Ben (Nicolas Cage) in the Leaving Las Vegas film

Leaving Las Vegas and Leaving for Good

[4 November 2009]

Using Ben in Leaving Las Vegas as a gauge to measure myself against, my life wasn’t anywhere close to as bad as it could be, but people who thought they had better control of their drinking than me still fuck their lives right up, so....

By Aaron Knier

In May of 2001, I was 21, I’d dropped out of college a couple months earlier, and I was spending all my time and money on whiskey.  I was a fuckin’ mess: I’d broken up with a wonderful girlfriend; tried and failed to get her back; was still wrapped up with another ex who served as the enabler from hell; was powerfully infatuated with yet another woman; and because of my self-involved, self-centered, and self-propagated misery, I was swiftly alienating everyone I knew.  My roommates and friends didn’t want to be around me, and the one person who did, Scott, had a real reason for his own nascent alcoholism; one thrust upon him, not created by his own ravenous desire for misery and attention.

cover art

John O'Brien

Leaving Las Vegas

(Watermark Press; US: Jun 1991)

I drank to deaden whatever pain it was I thought I felt, too young or inexperienced to know yet that alcohol is really a mood accelerant, that all it really does is make a good mood better or a bad mood worse.  I drank to make a spectacle of myself and to make everyone around me acutely aware of how miserable I was, how deserving of their pity I was—how my loneliness drove me to ingest superhuman amounts of Bushmills.  I was so insecure about my own drunkenness that I envied and even begrudged Scott the purity of his wretchedness.  I made my own bed, but I couldn’t lay in it without trying to draw everyone’s attention to the fact that I was doing so. 

Soon I was drinking because it was just what I did: wake up, drink, go to work, drink, go home, drink, wake up, drink, go to the club, drink, go somewhere else, drink, et cetera.  It stopped being about blotting out the pain I created and became the pain itself.  I started to push those limits I felt I still had and drank in order to make a scene, to cause trouble.  It wasn’t fun, it was punishment for breaking up with the girl, then for trying to get her back and making an ass of myself, then for dropping out of school, then for eroding all my friendships, then just for being awake.

I took a train to New Orleans to visit the enabler, a bipolar alcoholic bartender—a match made in heaven.  We drank just about every moment we were conscious in a city that breeds and cultivates such behavior.  We took every pill we could find, and along the way, fell back into a sort of love.  After a few days, we went back to Tallahassee for another solid week of similar behavior.  When she finally went home, I thought I’d seen the bottom, but she’d only shown me a glimpse. 

After that, I slept in a gutter, had severe alcohol poisoning, passed green shit, and waited at the Shell station down the road for the clock to hit the right time to buy more, which I then drank out of a paper bag while shambling down the street to my grand infatuation’s apartment, where, in a moment of clarity, I didn’t wake her up at 6:30 in the morning. Instead, I sat on the hood of her car and called my dad. Not all of this in one day, mind, but in relatively rapid succession.

Why?  Was it as clichéd as wanting to “feel something?”  I felt a lot, just none of it was any good.  I’d gone beyond seeking attention and past the point of anyone giving a shit.  No, after 21 years of trying to be someone, anyone, I realized I was no one and now I had driven away anyone within a few hundred miles who might have been inclined to help me, leaving me with relatively nothing.  No one and nothing—if that wouldn’t drive one to drink, I don’t know what would.  I wasn’t all the things I tried to make believe I was: a writer, an actor, a musician, a friend, a son, a student, a human fucking being.

I read Leaving Las Vegas during that period.  I’d seen the movie prior to ever drinking a drop, so of course it had no real effect on me, but I picked up the book after finding out the author, John O’Brien, was an unrepentant drunk who killed himself a couple weeks after selling the film rights. His father called the book his son’s suicide note.  I read it how I often read books in those days: in one sitting.  Having seen the movie, I knew the story, but I read it for the reason I usually read a book after seeing its adaptation: to get further into the characters’ minds, to understand why they were. 

