Wednesday, April 22, 2009

The Hour with The Power!

I’m getting a visual migraine. Pretty sure these are psycho-somatic, something I heard Michelle got, and so now I get them too when the situation arises. Either way, it’s getting hard to see. I can still write though. That’s good.

Last week (ye gods, has it been over a week already?), coming home from a Mets game, I got to the new South Ferry train station and observed the new escalators. They’re impressive, in a low-key sort of way. Until someone goes to use them, they run at a very slow pace, saving energy. Then when someone walks up, they increase speed to draw the person or people up the stairs. There’s a metaphor in there. Maybe a song.

*******

Last Tuesday night, I got together with a few of my friends and played a game, a drinking game. A Power Hour to be exact. This is, for those who don’t know, when you drink a shot of beer every minute on the minute, for an hour straight. If my math is correct, you end up drinking seven and a half cans of beer in an hour, getting you quite drunk. That, of course, is the whole purpose of the game. It certainly worked, but that’s not what this is about. This is about doing it on a Tuesday night.

On the surface, and pretty much every level below, this seems like a bad idea. I had gotten up pretty early for work that morning, and would be doing the same on Wednesday. On this particular week, I had quite a lot to do at work to boot, so the ability to focus would be useful. Besides, drinking on the weeknights is something I generally try to avoid, as I worry it will lead to just drinking all the time, something I feel I may be in danger of doing. Plus, if this was just a one-off desire to cut loose and get wasted, why? Was there something wrong, something stressing me out that drove me to want to do this so much I had to convince my friends to do it with me1?

I think, and I emphasize “think” because I feel I know myself far worse than I used to, that I wanted to do this so much to prove a point. You see, sure I’m 28 years old, sure I’m holding down a real job-type job, sure I pay rent. But you know what? That rent’s baby rent, I live with my folks, all the separate entrance in the world doesn’t change that. I’m not married, I don’t have kids. I don’t have pets. I don’t have a house, or a car, or a cell phone. I don’t even have a credit card. All I have is my rent and my student loans. If I lost my job tomorrow, while it would obviously suck huge, I’m not in a position where my life would spiral out of control. There is no reason for me not to cut loose, except life, or societal pressure, tells me not too.

You see, at 28, people have real substantial lives. Families. Responsibilities. Some of my friends have them. I think I got carried along in that. I get older, and think that I have to act or behave in a certain way, a way befitting my age, because that’s what everyone else is doing.

The retort I hear ringing in my head already2 is that this was just some desperate salvo in the face of growing up, then. That I should stop trying to live in the past and at least act like I’m an adult.

I am an adult. I don’t have to act like it, it’s just what I am. What I’m getting at is that the other stuff is an act. All that baggage, the burden of responsibility, the pressures of work, that’s the act. And it’s not a simple act either. It’s like I’m one of those South American frogs they talk about in Jurassic Park. The ones who start acting like females, then moving like females, then pretend to be females, then they actually become females. All that responsibility, all that worry, all that keep-treading-water attitude that we all take on hardens, it calcifies around you and then it’s what you actually are. That’s what I was fighting against last Tuesday.

So… here’s to drinking games on Tuesdays. To staying up ‘til 2am playing video games. To doing whatever it is you do – You know what? This is too hokey, even for me. That’s why I wanted to drink last Tuesday though.

The writing got rid of the migraine. Huh.

1. They’re glad they did!
2. Whenever I debate with myself, I always picture people I know (or knew) talking to me, never my own voice.

12 comments:

  1. What's with the 1. and the 2. at the end? and who were the people talking to you this time?

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  2. I can't repeat this enough: while I think all drinking games are stupid, the Power Hour is, of those I encountered, the dumbest one imaginable. That is all.

    WANTIVER!!!

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  3. I cannot believe that you don't have a credit card. I mean, I slightly envy you for it, but at the same time, I don't know how you exist without it. In fact, how do you order the Disney tickets? You mail them a check?

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  4. Twas a Powerful Hour.

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  5. The lack of a credit card is worthy of envy, until you go to buy a house.
    I was perfectly fine living my credit-card free existence, proud that I was debt free, until that day I realized aside from 1 student loan I had NO credit to my name. I've been doing what I can since then to build it up, shopping... shopping... charging... it's tough I tell ya'! It's all part of my dream to one say own roomS.

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  6. There's footnotes in there, at least on my page, that's what the one and two are. Weird.
    I have a debit card with a Visa logo. I pay those Disney tickets in cold, hard cash!

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  7. Ah! They just came up as a big "1" and "2" for me up against the end of "me" and "already", I just thought there was some funky formatting going on, my mistake! I didn't put 1 and 2 together...
    GET IT... 1 and 2!?!?

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  8. Oh, okay. So you are able to charge things, but it just debits. I thought you had nothing.

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  9. Jen! Tom has many fine qualities!

    The password is hummelyn! That sounds dirty.

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  10. I believe there are those of us who want to be grown ups and those of us who are perfectly happy with adolescence. All the assets in the world can't change that. My take on growing up is you do what you have to. I have a house, 2 cars, 2 kids, and a husband. And in those ways I guess I'm grown up. But only because I have to be and only with regards to those specific entities. Now because I am the latter of the two I mentioned, I have nights like last Friday. I actually have them quite frequently. I have trouble with rules, laws, and boundaries. I drink way too much and I've dabbled in some substances I obviously shouldn't. I could have all the assets, kids, and responsibilities in the world, that is not going to change who I am. I take care of what I have to take care of. You would do the same. Taking on another job or another child definitely doesn't make me more mature. It just means I have more responsibilities. So you taking on less doesn't make you less mature. It just simply means that you have less responsibilities... Jerkface!

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  11. Good points, Sue. Especially the last thing you said!

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  12. Have you ever read "Mother Night" by Kurt Vonnegut? It is my favorite book. I would recommend at least watching the movie adaptation with Nick Nolte if you don't want to commit to reading it. The main character is an american playwrite living in Germany in the 1930's. He is asked by the American government to become a high-ranking Nazi so that he can act as an American spy. He becomes a propaganda officer and transmits secret messages to American agents via his broadcasts. One of the best lines in the movie is when his father in law, a died-in-the-wool nazi says, "Everything that made me proud to be a Nazi came not from Hitler, but from you. You were the only thing that kept me from concluding that the country had gone insane."

    No, I am not calling you a Nazi. However, its the only book Vonnegut wrote that has a specifc moral, "Be careful what you pretend to be, because what you pretend to be ends up being what you are". I think about that a lot these days, as I remain a pretty resolved socialist working for one of the largest and most evil banks in the world. We are what we do, Tom. The decisions we make and the actions we choose to perform are the only things that will stay with us forever. Some people interpret that as punishment or reward after death. Personally, I think we see the fruits of our behaviors right here on Earth throughout our lives.

    Do the things that you love, and that make you happy. When you choose to do something, make sure that you are doing it with sincerety. Anything else may make you a person you don't want to be.


    Brendan, I assume you are NOT including "The Devo's Life Drinking Game" in your generalization.

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