You Deserve a Drink: Boozy Misadventures and Tales of Debauchery (8 page)

Read You Deserve a Drink: Boozy Misadventures and Tales of Debauchery Online

Authors: Mamrie Hart

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Humour, #Biography, #Writing, #Adult

Here’s what I’ve noticed from these little responses of mine. Whenever I call someone out on crossing the line or just a sheer correction, nine out of ten times they have an excuse. It’s never, “Sorry if that hurt your feelings, that’s just my truth”; it’s always . . .

  • You totally read that the wrong way!!! I looooove you!
  • My brother signed into my account and typed that!!
  • I meant to type that on a different video!!!!!
  • A SUPER bitchy ghost just possessed my body & typed that!!
  • You misunderstood!! That wasn’t English!! When translated into Klingdingdong it means “I’m OBSESSED WIT U!!!!”

It’s always some lame excuse. Their thighs gotta hurt from all that backpedaling. But you have to remember (you being myself on YouTube, or if you are getting hate in e-mail, or anonymous messages in any form), these people would never say this stuff to your face. It’s like when your friend drinks way too many margaritas and calls you an asshole. You take it with a grain of salt (or lots of grains of salt, when you promptly pound enough tequila shots to get on their level), because you know it’s the booze talking. People who are constantly mean on the Internet are basically drunk assholes, word-vomiting out rude comments. You can’t take them seriously.

The Genius

Your an asshole

  

YOU’RE a genius.

Leaves of Three Martini

3 oz cucumber juice

6 basil leaves

2 oz gin

½ oz simple syrup

Celery bitters

Time to break out that juicer you bought two years ago that’s been collecting dust on your shelf ever since! Bust out that bad boy to make the cuke juice. And if you don’t have a juicer (or a friend with lofty health goals), just sub lime juice.

Throw 3 basil leaves into a shaker with the cucumber juice. Muddle it together. If you don’t have a muddler, you can always use a wooden spoon or a novelty-size baseball bat. Add the gin and simple syrup. Then swirl it all around—don’t shake! Shaking the gin will make it bruise quicker than the knees of a hemophiliac after a blow job. Strain into a pretty glass, garnish with the remaining 3 basil leaves, and use an atomizer to spray 3 big mists of celery bitters over the top. If you don’t have an atomizer or are allergic to class, add 1 or 2 drops of bitters.

I
n the film masterpiece
She’s All That
, Freddie Prinze Jr.’s character is under a lot of pressure from his dad to go to Dartmouth. I think it’s safe to say we’ve all felt that FPJ parental pressure when it comes to picking colleges, right? Umm . . .
wrong
! Where I’m
from, the fact that I was graduating high school was already way impressive, so college was just icing on the Bo-Berry Biscuit.
*

When it came time to apply to colleges, I really had no idea where to go. My initial plan was to get as far away from North Carolina as possible. True story—I had the option to have my pre-SAT scores automatically sent to a college of my choice, and I chose Brigham Young University–Hawaii. Yes, Brigham Young as in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I had no idea it was a Mormon school; I just saw the word
Hawaii
on the form and went for it.

My dreams of wearing a grass skirt and sipping mai tais during calculus went out the window when I got my scores back. There was no way I was getting a full ride on that number, never mind the fact that
I’m not a Mormon
. I was bummed. My GPA was higher than 4.0, but I guess SATs weren’t my thing. It didn’t help that they scheduled the SATs for the same day as prom. How was I supposed to be working out complicated analogies while I was daydreaming about my cornrows/French twist updo combo?

I turned my focus to schools that were in state. I
refused
to go to community college. Listen, there is nothing wrong at all with a good ol’ CC. But I just couldn’t stay in my county anymore. I come from a town with one stoplight, where guys attach metal nut sacks to the back of their trucks as a sign of manliness. Add to that the fact that I had dated most of those nut-sack sporters, and it was game over.

What about the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill?
I thought.
After all, I look super fuckin’ good in light blue.

