Friday, May 30, 2008

I Would Have Liked to Wire a Car Bomb

While this does not concern drinking before noon per se, this post will show the ramifications of a few spirits in the wee hours of the morning.

Volunteering in a church band has its perks. For one, when you play venues other than your church sanctuary, you get to be a rock star. Another perk is that since we are big fans of food, the church takes us out to dinner at Outback around once a year.


Barring the steaks I’ve cooked in an amazing scotch marinade, Outback makes the best New York strip I’ve ever eaten (they also happened to have an excellent clam chowder on the menu). This is still just exposition, so suffice to say things went as usual with band outings. Somehow all 6 unmarried men wound up at one booth and those who did not fit that description were at the one directly behind us (being much louder, I should add). With a belly full of steak, Brian who owes Lilo money and I made a phone call and headed to my favorite bar: Blue Ridge.


We met up with Mark, whom we met at a Presbyterian barn dance about a month ago. Mark the Presbyterian is a respectable fellow who can brew a killer high gravity ale. This would be the reason Brian and I decided to adopt him as a drinking buddy (I think we pretty much had to after we spent just as much time with him at the dance as we did with our dates). Blue Ridge was running not only their usual $2.50 Wednesday pint special, but they also had $4 Irish car bombs. Though I’m not the biggest car bomb fan, when they’re $4, you pretty much have to go for it. I think you break some law somewhere if you don’t. We had a few drinks (while listening to Jurassic 5) and since I don’t live in the woods anymore, I was in bed by 11:15 PM feeling quite full.


Some time after putting my head on the pillow, I wound up in a strange, nice-looking suburban neighborhood. The lawns were neatly kept and the hedges trimmed just right. I went into the house that I assume belonged to me and it did not reflect the outer appearance of said neighborhood. It had the deep brown shag carpet of the laundry room of the house where I spent my childhood. The whole place smelled like smoke. Two old ladies lived in the house. I spoke to them and they started cackling and chasing me with knives. One was in a wheelchair, but apparently not bound by the usual stair limitations a person in a wheelchair usually faces. I ran upstairs, across a balcony, down another set of stairs, and outside into the street.


I then leapt out of bed, sweating. I looked at my phone: it read 2:16 AM. I shook my head and flopped back down onto the bed.


After I fell asleep again, I was right back where I had been before I woke up. I was running down the street with the two old ladies screaming at me from their front porch like they were Mrs. Henry Lafayette Dubose out of To Kill A Mockingbird. I made it up the street to another house with an open garage. For some reason it seemed like a good idea to walk in there. I promptly ran out because a girl about 4 feet tall with blue skin was throwing things at me.


I awoke a second time. Out loud, I said, “Seriously?” I saw that it was after 4 AM, so I rolled over and went back to sleep.


The dream continued. Now a whole host of strange people in this town were chasing me. I ducked into what should have been my saving grace: a sporting goods store. In most zombie movies, there is a sporting goods store. Why? Because that’s where you get the weapons that the protagonists use to fend off the zombie horde until the helicopter shows up after all but one person is dead. When you’ve got a sporting goods store you don’t have to explain why the movie is 2 hours long instead of 90 minutes and you also don’t have to come up with a hokey reason why the protagonists wound up with enough weapons to overthrow New Zealand. Sporting goods stores are wonderful plot devices unless I’m making up the plot as it goes along. There were no guns and no large hunting knives; I couldn’t even find a baseball bat. Just as I was about to start throwing baseballs at these people I woke up for the third time. Now it was after 7:30 AM.


I thought about getting up and starting my day, but it’s my day off. I don’t get up early on my day off unless there’s fishing to be done or a waterfall that needs to be jumped. So I did what good bachelors everywhere do: I got up just in time to take a nap on the couch. No murderous townsfolk (or old ladies with 24th century wheelchairs), it was the best sleep I got all morning.


While New York may be full of Irish folk, New York and the Irish do not mix well in one’s gastrointestinal tract.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

10 Reasons to Drink Before Noon

1. Hair of the Dog: Oh, hangovers... I don't know why an ice cold Miller Lite cures the headache/shakes/all-over-yucky-feeling the next morning, but thank heaven it does!

2. Day Games: None of the Cubs home games this season actually start before noon...but Wrigleyville exists for pre-drinking! Go Cubs, go.

3. Bacon: Brunch is my favorite meal. Ever. And brunch means Bloody Marys. (insert history lesson) Thank you Henry Tudor for hatin' on the Catholics; you seriously pissed off your daughter Mary, and she killed a whole lot of Protestants after you died. Perfect inspiration for a drink!

4. Vacation: The hotel in Puerto Rico actually brought mimosas out to me as I burned in the tropical sun. I didn't have to leave my towel to get booze! (Tango, tango, tango sed. Yo quiero beber.)

5. Being at Mommie and Daddy's: Not because I need to self-medicate when I'm with my parents. Rather, drinking in my parents' home signifies the change in our relationship since my entrance into adulthood.

6. Sunday Funday: Heed! McGees! Now! Fourteen hours of drinking in one place on a Sunday...GLORIOUS. Suck-and-Blows + DJ Rob + 2-for-1 bombs + the NFL package + the best wings in the city = Sunday Funday.

(6.5. Look, I don't do church. But if I did, you best believe I'd be hittin' that communion wine. Holla, blood of Christ!)

