Tanya’s alcoholism was not yet so pronounced. Or perhaps it was the fact that Tanya at that time had appetites that ranked higher in priority than drugs and alcohol ever could have, and it was to accommodate those appetites that she felt the regimen was necessary. So you went through this ritual of your own, carting over a 6 pack of Sierra Nevada in the early evening, and camping out on Tanya’s futon until she agreed to go to the shower. And checking in on her progress, periodically, in the hours that followed.

“Water polo, Tanya. Eyes on the prize.” You poked your head into the women’s bathroom at the end of the hall, and went back to drinking and hanging out with Cate and Linda, and talking about the evening to come. Time would pass, and Tanya would still not be ready, and after eseveral more attempts at gettin gher moving, you agreed to meet her at the party, and somewhere inbetween the brownish haze that descended after that pack of Sierra Nevada was gone and scrounging around for Old Smuggler in the back of Andy’s liquor cabinet at the end of the night, you remember seeing Tanya at the pirate party, talking to a guy named Brant that you had seen before but never spoken too. And thinking, what an odd choice, and going for more alcohol, and then everything went blurry again.

You would sleep on Cate’s floor, too drunk to drive, and in the morning attempt to piece together the disparate parts of the evening, to reconstruct the narrative that you had certainly been a part of but could not wholly claim subjectivity for. And as you and Cate were chatting, in came Tanya to the two-room double they shared that year, her black leather biker’s jacket and eyelash curler still intact, her hair looking only slightly worse for the wear. She headed over to her bedpost and carved in another line.

“Who?” you asked, never surprised by the circumstances of the notch, always curious to hear the notchee.
“Some pirate.”
“Right.”
“No, really, he was a pirate.”
“Dressed as a pirate, yeah. Brant, then?”

“Was that his name?”
“That’s who I saw you with.”
“Well, the only way we’ll know for sure is to examine him.”
“What do you mean?”
“I was calling him Captain Hook. For a reason.”

“He was missing a hand? Strange.”

“No, it was more of a reference to the shape of a crucial piece of his anatomy.”
“Oh Tanya.”
“Captain Hook! AAAAAR!”

With that, she put her hand over her eye and chased you down the hall, and the two of you were off to the sunporch where you could further deconstruct the evening, unfortunate references to the shape of people’s penises and all. And if Tanya’s insistence upon the casual insignificance of it all still seemed forced, well at least there was some intimacy forged there, in spite of it all. Because at the heart of all the destruction and hazy recollections, was laughter, and the precious bond of two lost souls clinging to each other, and clawing back to themselves, one shared cigarette at a time.

Different

by anna on 06.10.2009

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Tracy, my friend from early sobriety, had been a cocaine addict when she was only 12 years old. I don’t know where 12-year-olds find cocaine, but you can be sure that if they want to they will. Tracy had gotten sober for the first time shortly after she turned 14, and all of this happened before she had ever had even a sip of alcohol. Because she was active in the program, Tracy knew that real sobriety meant abstaining from all mind-altering substances. But, as is the case with many people, there was still a part of her that thought other drugs might be safe for her to try–a part that believed it was impossible for her to be an alcoholic without ever having been drunk.

And so at the age of 28, after a kind of poetic 14 years of sobriety, Tracy “went out” and started drinking for the first time in her life. Shortly thereafter, Tracy was a daily cocaine user again, and shortly after that, she was shacking up with her dealer. It was not long before Tracy was just a heartbeat away from cataclysmic physical, financial, and emotional ruin. Luckily for her, Tracy had picked up a few things by spending her formative years in the program, and was only “out” for about two years–but those two years were turbulent ones, and perhaps they were what convinced her, finally, that she couldn’t do any kind of substance without turning her life into chaos.

Initially, I referred to Tracy as “Crazy Tracy” as a means of differentiating her from the several other Tracys in the same community. At the time that she was Crazy Tracy, we were not yet friends, and even if I had less time than she did, she was, by her own admission, totally batshit crazy. She would sit in meetings and drone on and on about things like her mother’s speakerphone and the two lanes on the 405 that would always be backed up at the 101 North interchange (before they redid it). She would be dizzy with anger about this kind of stuff and though I, too, was angry about stupid stuff at the time–it was still something to see.

There is a school of thought that says you are crazy for at least the duration of your first year of sobriety–if not longer–just by virtue of the fact that you’re adjusting to a new way of living life, feeling feelings, and just generally taking responsibility for yourself and your own actions, often for the first time ever.

Eventually, Tracy stopped acting so crazy, and I mustered up the nerve to ask her how on earth she could have had fourteen years of sobriety under her belt and then convince herself that she could start drinking. What she said was that life got good, and you started thinking that you were different. And then you started making excuses, finding evidence that you were different. For Tracy, the fact that she had never drank alcohol made her different: though she was sure that she could not handle cocaine, she had been able to convince herself that–for her–alcohol was something different.

This was back in the days when I wanted to have a year of sobriety more than anything. And it wasn’t because I didn’t think I could make it a year. I always knew that I could. Because I knew I was different–the same but also defiantly different, saying that the rules DID apply to me but knowing, deep down, not all of them did. People would talk about how we were all the same, deep down, and to look for the similarities rather than the differences, but this was a much harder thing to do than it was to say. People would say some are sicker than others, and they would tell me, “Don’t you get the impression sometimes that you’re not as sick as the rest of us?”

