A
man is, ultimately, the sum of his accomplishments.
Each culture, of course, has a different idea as to
what rates as an accomplishment. Muslims, for example,
put a tremendous amount of stock into making a pilgrimage
to Mecca, while generations of Frenchmen have taken
great pride in not tripping over their discarded rifles
while fleeing the Germans.
The subculture of avid drinkers, living as we do by
our own set of rules and priorities, has an entirely
different idea altogether, to the degree that our
notion of a goal worth achieving may well appear
bad behavior or even a criminal offense to the
parent culture.
I think it a sad sign of the times that, in this age
of entrenched nannyism and political correctness,
a person is more likely to be judged by what he refrained
from doing than what he actually did. It’s
no longer important that you climbed the mountain,
but rather how many boulders you didn't “accidentally”
dislodge and let roll down on the less daring hunkered
in the valley below.
Fortunately, imbibers have historically been immune
to popular opinion, so hence this list. If you
manage all forty before you take a barstool at
St. Gabriel’s
Pearly Gate Lounge, you may feel secure in the
fact that you’ve lived a rich and full life,
even if only the boys and girls down at happy
hour think so. And when you do belly up to that
big open bar in the sky and the bartender asks: “What
sort of life did you lead?” you can look
him right in the eye and say, “Gabe, baby,
I’m glad this is eternity,
because I’ve got a helluva lot of stories to
tell.”
1.)
Open and close a bar.
Find one that opens its doors before noon. Stake out
a comfortable seat and hunker down. Resist informing
the bartender of your tremendous plan, as this will
cause him to pour waves of pre-celebratory shots and
you won’t survive happy hour. Pacing is everything.
Watch the crowds come and go, watch bartenders rise,
reign and fade while you remain like a cagey Methuselah.
From that day forward, within the walls of that bar
at least, your name will be legend.
2.)
Go on a bender.
I don’t mean a weekend binge. I’m talking
a full-bore, hooch-bent, screw-work hoolihan.
Dangerous, yes, but so is getting out of bed in the
morning. True benders have gone the way of the snap
brim fedora, which makes them all the greater currency
in the world of drunks. It won’t be easy. You
must start drinking the moment you wake up and carry
on until you go under. Then start over again. In your
grandfather’s day you had to drink two weeks straight
before you could officially declare yourself on a proper
jag, but that’s when a mug of beer cost a nickel.
These days four straight days and nights will give you
all the bragging rights you need.
3.)
Drink a fifth of hard liquor, by yourself, in one day.
For some this is a typical evening, the rest will have
to try harder. Unplug the phone, don’t answer
the door and get down with your bad self. Stock up on
ice, gather mixers if you need them, crack the seal
and, inch by inch, take that proud bottle down. Take
your own sweet time. Near the bottom you will discover
a rich inner landscape you thought a barren desert.
Explore it.
4.)
Dance like a fool in front of a large hooting crowd.
Cast aside your fear of public opinion, march to the
center of the room’s attention and boogie
down. You don’t need a partner, you don’t
even need music, do a happy jig to the beat of your
own drum. Of course, it helps to be really really drunk.
5.)
Spend a night in the drunk tank.
While getting captured by the Man goes against the most
primal of drunkard instincts, if you’re putting
your time and liquor in, it’s going to happen.
Make the most of the experience. Pretend you’re
Cool Hand Luke. And don’t refrain from telling
your friends: Among drunks, the real ones anyway, a
night in the tank is a very large feather in the drinking
cap.
6.)
Get drunk on the grave of your hero.
Wait until the cemetery closes for the night, then slip
over the fence with a bottle of something strong. Prop
your back against the gravestone and tell your hero
how much he inspired you, how he changed your life,
revel in the fact that your inspiration is only six
feet of hard-packed earth away. It’ll be the greatest
one-sided conversation you’ll ever have. Then
pass out. Let the groundskeeper be your alarm clock.
7.)
Buy a crowded bar a round.
For no reason at all. Jump up on a barstool and shout
it loud: “A round for the house! On me!”
Make sure you have a good toast ready, because, for
once, they’ll all be listening.
8.)
Embark on an impromptu road trip.
Out of the blue, propose a trip to Las Vegas, New Orleans,
Jack Kerouac’s grave or, for the love of God,
the Two-Headed Cattle Museum. It doesn’t really
matter where, the joy is in the journey. There’s
nothing like a sudden burst of irresponsible freedom
to shake up your worldview. It will be an adventure
you’ll never forget or get tired of talking about.
9.)
Get 86’d from a bar.
There are generally two types of drunkards in the world:
Those that get 86’d a lot and those who never
do. If you’re the latter, you’re missing
out on a very special feeling. A man with any character
at all must have enemies and places he is not
welcome—in the end we are not only defined by
our friends, but also those aligned against us. So choose
the type of bar you loathe. Get remorselessly smashed
on tequila. Let your lizard brain do your talking. Splash
the kerosene, drop the match and watch the bridge burn.
Few sentences in the English language bespeak a mysterious
dark side than: “I’m not allowed in there.