7. Anything Starbucks can do, the Irish can do better: The best part of waking up is Folgers in your cup; assuming the cream and sugar in said Folgers is actually Jameson and Baileys. Mmmm...Irish coffee.

8. Tailgating: Cheer, cheer for old Notre Dame! Or the Chiefs, or the Bears. Or whichever team of leatherheads inspires you to grill tubed meat in a parking lot at 8:00 am!

9. Summer in the City...: means cleavage, cleavage, cleavage. It also means beaches, streetfests, sidewalk tables on Southport... All of these demand a.m. drinking! Cheers!

10. Because I can, DAMMIT!: Nuff said.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Tow Truck Saves the Day

So, as always, there is never a dull moment in my life. We all went out last night for a company shin-dig, and before you know it, we are at a dirty bar and it is 2 o’clock in the A.M. Anyway I’m getting off the point. I woke up this morning, looked out the window and my car is not there…. hmmm, weird. Most people would think, hey some (derogatory word) stole my car. Unless of course, you’re like me and you have lived here for 2 years and have not ever registered your car in NC… Anyway, I called into work to find someone to cover for me and SUCCESS!

So, here’s where we stand - I found my car, this amazing girl goes to the store and gets food for breakfast, and yes, she brings back orange juice and champagne. Yeah I said it, mimosas before noon. The point of the story is it cost me 60 dollars to get the car back, but I got an extra day off, went to the pool, got a tan and I am still drinking. Living the dream!

Yours truly, Idaho Matt…

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Today's Theme: Meat

Five things in my life that make me phenomenally happy:

1. Radiohead: Two nights - two states - warm rain - sweet, sweet cousins - a gun and a pack of sandwiches - cool bouncers - chill cops - being herded into a giant meat grinder - expeditions into the woods - plans for Lolla in August - really good seats - really great times. (I think I may keep the tattoo after all.)

2. Vitamins: I am apparently anemic. I have been told the bruises that I have right now make me look like a battered housewife; I am literally, covered from head to toe. I generally try to stay on top of my iron intake, since I don’t really eat red meat, but life has been irregular lately and I have slipped into the habit of more beer and less nutrients. However, yesterday I finally found my bottle of vitamins that had been packed away in a moving box, and when I found them, I actually said (aloud), “Hell yeah!” You’d of thought, by my excitement, that I was a cokehead who had just found their long lost stash.

3. Amazing friends: I am so lucky to have bad-ass friends who will drive three and a half hours from Charleston to go to a show with me. I am so lucky to have co-workers who are groovy and who could "just tell" that I needed to "bond"/vent over Soco shots and wings at two in the morning last night - thanks K. I am also so lucky to have Idaho Matt living next door. He understands my nonsense and thought process and is totally okay with every last stupid thing that I do. And he tirelessly supports me, puts my laundry in the dryer, and makes me laugh nonstop. Ha! You, good sir, are my favorite meat mallet!

4. Hunting: Not the kind of hunting where you go and kill a deer for venison, but the kind where you are on the prowl for a hot partner. I mean, all the allure and fun is really in the thrill of the chase, right? After you actually catch the person, it is all kind of wrong/boring/useless anyway... Ah yes, the joys and temptations of single, fresh meat. Batter up, baby.

5. Liquid breakfasts: It can be tough to find a place that serves a good brunch in the South. Not that there aren’t plenty of places that will dish up some shrimp and grits, but very few have that quintessential ingredient that qualifies them as a good brunch establishment: a fully stocked bar available at 10:00 AM (forget ambrosia, Mimosas are the nectar of the gods). Not only was Eddie's Place voted the best breakfast joint in Charlotte, but it is within walking distance from my new apartment… and they serve livermush! What? You’ve never had livermush? Until this morning, neither had I, but with a name like livermush, how could I not try it out (this being the S.o.E. and all)? Let me tell you kids, livermush is not only super fun to say, but it is also quite delicious.

A morning toast:
May those who love us - love us
For those who don't - may god turn their hearts
For those who never will - may god turn their ankles so we will know them by their limp


Cheers, to those I give a shit about

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

On A More Serious Note

It took a little Sailor Jerry's in my sweet tea this morning to help me read the newest update out of Burma.

For those of you who don't know, I've spent a fair amount of time in Southeast Asia. While I've not spent time in Burma (you'll hear "Myanmar" on the news), a piece of my heart remains in that region of the world.

Just a quick crash course in things Burmese:

-Burma is currently known as Myanmar, though this is unrecognized by many as the official moniker
-Burma's democratic government was overthrown by a military coup in 1962
-Free speech is virtually non-existent in Burma
-Forced labor and forced prositution are not uncommon (including human trafficking to Thailand)
-Most protests if not all protests against the government have been violently repressed


Those things being said, do you honestly think any financial aid that is sent to Burma as a means to house and feed its people will help? I tell you no; it will only help in padding the pockets of government officials.

I speak this not as a mainly conservative American (who really could give a rat's ass about who the white neighborhoods in NC will vote for today), but as a person who has seen the governmental corruption of Southeast Asia first hand and knows that very little of the financial aid that is sent to help the Burmese homeless (1/5 of the entire country's population). I pray it won't be a repeat of the 2004 tsunami that killed so many in Indonesia (particularly in Aceh). As I have been watching CNN while writing this, one of the only Western reporters in Burma was chased out of a refugee camp by some soldiers.

I hope that your thoughts and prayers will go out to God for the Burmese today.