Tag Archives: nineteen

the time I made a white russian

Every credible drinker has an impressive story about vomiting. Here is mine.ocean
It was spring break of sophomore year in college, and my friend Brent had access to a three-story house with an elevator on the beach in Wilmington, NC. After weeks of anticipation, a slew of eager underage college students piled into cars and went to the coast to ring in springtime. The house was amazing, equipped with a hot tub, and huge open rooms facing the Atlantic.

It was my last spring break as a teenager – I was turning 20 that summer—and it was important to go out with a bang.

The first night I tackled the business of getting wasted. Someone had ordered pizza, so I started responsibly, eating several slices to brace my stomach for what was to come. After I finished I surveyed the alcohol situation. I wanted a White Russian. Since there was no Kahlua in sight, I whipped up a mix of Starbucks mocha frappuccino, vodka, gin, half and half, and ice. I figured this resembled my drink of choice, and was proud of my collegiate problem solving skills.  I dumped the concoction into a plastic cup and began drinking it like it was kool-aid.  16kahlua About half an hour later I was sitting a top a comforter in a well-lit bedroom giggling away with my friends. Suddenly I felt it. The unmistakable tummy rumbling—the realization that something’s going to shoot out of your body, you’re just not sure where.  I excused myself and went to the bathroom and threw up. I recovered and rejoined my friends, thinking it was over. Little did I know, it was merely the beginning of the most prolific vomiting experience of my life.

An hour and one barf later, I wandered into the living room and tried to join the dance party. I figured I could handle it; who drinks barely one drink, pukes twice and then can’t rally and dance? I threw myself into some intense interpretive work, but something just wasn’t right.  There was no time to make it to the bathroom so I walked outside, slowly at first, thinking I could trick my stomach into pulling it together, and that’s when the big one hit.
night-beach-view-from I was on the third floor of the house and miraculously there was only one person on the balcony. James John. I didn’t know James that well. He wore tight jeans and flannel shirts and usually addressed me with one-word sentences or the occasional grunt. I was pretty sure he thought I was a big dummy and this situation was not going to help.

I was holding a bottle of water and as I lurched to the edge of the balcony the vomit literally shot out of my face. It was like a cannon. I had no control and I just hoped that those on the balcony below weren’t leaning into my stream.

I held my hair back with one hand and the water bottle with the other and projectile vomited like my life depended on it. Then I realized JJ was next to me. He reached out and took the water bottle out of my hand, freeing it up so I could use my hand to brace myself against the edge of the balcony while I convulsed the vomit out of myself. When I finally finished I looked up and he was standing there patiently averting his eyes and holding the bottle.  I wiped my mouth on the sleeve of my shirt and he handed the bottle back to me. I went back inside. officetub
It was around midnight and I surveyed the dance party, the bar, and the kids in bathing suits writhing around in the hot tub and spilling out of the elevator. I could partake in none of it.

I threw up every hour on the hour for nine hours. Sinks, toilets, balconies, trash cans. I covered all the bases. The last two times were just bile and it was pretty evident that I had somehow poisoned myself. They happened at 5 and 6am while I was sitting on the couch watching Boogie Nights with the only other person still awake. To this day that movie makes me want to puke.
It was four years before the smell of Kahlua didn’t have a similar effect.

The next day I went on a walk with James John, and he told me I was the ultimate post-modern girl. I had no idea what it meant but figured given the events of the previous night, it was probably not a compliment.

the time i was a hot mess dot com in london… part two

We were out at a bar with Jon and Felicity’s mates from Cambridge and everyone knew each other and no one knew me.  I downed three martinis and three buttery nipples, and then excused myself to the loo.
mmmmartini

The bathroom was large, clean and surprisingly deserted.

After completing a pee, I continued to sit, reassuring myself that leaving Jon would be ok, that going back to college with my dorm room and my roommate and my easy mac meals would be fine after my four months of European fantasy life.

My internal conversation must have lasted for a while because the next thing I knew, Jon had gotten into the bathroom and was knocking on the stall door insisting I let him in. There was about a foot of space on the floor and he crammed himself in it, sitting on the tile while I held court on the porcelain throne.

We talked for a long time and I don’t remember much of the conversation — just the general feeling of being shrouded in loneliness coupled with drunken crying as we discussed my rapidly approaching departure. He tried to cheer me up, to convince me to come back to the bar, but I wasn’t ready to leave the loo.

Supersit

On the way out of the bathroom, he mentioned something about sending his sister in to check on me. Had I not been so drunk or lost in thought or comfortable there on that pristine toilet seat, the sheer mention of Felicity would have thrown me into a panic.

