Authors: Augusten Burroughs
Tags: #Humor, #Biography & Autobiography, #Alcoholism, #Gay, #Contemporary
“Augusten?” David asks. “Would you like to share your feelings?”
I look at all the faces looking at me. Except Pregnant Paul; he is looking away.
I can’t be here, this can’t be happening. I don’t know what to say. I don’t know what I feel
. “I feel like I want to leave. Like this was a big mistake.”
Paul turns, quickly looks at me. “That’s exactly how I felt when I first came here,” he says.
Then somebody else says, “Me too.”
And then somebody else, “It took about a week before I finally accepted it.”
“Good, good,” David says in a soothing tone.
A WASPy looking man who is slumped down in his chair suddenly bursts into tears. The room falls silent. I could be wrong, but I believe I sense palpable excitement in the air as everyone suddenly turns to him. He buries his face in his hands and sobs so hard that his entire body rocks. A couple people whisper something back and forth.
David turns to them with his finger on his lip. “
Shhhhhhhhhh
.”
The WASP chokes and then, much to my horror, looks directly at me and says, “I don’t belong here, either. I don’t belong in this room or in this goddamn world. I should be dead.”
He continues to look at me and I look at him back, afraid that if I break eye contact he will hurl a chair at me.
David asks in a very soft voice, “Tom, why do you feel you should be dead?”
The WASP looks at him.
Phew
. Let this mess transfer onto a trained professional.
Then the WASP starts talking. He’s talking about how he drank every single night and on the nights he didn’t drink would get really sick. He’s been in and out of rehab six times and he feels this is his last chance. And the reason he is here this time is because he was driving his parents to a party and they didn’t realize he was drunk. They thought he was on the wagon. But he was in a blackout. He veered off the road and the car rolled over an embankment and landed against a tree. His mother’s legs were crushed. Now she’s paralyzed from the waist down. And every time he looks at her, he realizes that if he had killed himself earlier, his mother would be okay. Now he can’t even look at her without reliving that night.
I notice he is wearing cuff links on his pinstriped shirt. Cuff links and loafers. But when you look at his eyes, all you see is destruction and emptiness. Something so sad it scares me. It scares me because I almost recognize it. He could be an ad guy.
“I had a car accident,” says another man who is wearing a cowboy hat. “My face went right through the windshield, thirty-two stitches,” he says, pointing to the scar that runs across his forehead, just below the brim of his hat. “Think that stopped me? Hell no. And you know why? ’Cause I didn’t hit nobody else. It was only me that got hurt, and I don’t count, see?”
Tom, the WASP, looks at the cowboy and nods his head. Yeah, he knows.
Car accidents, facial lacerations, paralyzed mothers . . . I am definitely in the wrong place. This is for hard-core alcoholics. Rock-bottom, ruined-their-lives alcoholics. I’m an Advertising Alcoholic. An eccentric mess. I fold my arms across my chest and look out the window at the lone tree in the distance. The tree looks homeless. It looks like—oh, I don’t know—an advertising copywriter who refused to go to rehab and got fired. A general sense of doom swells inside of me.
A woman says, “But Dale, you are important. It’s your disease that makes you feel you’re not.”
David looks at the woman who just spoke. He’s wearing a naughty face. “You know the rules Helen. If you have something to say,
use an ‘I’ statement
.”
Helen blushes slightly and stammers. “Okay, okay, you’re right. I’m sorry.” She inhales very deeply, slides her eyes up to the ceiling. “What I mean is that
I
could relate to your story because I have felt that my drinking was okay as long as it didn’t hurt anybody. But in the program, I’m starting to realize that I do matter, that I am somebody who is worth something and it’s the booze and the crack that make me feel I’m not. If I don’t use, I can’t lose.” Then she looks at the cowboy. “Dale, I’m very glad you shared that. And you too, Tom. I really got a lot out of what both of you said . . . so thanks.” She shrugs and smiles.
I’m thinking,
In the program . . . thanks for sharing . . . if I don’t use, I can’t lose . . .
What language are these people speaking? I remember I was really freaked out on my first day in advertising, because I could barely understand a word people said. It was as if I had taken a job in Antwerp: Storyboards, VO, Tag, Farm-out, CA, Rep, Donut-middle. It was like,
Huh?