And the answer for me was yes, had always been yes–but at the same time, I knew that I wasn’t like the rest of the world, either. I could not both control and enjoy my drinking at the same time. And that was all I needed to know I belonged. And if I needed to have a year it was not because I felt like after a year anything would change for me, but rather because I was sick of being new, sick of not having any credibility. It was a new feeling to me and I didn’t like it. I did not like former heroin addicts coming up to me and asking “how [I was] doing” meaningfully, people who had been off the syringe less than two years but because I was a newcomer, they felt they knew what it was like for me, with under a year of sobriety, they knew what I must be going through. It made me indignant and I was told that this indignant egotism was the kind of thing that might one day lead me to drink again. That would make me think that I was different.

When you share your story in a meeting, it is sometimes referred to as “qualifying”: e.g. you are instructed to “qualify” for a few minutes before opening the meeting up to general discussion. This always struck me as a strange expression–why would anyone ever need to qualify themselves as an alcoholic? Wasn’t showing up at a meeting enough, pretty much? Did anyone try to get in and just not quite meet the standards? I had spent my life over-qualifying for things and I felt the impulse during those moments to let that mode kick-in again: I would talk about the blood alcohol level I had when I got my DUI, because it was higher than anyone else’s, and most people would have been passed out with that percentage. It was not because I was proud of it–far from it–but because I always felt like people were looking at me and thinking I didn’t qualify, that I didn’t belong–no, not EVEN here, I wasn’t at home.

And then there were other times when I felt the need to qualify my qualification: when the circumstantial, educational and class-based knack I had to pass as a normal person served as a kind of crutch that I needed to make myself feel better. It was at those times that I would talk about how I had been a periodic alcoholic: I had never been a daily drinker, and I had never been physically dependent upon alcohol. I had never shown signs of liver disease, and my drinking career was short enough to save me from the lined, hard faces that prematurely aged so many women I saw in my regular meetings. I would tell them that I had quit drinking because I knew that something awful would happen to me if I hadn’t: I had cheated death twice already and wasn’t sure I would be so lucky again. But then I would go back to being me, in the corner, thinking of myself as the same and different, because I had never even tried heroin and didn’t even know what it was like to have a dealer of one’s own.

Last Wednesday was the eighth anniversary of the day I got sober, but I forgot. I took my last drink in the very early morning of June 2, 2001, just a few hours before I tried to kill myself. I failed at that. Now, it is gaining on a decade later, and I have a wonderful husband, a beautiful son, and for the first time ever, I feel like I belong somewhere. At 8 years of being substance-free, sometimes my world gets so full of beautiful things that I can forget who I am. I can start thinking that I am different. Last week I forgot my anniversary. And this post is to remind me that, howevermuch I might have changed, I will never be different.

Dim Bulbs, Bedroom Community

by anna on 05.01.2009

Chris was a foot soldier in the Coke Wars of ’97, but when he enlisted he was already a three-time loser. Surfing, selling, and stealing had already bested him, so by the Fall of 1996, he had long since laced up his Doc Martens, packed up his Social Distortion collection, and rolled up and over for the proverbial Tour. They were happy to have him. He had always been the most promising of their group, and when he, too, failed, it was a triumph of sorts, a tacit endorsement of their way of life, whether Chris would acknowledge it as such or not.

Battling valiantly against the post-apocalyptic backdrop of the spare living space of somebody’s mother’s house in Lotophagi, a realm beyond the reach of time, ambition, moral development, and fiscal responsibility, Chris held his own in a quest for? death? destruction? the results were hazy. Lotophagi was no kind of place. More of a sleepy stupor than a real location, Lotophagi was most notable for a group of inhabitants who had vowed, silently, unconsciously, never to leave it. And though it boasted the kind of natural beauty that one might see on a postcard, the vows were not made because of these attractions, but rather because they had become unwitting slaves to it–out of apathy, lethargy, the tendency never to move again once ensconced within its foggy confines.

Like any ragamuffin rebellion, the Coke Wars were fought with whatever improvised weapons could be procured at a reasonable price, which is to say free, or next-to-free, compliments of the kinds of shady connections you develop as part of the underbelly of a small town when you have never thought to leave it. Necessarily, video games were played, King Cobra malt liquor was drunk, and whatever illicit substances they could procure from the guys at Pizza King were ingested. Few lines were drawn. Everyone pooled their resources, but nobody turned up their noses: the appellation of “Coke Wars” was, therefore–like many historical events–constructed after-the-fact, and merely the romanticizing of a shared past by those who had lived through it and needed it to mean more than it ever could.

The plain fact was that cocaine had outclassed Lotophagi. They would never be the kind of glamorously debauched people you meet in a Bret Easton Ellis novel, or more especially the movie based on a Bret Easton Ellis novel: they were a decade late, a couple hundred thousand short, haphazardly clothed in whatever free swag View definition in a new window they could pilfer from so-and-so’s cousin, who was sponsored by Rip Curl. It is a strange thing to class people by their ability to afford and procure illicit drugs, but then Lotophagi had seen worse. And how else could you think of them?

[click to continue…]

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