And, quite frankly, I don’t blame them.”
10.)
Extravagantly overtip a bartender.
The next time a bartender is especially kind or proficient,
lay a massive tip on her. I mean, massive.
You must be relatively sober or they’ll discount
the act as drunken foolishness. Say something smooth
like, “You’re the best of your kind,”
drop the bomb, and—this is important—walk
out of the bar without another word. With this single
act of unexpected generosity, you will restore a bartender’s
faith in humanity and give your own self-image a healthy
boost.
11.)
Walk up to an attractive stranger way out of your league
and buy him or her a drink.
You always wanted to do it. You’ve enviously watched
your smooth friends do it. Now it’s your turn.
The fear is nowhere proportionate to the risk to your
ego (she’s out of your league, remember?), yet
it still requires a certain amount of courage. It’s
akin to sticking your hand down into the garbage disposal.
The thing isn’t going to turn on by itself, but
still...
12.)
Conspire an afterhours at your favorite bar.
I’m not talking about them letting you have a
quick one in the back while they’re cleaning up.
I’m talking about drinking until the sun creeps
through the shut blinds. It takes a lot of time and
tips to earn the privilege, but there’s nothing
quite like it.
13.)
Make your best friend a perfect martini.
I mean perfect. Employ the proper utensils
and the highest-end liquor you can afford. Follow an
old-school recipe and take your time. You know how a
handmade present from a child always warms the heart
of a parent more than the most expensive gift? Same
deal. Just a little something for all the times your
pal bailed you out. And after your friend has enjoyed
your sublime creation, make yourself one, you magnificent
bastard.
14.)
Buy, build or steal a home bar.
Put the well right in your home. Outfit it with many
sparkling bottles, accruement and tools. Sit on your
barstool with a grossly over-poured cocktail and think:
“This is my bar. No one can cut me off, no one
can kick me out, none but the floor can announce last
call.” You’ve been a sharecropper long enough.
Get your own plot of land.
15.) Get carried home by your drinking buddies.
In the company of friends you can trust, get fantastically
loaded to the point you cannot stand, nevermind walk.
Let them brace you from both sides and carry you homeward.
Sing like an Irish uncle. Swear love and fealty to your
human crutches. These are the bonds that never break.
16.)
Get drunk with your father.
Getting loaded with the man who brought you into this
world is one of the most deeply mystical experiences
a human being can manage. If you can’t get your
father to commit, find an elder you respect.
17.)
Fight a good fight.
Samuel Johnson said “Every man thinks meanly of
himself for not having been a soldier, or not having
been at sea.” Men who go to their graves without
ever getting into a fistfight undoubtedly feel the same
way. How many times have you gone home thinking, “Damn,
I should have clocked that asshole.” Next time,
do it. Swing first, swing hard, and make sure you’re
in the right. You may not win, but at least you were
in there swinging. Fear of losing a fight never stopped
Bukowski and neither should it stop you.
18.)
Visit the source of your favorite beer, wine or liquor.
Make a pilgrimage to the headwaters. Follow the river
that’s fed you joy to its source. Stand amongst
the vats and barrels and absorb the knowledge that this
is the spring from which the good times flow. Drink
as many free samples as they’ll give you. It might
mean a trip to Dublin or Tennessee, but from that moment
on you can gaze into your glass and think, “Lad,
I met your mother.”
19.)
Drunkenly watch the sun come up with your best boozing
buddies and a bottle.
You’ve spent plenty of time railing against the
dying of the light, this time welcome its birth. With
a shot.
20.)
Sit in on an A.A. meeting.
Not all accomplishments are rum and games. File this
under the heading of facing your fears. Just as Jonah
found enlightenment in the belly of a beast, so will
you. You may come to look at it as a sober examination
of the safety net (or trampoline, as the case may be).
You may view it as a cautionary trip to hell. Either
way, you’ll never have to wonder again.
21.)
Hit a dozen bars in one night.
Make like Marco Polo. Instead of eating one lousy apple,
take a bite out of a dozen exotic fruits. Chase the
ever elusive good time. A rolling stone gathers no bar
tabs.
22.)
Try at least one hundred different drinks.
Too often we drunks get trapped in a rut, forgetting
there is a wide and golden world of forgotten cocktails,
strangely-hued beers, mysterious liquors and wines from
places we cannot pronounce. Explore the world from your
barstool. One need only thumb through a bartender’s
guide to realize how wide that world is. And when you
return to your rut, and you probably will, you’ll
appreciate just how good home can be after months on
the road.
23.)
Get loaded in the land of your forefathers.
An effortless task for Europeans, a broad leap of faith
for we colonials. Return to the land from whence your
blood sprang, sit down to drinks with those your bold
forefathers left behind. And for godsakes, don’t
order a Bud.
24.)
Juice on the job.
You will never comprehend just how pleasurable the workaday
grind can be until you bring your old chum alcohol along.
You don’t have to get boss-punching drunk, just
sneak enough to loosen up that tight harness. It’ll
make you wish you worked for a drinking magazine.
25.)