My favorite phrase was “Two-Cs-in-a-K.” This referred to the standard packaged goods commercial. It stood for Two Cunts in a Kitchen.
I say, “There seems to be an alcoholic language and I don’t speak it.” I have never had an ear for languages, which is yet another reason why I should leave right now.
People chuckle knowingly.
David smiles.
I turn red and mentally scold myself for actually
involving
myself with these people. Better to sit quietly, avert the eyes. Do
not
ask the Iranian hijackers for an extra pillow.
David says, “Yup, there’s a language all right. You’ll pick it up really quickly. But if there’s some particular thing you heard that you don’t understand, just tell us and we can explain it to you.”
Marion briefly departs her world of low self-esteem long enough to smile at me.
I wipe my hands on my pants. They leave dark wet marks behind. I am feeling so out of place and uncomfortable, not to mention threatened. Like it’s the first day of high school and I showed up in a red Speedo. I swallow hard. “Well, this woman here . . .” I point to the woman who had just “shared.” “Helen, is it?”
She nods.
“Yeah, so Helen, she said something about ‘in the program’ and I guess I was wondering what a ‘program’ is.” Somehow, I do not think
a program
in any way resembles something Julie from
The Love Boat
would dream up.
“Would anybody like to answer Augusten’s question?”
Pregnant Paul smiles at me, looks like he’s about to open his mouth.
“Sure. Hi Augusten, I’m Brian and I’m a drug addict,” says a guy who has been silent the whole time. He has been not only silent, but borderline smirky.
“Hi, Brian!” says the room.
“A ‘program’ is basically AA terminology and it refers to the steps. You know the Twelve Steps?”
I shake my head vaguely and shrug. I only know the first step, which seems depressing enough: admitting I am powerless over alcohol, even bad sangria. That there are eleven additional steps is daunting.
“Okay, well, when you ‘work your program’ all that means is that you’re doing everything you can do to stay sober, according to the steps. You’ll see. You’ll see a lot of AA when you get out of here.”
That should be interesting. I’ve always wondered what an AA meeting is like. The reason I’ve never been to one—aside from the fact that you can’t drink at them—is because I’m afraid what I see in my head might be close to the truth: Held downstairs in the dank, unused basements of churches, I envision a shamed group of people wearing long dark coats and old Foster Grant sunglasses, sitting in folding metal chairs. Everyone is clutching a white Styrofoam cup filled halfway with bad coffee. Filled only halfway so the coffee doesn’t slosh out, due to the fact that everyone’s hands are trembling from withdrawal. I see one person after another introducing themselves. . . . “. . . and I’m an alcoholic.” And I hear the other alcoholics applauding. “Congratulations!! Welcome!! One day at a time!!” Maybe they talk about how much they want to drink. “And I would kill for a Manhattan right now.” And somebody else says “. . . on the rocks, a Manhattan on the rocks . . .” And a few people moan and you hear all of these frantic sips of coffee all at once. Maybe there’s even a secret handshake, like the Mormons who also don’t drink. My feeling has always been that if AA means sitting around in the bottom of a church talking endlessly about how much I want to drink, I’d rather never talk about drinking. I’d rather talk about modern art or advertising or screenplay ideas, while tossing back shots. So yeah, it’ll be interesting to see what the mystical force of AA really is. I can hardly wait. Check please.
Why does this have to be so complicated? I wish they could just cut your “drinker” out of you. Like having a kidney stone removed. You check into the hospital as an outpatient, get anesthetized from the waist down, they put headphones on you and you listen to Enya. Fifteen minutes later, the doctor lifts the headphones off and shows you the small, turd-colored organ he extracted from somewhere inside you. I see it looking like a snail.
“Would you like to save it . . . as a souvenir?”
“No, Dr. Zizmor, toss it. I don’t want any reminder.”
The doctor slaps you on the back on your way out. “Congratulations, you’re now a sober man.”
“Could I say something to the group?” Brian asks.
“Of course,” says David.
“I would just like everyone to know that I am down to my last doses of Valium and by Monday, I should be off of it entirely.”
The room applauds.
Why does he get Valium? All I get is a McFishThing sandwich, along with Mother’s Little Helper so I don’t go into some alcoholic withdrawal shock. I want Valium
.