Instead, the words seeped into one side of my head and right out the other. His intentions were kind, of course. He thought I needed a female friend and who better then his sister? I didn’t have long to analyze because I forgot. Then, suddenly, I heard the main door to the bathroom fly open and the brisk, calculated clacking of stiletto boots on a mission.

toilet-paper-holder-8551G

The door slammed just as Felicity echoed,

“Meghan?”

She clacked closer and closer and, to my horror, I realized that the door had not latched behind Jon when he’d exited my stall. In one drunken huff I launched myself towards the stall door, reaching for the latch.  At the exact same instant, Felicity placed her knocking fist against the door, and it swung open.

I stood frozen, mascara streaked down my face and neck, rumpled shirt, jeans and underwear around my ankles, crotch still instinctively hovering over the toilet, one arm reaching for the door, the other precariously balancing against the wall, belly button to ankles completely exposed. Because I hadn’t yet “wiped,” the single droplet of urine that pointedly splashed into the toilet punctuated the silence that ensued.
drip
Felicity, wearing pinstripe pants, leather stiletto ankle boots, fitted lavender sweater and perfectly coiffed hair was stunned into clacking-free silence. I came to first, reaching for the door, slamming it, and uttering my apologies.  She backed up, still not speaking and I waited.

Eventually I came out of the stall. Felicity stood by the paper towel dispenser with a look that I couldn’t read, something between amusement, pity and understanding. Maybe I just hoped for the understanding. I washed my hands and face while she wordlessly waited for me.

When I was ready, she followed me out of the bathroom, closing the door behind us. Back at the bar, Jon and his friends were ready to leave. He kissed me as we approached, glancing at his sister.

“Everything ok?” he asked.

“Fine,” I said.

“Everything’s fine,” she said. We left the bar and six days later I left England. I never saw Felicity again, but to this day I have trouble getting comfortable in public bathrooms.

the time i was a hot mess dot com in london… part 1

When I was nineteen I studied abroad in London and fell in love with a Welsh barrister. Jon lived in a flat near Buckingham Palace with his sister, Felicity, who was excruciatingly posh. She wore little boots and had shiny hair and nostrils that flared ever so slightly when she was making a point.
buckingham palace

I was awestruck and somewhat terrified of Felicity, who Jon lovingly referred to as, “Feliss.” He was twenty-five and she was twenty-one and, in retrospect, it was probably a little unacceptable for one’s older, mid-twenties brother to be dating a teenager. But Jon dated me and I smiled timidly as I felt Felicity watch me, tolerate me, keenly observing my oddly idiotic American tendencies.

When I started spending the night regularly at their flat, I knew I wasn’t imagining Felicity’s resentment.  In the mornings, I would stay in bed while Jon went to work. (I only had class two days a week.) Hours later I would groggily sit up, warming my face on the slice of grey London sun that peeked through the French doors, only to be blasted into consciousness by the motion-detecting theft alarm erupting from outside Jon’s bedroom.
french_door_pic

I’d stumble blindly into the hall, the earsplitting siren beating nails into my skull, until I found the keypad and punched off the alarm.  It seemed that whenever I spent the night, Felicity set the alarm in the morning. It was perfect, really. A seemingly well-intentioned effort to protect their flat was an excellent mask for the “fuck you, child girlfriend” that roused me each day.

One night around 3am Jon, my friend Gretchen, and I stumbled back from a bender. I collapsed in the bedroom while Jon set up Gretchen’s cot in the den.  After a million years I screeched,  ”If you don’t come in here and fuck me right now, I’m gonna ralph all over you!”

Jon didn’t reply, so I waltzed back into the living room where he was staring at Gretchen with confusion saying, “Ralph? What does ralph mean?” As I opened my mouth to explain, I felt my stomach rising into my throat. Launching myself back down the hall, I barely made it to the toilet before the blue and purple meaty pasta sauce and liquor combination (this was also the first and only time I drank Absinthe) came sailing forth.
absinthe-verdoyante

Several minutes later I managed to finish barfing, slip out of my clothes and stumble from the bathroom to the hallway. Just as I opened my mouth to scream the definition of “Ralph,” I came face to face with Felicity. She stood in her doorway, wearing her white Ralph Lauren silk bathroom and rubbing her eyes, her hair shining in the lamplight. I cowered for a moment, hoping she didn’t see me, but there I was, a drunk lump, two feet in front of her, wearing neon rainbow thongs with bows and a blue lace bra.

I gummed my lips together in an effort to explain, but she beat me to it with,

“Feeling a bit ill, are we?”

I wish I could say that screeching about screwing her brother while appearing in my redneck underwear with vomit smeared on my face, was the end of my embarrassment.

But, no.

Three days later, I outdid myself.