Split a magnum of expensive champagne with your true
love.
Do it up like F. Scott and Zelda before they went crazy.
Realize that this is one of the precious few times you
can get swizzled in front of your better half and she’ll
think it’s wonderfully romantic.
26.)
Give a hobo twenty bucks.
Make him promise he’s going to spend it on hooch.
It won’t be a hard sell. Twenty bucks is the price
of a crappy shirt to you, to our alley brethren it’s
a gift from the gods.
27.)
Get loaded and tell your boss exactly how you feel.
It could go down at the company picnic, the Christmas
party, or maybe, if you’re really going after
Accomplishment #24, right at the office. It’s
tremendously cathartic. Years of stress and bitterness
will drop from your shoulders and for the first time,
after you’re done unloading, you will see your
employer as an actual human being. You may very well
get fired, but hey, if you’re angry enough to
go berserk on your boss, you need to get a new job anyway.
28.)
Send a friend a bottle of good liquor.
Apropos of nothing and don’t tell him it’s
coming. Attach a card reading: “Tonight the drinks
are on me.” He will never forget it. There is
no better feeling than unexpected free booze.
29.)
Eat a pickled egg from the big jar.
A bar must own a certain amount of character to carry
the big jar. Maybe you’ve seen one. A jar large
enough to hold Jay Leno’s head, populated with
slightly off-color eggs floating in a murky fluid. You
always wondered what they tasted like and it’s
time to find out.
30.)
Go on a fishing trip with your pals.
Ensure you bring enough beer and liquor to paralyze
the nation of Liechtenstein. Fishing tackle is optional.
Drink near a body of water (you don’t actually
have to come in contact or even see the water, but it
should be nearby), then, when night falls, build a huge
campfire. There is nothing more conducive to male bonding
and rampant drinking than a campfire. Trust me, strip
clubs come in a distant second.
31.)
Eat the worm.
It’s a cliche, but so are strippers at a bachelor
party. It must be done. The last thing you want to do
is mutter a half-hearted lie to your grand kids when
they squeal, “Gramps, did you eat the
worm?”
32.)
Learn at least one traditional drinking song.
Ethnically fractured and mixed as we are, we colonials
have lost the art of the booze ballad. Watch a European
football match on television and first thing you notice
is the fans know one hell of a lot of songs. All we
Yanks can manage is the “Na-na-na” song
and chants of “De-fense!” Sure, we all know
the words of Ring of Fire by rote, but what
of The Pub with No Beer, My Lip Is on the Cup, and
Drunk Last Night, Drunk the Night Before? Also,
there’s nothing like a table of drunks bellowing
an unidentifiable song in unison to scare the bejesus
out of the bar staff.
33.)
Steal some booze.
Against the law? Sure. A hell of a rush? Absolutely.
Of course, not getting caught is very important. Plan
well. Nothing tastes quite so sweet.
34.)
Spend half a paycheck on a single bottle of liquor.
So much money for so little booze. We’ve spent
our lives learning the art of getting the most stagger
out of the smallest investment. We’ve heard rumors
of those insanely expensive bottles, but they might
as well sell them on Mars. Out of spite, you’ve
probably told yourself: “Screw that—booze
is booze. What’s it gonna do, get me five times
drunker?” In a better world, maybe. Depending
upon the sensitivity of your palette, however, you may
come to understand that the rich really do
have it better than us. And when I say better, I mean
they can afford better booze.
35.)
Start your long-awaited and very personal autobiography:
Me and the Booze: A Love Story.
You don’t have to finish it. Very few do. The
point is, the very act of starting an autobiography
means you think you’ve lived an exciting enough
life to deserve one. Strive for that day.
36.)
Try absinthe.
Do the full ritual with the spoon and sugar. Drink enough
to feel the full effect. Stroll the path that Hemingway,
Van Gogh, Degas, F. Scott, and myriad other geniuses
spent their lives pounding flat. Just don’t cut
your ear off.
37.)
Watch the movie Barfly with five of your closest
friends.
Without a doubt the finest drinking movie ever put to
celluloid. Make sure there’s plenty of booze on
hand because you’ll want to drink along.
38.)
Work at least a week as a bartender.
You’ll never fully understand the drinking culture
as a whole until you’ve spent some time on the
supply side of the wood. The empathy it will lever into
your psyche will change your bar behavior forever.
39.)
Make your own beer, wine or moonshine.
There are fewer finer feelings in the world than to
nurture booze from it’s humble, evil-tasting origins
to something you can get hammered on. Just expect to
repeat these words over and over again when you go mad
on the blood of your creation: “I made this! Me!
And now I’m drinking it! Woo-hoo!”
40.)
Go to your place of worship loaded.
Not so loaded they’ll finger you as a walking
incarnation of Demon Rum, just enough to make the droning
sermons lip-bitingly hilarious. It’s often said
that liquor can bring you closer to God, so just think
how close you’ll be when you’re hammered
in his house.
—Frank Rich
(The author would like to thank Luke Schmaltz and
Padraig Tilbury for their contributions to his list.)