Sunday 18 November 2012

Hangover


Let’s begin with a hangover.  Let’s begin in the existential badlands where the night before wakes up, looks forward to the day ahead, and then curls up and cries.  It’s a day begun with what Hemmingway was wont to call a Mastodon Hangover, and inevitably, your thoughts turn to the pub.  Nothing quite so quaint as the hair of the dog that bit you, because for one thing, it wasn’t a dog that gave you the once over last night, but a whole pack of wolves.  Rather, where hair of the dog is conscious decision – manifestly more than you’re capable of this morning – this is deferring a decision.  This is deferring your hangover until tomorrow, or perhaps next week, by when it will have become something altogether more sinister.
The best that could be said is that you are continuing with the logic of last night, that your body, unable to engage your mind (which is clearly absent without leave), is carrying on from where it left off.  Or perhaps this is merely your body, denied the guiding light of mind and so of experience, refusing to put up with the pain in which it finds itself.  Resolving, of its own accord, to do something about it.  In any event, it’s happening regardless, and you resign yourself to spending the day somewhere between drunk and hungover and completely insane.
And there you are.  A pint in your hand and a brick in your head, and oddly enough, a smile on your face.  Whence the smile, amidst the pain that inhabits you body and soul? You’re in free-fall, and you know it, and there is something glorious about it.  There is something life-affirming about this headlong chase to oblivion, something ennobling in this decent towards spiritual and financial insolvency.  All fetters have been released, and you are in your element.  At one with yourself and the world, no doubts, no guilt, just the possibilities inherent in the day stretching out ahead of you.
There will always be time to sit at home, clutching your head and counting your pennies.  The will always be time to be bored and frustrated.  Tomorrow, perhaps, or perhaps next week; but until then, cin-cin.