In classic, responsible Mamrie fashion, it was the only school I
applied to, and I put my application in the mail literally seconds before the post office closed, on the last day it could be postmarked. Part of this was laziness; the other part was that it was a forty-dollar application fee at the time. These days, I will spend that much on a bottle of blueberry vodka or a novelty pair of jumbo granny panties, but those days? Forget it. That was a double shift at the movie theater.

But the college gods smiled upon me.

Chapel Hill is a Norman Rockwell painting of a four-year university. Lounging under hundred-year-old trees in the quad between classes, throwing keggers in our yard, winning the NCAA championship my senior year. Everything about UNC was perfect, including the girls. Therein lay the problem—the problem of not getting laid. These weren’t just ordinary girls. These girls looked like they had all just walked out of a J.Crew catalog. They were all in sororities, lived in Lilly Pulitzer dresses, and had names like Catherine Louise Vanderbilt Montgomery XI. Meanwhile, I was co-president of Topless Tuesday, wore Poison concert tees, and openly burped in public like I was being possessed by the ghost of a velociraptor.

Luckily for me, my roommates were all normal and not the priss-pots in floral cardigans we’d see on campus. But being normal had its drawbacks. Let’s just say guys weren’t exactly forming lines to date us. Being asked out was borderline impossible for a “normal” girl like me.

While we spent the fall getting dolled up and squeezing into our best velvet pants (it was 2001), by the time Thanksgiving rolled around we all said fuck it. Winter of our freshman year was spent in pajamas in my dorm, mixing up frozen margs and singing the Dixie Chicks into hairbrushes.

We became such hermits that the only time we saw guys was in class or the dining halls. We would have crushes on guys from afar but never actually talk to them.

Did you see Green Hat in the dining hall today? He asked me to quit hogging the ranch dressing. I think we had a moment.

Sadly, I think the picture of Erika and me singing into hairbrushes is actually from Valentine’s Day.

You guys. White Shirt is totally in my philosophy lecture. He sneezed last week, and I was this close to saying, “God bless you.” Dammit, Mamrie! We could be engaged by now.

In our defense, we were screwed from the get-go. Unfortunately, not literally. While other college freshmen were basking in the scandal of living mere feet from the opposite sex, we were left out in the cold. The four of us had all requested a coed hall but were put together in an all-girls academic hall, or the “Virgin Vault,” as it was so aptly called by the rest of the tower. I get that there wasn’t enough coed housing, but putting us all in the same suite didn’t make sense. They put the troublemakers in one place, like when Australia was a penal colony. Why stick us on the same floor as a seventeen-year-old getting her doctorate? Big mistake. We would be taking shots of room-temp raspberry vodka and making up a choreographed dance to Outkast, only to be yelled at by our hallmates:

Girls, seriously. I have heard “Ms. Jackson” on repeat for the last three hours. Can you please quiet down?

Aarushi, it’s four p.m.! Get off our back. Here, take this.
I handed her a shot.
It’ll make you calm the fuck down.

Later that semester, Aarushi would make her first B due to partying so much. I refused to take the blame. But I will take the credit for her record-breaking twenty-seven-second keg stand. When that girl put her mind to something, she’d do it really well.

Since meeting a guy on our floor was out of the question and putting on pants was required to leave the floor, dating was nonexistent. But in all truth I didn’t want to go out with those frat chumps anyway. They wore pink polo shirts. Pink polo shirts tucked into
pleated
khakis. I am not hating on the Greek system in general. I spent many a wonderful night taking advantage of their parties with live bands and free beer. Hell, I even went with a friend to his frat formal in Charleston . . . dressed in full 1800s Southern regalia.
*
But frat dudes were mostly my friends, and not people I was interested in.

The only time I’d ever have luck meeting guys would be grad students or older guys. Lucky for me, I had the greatest wingman for all four years of college: a fake ID. That baby was my BFF. It wasn’t fake so much as it was someone else’s real ID, and I had to scrunch my face up and bug my eyes out every time a bouncer looked at me. But it always worked like a charm.

