Day 16: Alcohol-induced narcissism


If you have stumbled across my blog and are thinking ‘Day 16’ of what? Have a quick read about my challenge.

As our guests entered, joy leapt through me. We hadn’t seen them for a year. The last time we saw them, he had not been well. Today he looked great. Slimmer, tanned and happy. Holding his head high. 

“You look really well.” I exclaimed. You could see the pride flash across his face.

His wife, as lovely as ever, relaxed and looking forward to a long and leisurely lunch.

A toast. Friends reunited.

Whispered questions about my health. I responded with gratitude and promising news. Feeling loved and cared for. 

Hours later, we were having lunch with a narcissist.

How can that be?

There was a monster amongst us; belligerent, aggressive, foul-mouthed, and offensive. Not the person who had arrived a few hours earlier.

Alcohol can bring the worst out in a person. Fortunately, over the years, I have learnt to slow my drinking down to protect myself and others. See, Day 2: Alcohol to find out why. My glass of Rosé topped up with ice, over time, becoming little more than flavoured water. This is my trick. I always have a wine glass with something in it. It looks like I am drinking the same as everyone else. Self-preservation. A fine art created over years of commitment.

As the alcohol flowed, the temperament changed. The fun-loving, gentle giant morphed into an unrecognisable tyrant.

Occasionally, my tolerance levels wore thin. I attempted to stay out of the conversation, only to be questioned, “Are you ignoring me?” To which I replied. “Yes, you’re constantly moaning.” Unsurprisingly, this didn’t land well.

One heated discussion had me leave the table temporarily to gather my thoughts and wonder how I would get through the meal.

Another, after a barrage of arrogant interruptions, I stood my ground and had my say. The retort I received was “You’re a bitch.”

I have been called worse, however, ‘bitch’ really gets under my skin. My blood boiling. It took all the restraint I had left not to leap across the table and punch him to the ground. 

The bill arrived promptly.

An eventful journey home only prolonged the anguish.

Finally, safely at our front door, I couldn’t help myself. From behind, I leant forward, squeezed his shoulder, and said thank you for the afternoon, omitting the word ‘lovely’, I hasten to add.

Exiting the vehicle, turning to walk away. I stopped in my tracks. Walked over to his open window, gently kissed him on the cheek and said goodbye. 

“Why the hell would you do that?” I hear you cry. Because that’s just who I am.

On receiving the kiss, his eyes rose slowly, the manic look gone. Instead, I was staring back at a young boy, recently chastised by a parent. All the venom had left his tongue, the hatred gone from his eyes. A little lost boy who knew he had overstepped the mark.

With anger still fuelling my veins, I hadn’t noticed his demeanour. That didn’t come back to me until this morning, while I was mulling over the calamity of the previous day.

I felt empty. I pitied him. I felt sorrow. What should have been a wonderful time with friends had become a battleground.

All because of alcohol. 

If you would like to join me on this journey, please like, subscribe and comment.

Thanks, Liz

For anyone reading my posts who has a story in them, they are struggling to tell. I would recommend getting Anne Lamott’s book ‘Bird by Bird’. It has inspired me to create this challenge and is full of great knowledge and insight. She also has a wonderful sense of humour and writing style.

If you would like to buy ‘Bird by Bird’, please use my Amazon associate link: https://amzn.to/47Pdkx7

Day 15: “I carried a watermelon.”

If you have stumbled across my blog and are thinking ‘Day 15’ of what? Have a quick read about my challenge.

“I carried a watermelon.” Instantly, without hesitation, a chuckle reverberated in my throat. A grin spread across my mouth, and a myriad of memories flooded my mind.

Dirty Dancing. What a classic. 

(Sorry, I don’t have a picture of me carrying a watermelon!)

I am clearly still on a high from Day 14: I love dancing with my husband

My son-in-law, Chris, said it as he wandered off to get some watermelon for my grandson. Incredible how a simple phrase can have such an effect on you.

My family uses lines from films as a national pastime. Very few conversations escape the phenomenon. My sister and I are fiendish participants.

A few years ago, I bought tickets for Jess and me to see Dirty Dancing in London. It was superb. We had a fabulous time. The atmosphere was electric. Everyone in the auditorium was waiting to hear their favourite line.

Mine: “Nobody puts Baby in the corner.” It crops up all the time at home.

Our journey home was just as exhilarating. In London’s version of a Thai Tuk Tuk, we wondered if our last memories would be of the ‘jump’ in Dirty Dancing or one of our own being catapulted from the vehicle at high speed. Fortunately, we made it back to the hotel in one piece- although I am not entirely sure how.

I struggle to watch it now, though. Patrick Swayze was perfect for the role and Sam in Ghost. I watched it recently. As I said in Day 3: Crying makes you feel better. It somehow seemed wrong to watch it now that he is dead. I wonder if he watches over his wife, whom he so dearly loved, the way he watched over Demi Moore in the movie.

Why do we feel such a loss when someone we have never met dies? Especially an actor, because we rarely see them for who they really are. Or do we? 

As an actor myself, I draw on my own experiences to create my characters. There is always a piece of me somewhere inside the person I portray. Does that mean the viewer can see me underneath my façade? I believe we have an insight into the person behind the character and maybe that’s why we feel their loss. 

What do you think?

Murray and I have a favourite line. The brilliant, and also sadly dead, James Gandolfini in The Mexican. “When two people love each other – Really… Love each other – but they just can’t get it together, when do you get to that point where enough is enough?”

Julia Roberts replies in a convoluted fashion, saying nothing profound – women, we overthink everything!

Brad, short and simple – “Never”

For us, it says it all. It cements the longevity of a relationship. Regardless of what you go through, if you “love each other – Really…Love each other” you never give up. I’m not saying it’s easy. Murray and I both get driven demented by the other. But when the shit hits the fan and there is something major to contend with. We both know the only person we want by our side is our other half.

At times, it feels as though we are one. I love it when you know what the other is thinking. You say the same thing at the same time. You glance across a crowded room and have a conversation without saying a word.

That’s what that line is all about. The simple knowing that you are meant to be together. 

Do you have a favourite line from a film? If so, please tell me in the comments box.

If you would like to join me on this journey, please like, subscribe and comment.

Thanks, Liz

For anyone reading my posts who has a story in them, they are struggling to tell. I would recommend getting Anne Lamott’s book ‘Bird by Bird’. It has inspired me to create this challenge and is full of great knowledge and insight. She also has a wonderful sense of humour and writing style.

If you would like to buy ‘Bird by Bird’, please use my Amazon associate link: https://amzn.to/47Pdkx7