Tag Archives: alcoholism

My Drunken Nights

I look back at all my drunken nights and can’t count on one finger a single one that stands out. They all come together in a blur, a long, significant blur.

It started when I was twenty-one and ended when I was forty-one. I drank almost every day from the time I was twenty-six to the day that I retired on August 15, 2019. I thought that was the date, but it was nothing official. I used to get blackout drunk with my friends in Hollywood when they were still around. We did shots of anything, and I drank mostly beers, domestic beers, not the fancy imported kind that really wasn’t imported. If you travel to Belgium and drink the Americanized Belgian beer, you’ll get ridiculed. My parents told me you’re supposed to drink a different beer over there. I’ll probably never fly to Belgium anyway.

But I drank whatever came my way like Long Island Iced Teas from a cowboy bar in West Hollywood because the cocktail came in a flower vase with a long thick straw sticking out of the top. The bar had a mechanical bull that I would never ride, and I wasn’t interested in anyone who rode the thing. All I wanted was to get obliterated because life was hard, and I wanted to make it easier.

When my friends went away when I was in my thirties, I was left alone to drink alcohol and smoke hash, mostly weed but hash sometimes. I had acquaintances, not friends. We would drink and get high together, but that was all we really had in common. I respected my time alone with my drinking but also would venture to the bar down the street from my apartment.

One night, when I was in my late thirties, I can’t remember what age exactly, I was crossing Hollywood Boulevard when a young dude on crack punched me in the mouth. It was a sucker punch. I was high already after smoking a spliff in my apartment. The kid walked away, still staring me down and cursing me. I never retaliated, which I should’ve done, but I was too dazed that a stranger would actually hit me at one in the morning on an empty Hollywood street. I continued walking to the bar because I wanted to drink into a blackout after what that kid had done to me.

I told everyone in the bar what had happened, and they were all amazed too.

“I just got punched in the face,” I said.

“By who?” they asked.

“Some kid on crack,” I said.

Of course it might not have been crack. It could’ve been acid for all I knew, or crystal meth. All the more reason not to have hit him back. The kid could’ve felt nothing and been a superhero with super strengths, and a punch to his jaw might not have even fazed him. He could’ve done something worse to me.

I told the bouncer.

“Where is he?” he asked. “I’ll take him down.”

But I couldn’t tell him. He could’ve been anywhere in Hollywood, sucker-punching other drunk fools like me, around the time when I quit drinking. I think less than a year went by when I ended up in rehab and reached an age where I couldn’t do it anymore.

I cringe at the things I’d done as a drunk, like the time I raised hell at my twenty-year high school reunion. I regret ever getting kicked out of a local bar in my hometown. I don’t talk to my high school alumni anymore, ever since that happened. It was a visceral reaction to the way my alums were acting that night, and the alcohol only freed my inhibitions to attack people the way I did. I don’t remember anything. People on social media had to inform me of what I did, and I wanted to hide somewhere for good.

I don’t have to worry anymore. Those days are behind me now. I stare reality right in the face and deal with it head-on.

Last Call

Never in my wildest dreams, when I played at recess, did I think, someday, I’m going to sit in a bar every night until closing time. I thought I would be a superhero. If not a superhero, I would be a baseball champion, pitching for the Pittsburgh Pirates, the youngest pitcher to ever grace the mound. I used to daydream about that when I stared out the window in class, only for the teacher to send me to the principal for not paying attention. They put me in other classes, separate from the normies.

I grew older, and the baseball dream was zapped like the acne on my face from my dermatologist.

Soon after I became an adult, a woman I was dating introduced me to bars. I would drink into blackouts. The baseball dream may have gone, but I had other dreams of becoming rich. Those dreams faded, too.

Next thing I knew, I heard the bartender shout, “Last call!” The music shut off. The bartender switched on the light and exposed our drunk faces, which was never a pretty sight. We all had to pay up. He gave us freebies on the house. I would get deals because I went there every night and blacked out at some point. The bouncer used to smoke with me out front before marijuana became legal.

Everyone would wait for me to show up. I was the staple of that bar. They should’ve named it after me: Ben’s Hideout. But that never happened. I would’ve loved to have had a bar named after me and have my picture on the wall, so people, decades later, would see who the best customer was in the early part of the century. The picture would’ve been framed, with me in front of a group of regulars.

There was one time, when I blacked out and ended up at the bar in Hollywood, not knowing how I got there. I called my buddy from work, who’d driven me after the work party.

“What the hell happened last night?” I said.

“Oh, we ended up at your watering hole, and you fell asleep at the counter.”

“I was afraid of that,” I said.

“You climbed onto the counter and slept there.”

“No, I didn’t. And they let me?”

“They let you until closing time.”

I went there the night after he’d told me, just to confirm that it happened and that I wasn’t booted out permanently. And my favorite bartender said, “Yes, you did.” That was when I knew I owned the place. The scariest part about that particular blackout was that when I awoke the next morning with a wicked hangover, I saw everything in the right place. My shoes were exactly where I always put them. The same with my wallet, my keys, my clothes. None of it was scattered or missing. It was like my unconscious had navigated me through it all.

That happened over six years ago. Ancient times. I don’t drink anymore after having gone through it all–rehab, recovery, outpatient—still as the same person. A part of me still wishes he was still doing it with the regulars.