One night, my girls and I decided to peel the pajama pants off and go out. We got to the bar and right out of the gate I started having a super flirt session with a very attractive Italian guy. I’m not talking Italian like lives at home and lets his mom iron his underwear and cook him chicken parm every night. I’m talking the straight-up, plays
f
ú
tbol
, is named Piero, and barely understands what I’m saying kind of Italian. At this time, I was super into the show
Friends
(my roommates and I would make sure we were home at eight p.m. on Thursday, and if we weren’t we would tape it on a
VCR
—yep, I’m that old, folks), so I often gleaned my life lessons from the wisdom of that Greenwich Village gang. I knew for a fact that Rachel didn’t need to speak Italian to be able to date Paolo for almost an entire season. If she could do it, I
could do it. After all, I did look like Jennifer Aniston . . .’s overweight cousin, Tonya. I imagined going home with him to Sicily and his mother having me try the marinara from a wooden spoon, making sure the seasoning was right. I’d sip red wine as I helped sprinkle the basil chiffonade on the caprese salad, looking out the window at my new Italian boyfriend as he played checkers with a table of old men from the village. (Like I said, it had been a while since I’d gotten any male attention.) Naturally, I went home with him.

Everyone relax! There was no stranger danger. I was going back to a house with a group of people, including a girl from my sociology class whom the Italians were visiting. I
knew
her. I knew her name and that she also needed sociology as a requirement. So, we squeezed into their rented convertible, put the top down, and cruised back to her house. About a half mile away, blue lights appeared in the rearview. Fuck, fuck, fuck. Our driver was sober, but Little Miss Idiot in the backseat was eighteen and drunk as a skunk. To be more specific, a skunk who’d just done five Jäger bombs.

The cop was actually cool (a sentence I never thought I’d say) and told us if we left the car there and walked the rest of the way, he wouldn’t Breathalyze anyone.
Deal!
After all, we had a designated driver (the Italian Screech of the crew), but we’d been dumb-asses to try and fit four people in the backseat. We all piled out and started walking toward
what’s-her-face’s
my dear friend’s house. About halfway there, I had to take a major whiz. Being the classy thing that I am, I politely excused myself and popped a squat in the woods. Squatting down, listening to the breeze through the trees and the pee hitting the ground beneath my feet, the night felt magical. I was finally gonna get some sweet, sweet ass. I couldn’t risk hooking up after a drip-dry!

I reached around me and grabbed a few leaves. Toilet paper is technically made out of trees, I reasoned, so the leaves were like the freshest one-ply TP available. #organic

RUTABAGA!

Once back at the house, the Italian and I had fun. I beat him at Ping-Pong, and then I beat on his ding-dong. I kid! That rhyme was
too
great not to go for. It takes a little more than that to put a notch on my lipstick case, but I was happy to “brush” up on him (makeup innuendo FTW).

The next day, the hangover was
painful
. But it wasn’t as painful as being dropped off in front of your dorm by a convertible full of Italian men. Let me add that this was around nine fifteen a.m., right when
everyone
is headed to their nine-thirty class. Oh great, there’s Green Hat watching me crawl out of this Miata full of dudes. Fantastic! There’s White Shirt thinking I just played “Put Your Weenie in My Arancini” with five Italian dudes. But I played it cool (pretended to get a dramatic call on my flip phone) and hurried into the dorm. Once the elevator doors closed and I could finally relax, I noticed it. Something felt
off
in my pants. I fought the urge to panic and immediately drop my pants in the elevator, waiting until I got to my room.

There, on the toilet, is when I realized that nothing would ever be the same. Peering downtown, I saw that my hoo-ha was red and itchy and—holy fuck, I had Italian herpes! That was the only explanation. I straight-up had Italian herpes. Granted, it was probably much classier than normal herpes, with its affinity for high fashion and late-night dinners, but it was still
herpes
. And herpes is the one thing that lasts forever. Not true love, not diamonds—herpes. When the apocalypse comes, it won’t just be cockroaches that survive. It will also be herpes and that random bottle of crème de menthe you bought years ago.

Upon learning about my new “forever friend,” I took a shower hot enough to take off the top two layers of epidermis. I awkwardly crawled into bed. Just as I was about to finish filling out my online application to the nunnery, it hit me. That wasn’t the herp; that was poison ivy! I must’ve, like an idiot, wiped with poison ivy leaves in the dark when I pissed in the woods!

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