I found in Ben (Nicolas Cage in the movie) someone much worse than me.  He couldn’t eat anymore due to what he’d done to himself, and could not physically function without alcohol in his blood.  The book described in thorough detail the difficulty he had performing even the most perfunctory tasks: tying his shoes, walking, but most of all living.  He was literally drinking himself to death, yet after a certain point, it would kill him if he stopped drinking. 

Is that where I was headed?  I didn’t think so, but I didn’t see an end in sight, either.  I had no reason to stop, I didn’t want to stop, but now I was drinking alone.  I was drinking as a matter of fact, because, as I said earlier, it’s just what I did.  I knew that was Ben’s life, too, the only difference being that he would drink as much as possible, day in, day out, and it was all his body could ingest anymore.  I thought not only “Is that where I’m headed?” but also “Is that where I want to be?”  For all its pages speaking on the harrowing nature of profound, irreversable alcoholism (which wasn’t my future, no sir), none of it really touched me (certainly not me) save for a three-paragraph block of text. 

Leaving Las Vegas refers to it as “the tundra of two to six” and warns “never let two o’clock happen unless there is more liquor in the house than you could possibly drink in four hours.”  You see, most college kids do their drinking on the weekends, at night, after class, after work.  I woke up at five or six in the afternoon every day and drank all night and into the next morning.  In Florida (and most places, I think), you can’t buy or sell alcohol between two and six in the morning. It’s tough when that’s when you do most of your drinking—in the hours when most everyone has gone off to their beddy-bye, and you sit alone with whatever it is you have, chugging through whether it was a good night or a bad one.

And God forbid you run out at four AM on a bad night.

That was me.  That’s exactly where I was.  That was me sitting outside the Shell station, waiting for six AM so I could keep drinking, not even knowing why anymore, just knowing that if I didn’t, the panic would set in. What am I doing, why am I here, will I always be alone, and—worst of all—who am I?  I was only at what I thought was peace when I was drunk, so drunk was how I stayed.

This terrible knowledge didn’t stop me, though.  Soon enough, I backslid into attention seeking and causing emotional mischief, thinking it was better than what I was doing.  It would be another two or three years until I stopped drinking almost entirely, following a bad relationship, a move to Orlando, and a failed engagement.  When the dust settled from my now-ex-fiancé moving out, I finally realized I was an alcoholic trying to feed Goldschlager to his cat (who turned up his nose when I poured it into his water dish).

After re-reading Leaving Las Vegas for the first time since college, I became more or less terrified of drinking, and almost got in fights with drunk friends who would insist I drank, as drunk people often do.  I remembered the “tundra” and who I was—that feeling of hopelessness that I felt even more overwhelmingly by that point.  I “knew” if I started drinking again that that was it—I wouldn’t come back, and the bleak thoughts that found me with my gun’s cold metal rubbing against my forehead would put it back in my mouth where it belonged.

When the time came to move back to Tallahassee and finally finish my degree and maybe do something with my life, I was more than a little scared.  After all, Tallahassee is a town that fosters and encourages the type of drinking that can quickly become my (or Ben’s) particular shade.  I knew I was headed into a situation where I would be living alone, with only one real friend that I wouldn’t see very often, and that the person I’d become in the years that I’d been gone didn’t make new friends easily, if at all.

I’ve been here for almost two years now, as alone as when I came back, with a bottle of vodka in the freezer I eyeball very carefully, lest it sneak up on me.  I know I shouldn’t have it at all, but sometimes I need a drink, just one drink, and I have it, and that’s that.  It’s to the point now where I don’t like drinking, being drunk, or being around drunk people, so I get high instead (which, of course, has its own easily-rationalized attendant down side).  Sometimes, though, when the night is very quiet and closes around me, and all I have is the old loneliness, I want to get drunk—rampagingly drunk, like I used to, and stir up some shit.  I don’t, though—I can’t. I’m too scared of what might happen, so I have my one drink and call it a night.