Yet there’s something about this Brian person I like. I sense that he is extremely intelligent. There’s a professionalism to the way he speaks, like he’s a therapist, that I find comforting. That’s just my gut instinct. I think tonight at dinner, maybe I will sit with him instead of Big Bobby and Kavi the Sex Addict.
Group lasts for an hour and a half. Having survived, I now have fifteen minutes before my next piece of structured therapy: chemical dependency history, or CDH.
At the bottom of the stairs, Tom the WASP catches up to me. “It really does get better,” he says. “In a few days, you won’t want to leave this place.”
I smile, say, “Thanks,” and walk to my room thinking,
you are
so
wrong
.
I’m standing in front of a white marker board, upstairs, writing down “to the best of your ability” a complete history of my drinking.
“I want you to go back as far as possible and list everything . . . alcohol, barbituates, tranquilizers, speed, everything . . . even prescription painkillers. And don’t minimize. List your age, the substance, the quantity consumed and the regularity.”
So far on the board, I have written:
Age 7: Given NyQuil for cold. Grandfather is NyQuil salesman so we have cases of it. Green is favorite color so sometimes sneak sips.
Age 12: First real drunk. One bottle of red wine. Threw up on friend’s sheepdog.
Ages 13–17: Smoke pot once a week. Drink alcohol maybe once a week.
18: Drink nightly, always to intoxication. Five drinks per night, + or −
19–20: Drink maybe ten drinks per night, with occasional binges. Coke once every six months.
21 to present: A liter of Dewar’s a night, often chased with cocktails. Cocaine once a month.
I stand back and look. A jumble of blue words, my messy writing, my magic marker confession up here for all to see. I’ve never actually
quantified
before.
People look at the board, then back at me.
Tracy, the leader of the CDH group, looks at me with eyes that seem to belong to someone three times her age. It’s something beyond wisdom, all the way to insanity and back. It’s like her eyes are scarred from all the things she’s seen. “When you look at what you’ve just written, what do you feel?” she asks.
I look at the board. Now that it’s up there, it does seem like I drink a lot. “I guess I drink a lot.” I feel ashamed, like I wear the same pair of underwear for days at a time.
Brian, from Group, says, “Given the quantity of alcohol you’ve consumed, it’s a wonder you’re alive at all.”
And what makes Mr. Valium such an expert?
I wonder.
A lesbian wearing a blue
MALL OF AMERICA
sweatshirt tells me, “I am so happy that you’re here. You need to be here.”
A couple of other people agree.
Glad you’re here. You need to be here
. They may be right or they may be wrong. But the one thing that I know for sure is that this will make a great bar story.
“The amount of alcohol you consumed would be associated with late-stage alcoholism. You were very much in danger of alcoholic poisoning, an overdose. And I’m glad you’re here, too.” Tracy looks at me with genuine warmth and understanding. Something else, too. Something that makes me think we could have really partied together.
I figure I’ll up the ante. “Does Benadryl count?” A couple of people look at me. I shrug innocently like,
Shucks, I don’t know these things
.
“Benadryl? The antihistamine?” asks Tracy.
“Yes,” I say. “Does that count?”
“It depends,” she says, suspiciously.
“Oh. Well, the thing is, I can’t drink alcohol, not
any
alcohol, without having an allergic reaction. My face swells, my chest gets red, I get a metallic taste in my mouth and it’s hard to breathe. Even one drink will do it. But I found that if I take Benadryl before I drink, I’m okay.”
“How much Benadryl?” she asks.
Other people look at me, then at her, then back at me. This could be Wimbledon.
I suddenly realize that the amount is so staggeringly large that I am ashamed to admit it. “Ten pills a day. Usually. Sometimes fifteen.”
Her eyes widen in alarm. “And the recommended dosage? What is that?” But she’s not really asking me the dosage, she’s asking me if I recognize insane when I see it. I play along.
“Two.”
She looks at me. Actually, right through me to the back of the chair. She can see its upholstery despite the fact that my body is blocking the view. She says nothing. Because she knows she doesn’t need to say anything. She knows that I already know. All she does is close her eyes and give me a small smile. “Yep, I’m very glad you’re here.”