On the other hand, probably because I get high it’s almost easy not to drink.  Most of the time, I don’t even think about it, it isn’t even an issue. It’s almost a non-issue.  It’s so easy, in fact, that I feel like a fraud.  Was I really an alcoholic?  Ever?  Or was it always just a cry of loneliness, and a calculated one, at that?  They say you never stop being an alcoholic, even if you never have another drink, but was that me?  Is that me?  Or is it just emotional ostentation to claim to be so?  Using Ben as a gauge to measure myself against, my life wasn’t anywhere close to as bad as it could be, but I’m also well aware that people who thought they had better control of their drinking than me still fuck their lives right up, so….

Considering the question of the most important, life-altering book in my life, you’d think that as a “writer” I’d be able to offer something up at a moment’s notice, but it took me a few minutes.  The problem wasn’t that I couldn’t instantly respond to the question, but rather that when I could, I wasn’t confident in the answer. In pointing out specific behaviors, mechanically, Leaving Las Vegas did influence, change, and in the end might have saved my life, so why does it feel like an empty answer to an honest question?

 
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Comments

I’m glad you touched upon the topic of enablers, Aaron, because their role in perpetuating alcoholism after they recognize it in another person is often shameful at best. When I look back at my decades of nightly hard-liquor imbibing (I rarely drank before 5:00 pm but come five, baby, the drinking lamp was lit) there almost always seems to have been a woman around helping me to bend my elbow.

When I was diagnosed at 35 with hypertension, a familial disorder, I decided I would “try” to keep my hands off the bourbon. After three successful weeks on the wagon, my now-ex-wife surprised me on my birthday morn with a gallon jug of Jack Daniels. With a bow on it. For whatever perverse reason she was trying to sabotage my efforts at sobriety but did I throw the bottle in the trash to demonstrate my disgust? Are you kidding me? A gallon jug of fine Kentucky liquor?

But then a funny thing happened to me just shy of my 50th birthday: one day I simply quit. No drama, no theatrics, no DTs, no shocking incident save for a lifetime of shocking incidents if I care to look back on it, which I don’t, so thank you for not asking.

I still keep beer and wine around but that’s the extent of it. Gone are the midnight runs to the liquor store, gone is the tolerance and craving for the amber-colored liquid deliciousness of the gods, gone is the panic when I travel on business to a strange city and the first thing I ask the hotel desk clerk after check-in is where the nearest liquor store can be found.

Back to enablers, though: humans have a strange fetish for neat and easy classifications, especially for complex, distant, hard-to-understand individuals. I became neatly and easily classified as a generic “alcoholic writer” because (a) that’s what I aspired to be, since all of my literary idols were roaring drunks, and (b) friends and loved ones found my behavior more easy to explain with the “He’s an alcoholic writer, what’re you gonna do?” pass.

To be honest, my wife probably thought she was doing me a favor when she bought me that gallon of bourbon, shoring up my sagging self-esteem; the enablers who are close to us know the pain and torment that drives us to drink (we think they don’t, but they do) and they believe they are doing us a favor by uncorking the bottle and urging a sip.

By the way, I was a little less than honest above; yes, I did quit drinking hard liquor abruptly almost a year ago but only after one year (2007) of pure bottoming-out alcoholic hell, complete with the stock “If you keep drinking like this you’re going to die” lecture from my personal physician.

And so it goes ...

Comment by Rodger Jacobs from Las Vegas, NV — November 5, 2009 @ 11:37 am

I watched “Leaving Las Vegas” just once. It was a tremendous struggle to watch to the end. It was as depressing as “Sophie’s Choice.”

...

Comment by Kitty — November 6, 2009 @ 10:47 am

To me there is an Acceptance rune you have to draw somewhere along the way.  The feeling that writers describe in which they feel to some degree counterfeit as alcoholics if they don’t hit a bottom or have another man’s drunk once in a while is unhealthy but very understandable; it is really the esteem thing, for nobody really esteems a writer, they have to do it themselves.  But I think they make more progress when they hit their own stride and not aspire to someone else’s.

Accepting the level at which you naturally drink, at which your natural addictions top off, is a great relief.  It is a great relief not to be using someone else’s yardstick.  It’s about Acceptance, see? Acceptance of the self as is.

I loved the “tundra of two to six” but I have not often been there.  I can most days hold off to nine a.m. even if it is a heavy period.  There have been some bad mornings but they are generally manageable.  What I hate about drinking is spinning out, and in general I don’t spin out too much unless Atavan is also involved.  Which it was, for instance, during Lynn’s chemo.

That time for me was a special time; I even have a certain nostalgia for it.  I would drive to Forest Lawn every morning with a few Modelos; I would listen to Mark and Brian in the warm car in the cool cemetary.  I wanted to laugh, and I did, because it was a manic time and I also cried all the time, especially when I first arrived at the cemetary.  The time shook my faith; I hated a god so negligent that it could allow someone like Lynn to get cancer.  I would finish my beers and then go write, anything, everything.  It turned out to be a very productive time for me.  I wrote a novel and a lot of criticism and I even wrote a few <i>gardening</i> articles, for christsakes!

So alcohol was at the center of the time.  Now, a couple of beers in the morning are fairly tame by alcoholic measures.  Germans often have beer with breakfast anyway.  But I think at that point I really found my own stride at last.  A few times in my life feel precious to me, and that was one of them.

Comment by Joseph Mailander from Los Angeles — November 7, 2009 @ 12:09 pm

I cannot think of a more polarizing movie than “Leaving Las Vegas.” For every person I’ve encountered who loved the film, I’ve met another person who says (and the detractors are pretty uniform on this): “It was two hours of watching a guy drink himself to death! I was bored after five minutes.” To each his own; I feel the same way about “The Wizard of Oz”, two hours of watching a dumb girl from Kansas follow a yellow brick road.

Comment by Rodger Jacobs from Las Vegas, NV — November 7, 2009 @ 12:45 pm

Funny, Joseph, how some of the darker moments in life, particularly when experienced through an alcoholic vapor, can take on a nostalgic tone with the passage of time; nostalgia, as you well know, isn’t always about warm and fuzzy moments.

Comment by Rodger Jacobs from Las Vegas, NV — November 7, 2009 @ 1:27 pm

” ... for nobody really esteems a writer, they have to do it themselves.”

Precisely! And by no small coincidence, my gaining of self-esteem as a writer coincided with my own bottoming-out episode.

Comment by Rodger Jacobs from Las Vegas, NV — November 7, 2009 @ 2:13 pm

You have a real gift for honesty and self-awareness. That idea of wanting someone to watch you lie in the bed you make is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it perpetuates your illness, on the other hand, it’s what makes you a writer.

Comment by Rachel Balik — November 12, 2009 @ 10:21 pm

I just came from a hospital where I delivered a suitcase full of clothing, denture adhesive and denture cleaning stuff for my absentee wife.  On the way home I stopped at the B of A’s ATM and tried to withdraw cash from my USAA Savings account; I have to deposit it into my B of A checking account to prevent that big debit by G.E. Money Bank from bouncing.  There’s nothing like juggling money to make me crave hard liquor, unless it’s having the ATM tell me it can’t process my request.  I checked my pockets for cash and came up with a fin and some change.

It was half an hour before the bank opened, so I drove to the thrift store for bread where $4.50 will supply enough 12-Grain bread to keep my bowels working until the 1st of December—when the government checks go into my account electronically.  The bread store left me with less than enough for that 1-ounce bottle of bourbon I craved, so I drove back to the bank.

After a bitch session with the branch manager, he and I went out front to the ATM.  I punched in the USAA card, tapped out the PIN, and the manager took over.  I tried to follow his action, but my vision was clouded by self pity.  Whatever he did made the machine clank and groan, but it spit out five crisp new Twenties.  I went inside and plopped three of the bills on the teller’s counter, slid my B of A card through the doohickey and got a receipt showing my checking account balance sufficient to cover the $500 G.E. Money Bank debit when it hits.

Solving that crisis did not quell the craving for a shot of whiskey, but I came home without any booze and already I’m beginning to feel less needy. I’m still glad I busted that 1/2 gallon jug of Crown Royal, Rodger; there are too many days like this lately and I know what the stuff does to me.

Comment by Ron McKinney aka OldMack from Seminole, Florida — November 17, 2009 @ 9:51 am

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