You Can’t Drink All Day if You Don’t Start in the Morning

BOOK: You Can’t Drink All Day if You Don’t Start in the Morning
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YOU CAN’T DRINK ALL DAY IF YOU DON’T START IN THE MORNING

 

 

 

Also by Celia Rivenbark

Belle Weather

Stop Dressing Your Six-Year-Old Like a Skank

We’re Just Like You, Only Prettier

Bless Your Heart, Tramp

 

 

YOU CAN’T DRINK ALL DAY IF YOU DON’T START IN THE MORNING

Celia Rivenbark

St. Martin’s Press   
   New York

 

 

 

 

YOU CAN’T DRINK ALL DAY IF YOU DON’T START IN THE MORNING.

Copyright © 2009 by Celia Rivenbark. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

 

www.stmartins.com

 

“The Wrestler and the Fan” originally appeared in
Southern Fried Farce
, 2008, Jefferson Press.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

 

Rivenbark, Celia.

  You can’t drink all day if you don’t start in the morning / Celia

  Rivenbark.—1st ed.

      p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-312-36301-7

  1. American wit and humor. I. Title.

  PN6165.R595 2009

  814'.6–dc22

2009016204

First Edition: September 2009

 

10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1

FOR MY DEAR
MOTHER-IN-LAW, NANCY SCOTT WHISNANT,
ONE HELLUVA SOUTHERN COOK

Contents

  1. TB or Not TB: Perfect Attendance Nuts Don’t Care

  2. Poseable Jesus Meets Poser Ken

  3. Let’s Go See “Gobbler” Up at the Funeral Home

  4.
High School Musical
Triumphs: Dreams 1, Snot 0

  5. Miss North Carolina Is Too Nice to Hate

  6. My Manservant Can Kick Your Ass

  7. Playing “the Bingo” with A-Cissy and A-Bobby

  8. Airlines Serving Up One Hot Mess

  9. Gladys Kravitz Would’ve Loved Her Some Facebook

10. Gwyneth Paltrow Wants to Improve Your Pathetic Life

11.
Jon & Kate Plus 8
Better Without the Kids

12. Clay Aiken Ain’t Marrying Your Glandular Daughter

13. What? Your Preacher Doesn’t Stand on a Bucket?

14. Chances of Getting in the Hall of Fame? Very Rare

15. When Celia Met Sally . . . A Convertible Love Story

16. I Want to be a Margo, but I’m Really a Sha-nae-nae

17. It Is What It @#$%^-ing Is

18. Lessons Taught Here

19. The Wrestler and the Fan

20. No TV? I’ll Put My Carbon Footprint Up Your Behind

21. Checkerboard Dreams: Shaggin’ with the (Sorta) Stars

22. Get Yer Wassail On; It’s Carolin’ Time

23. Sex Every Night for a Year? How Do You Wrap That?

24. Japanese Moms, Meet Most Honorable Uncrustables

25. Strapped for Cash? Try Cat Whisperin’

26. Mamas, Don’t Let Your Sons Grow Up to Be Cheaters

27. Epilogue: The Future Is Bloody Well Decided—Or Is It?

Acknowledgments

YOU CAN’T DRINK ALL DAY IF YOU DON’T START IN THE MORNING

1
TB or Not TB: Perfect Attendance Nuts Don’t Care

It doesn’t win me any points with the other mommies, but I tend to loudly yell
“Booooooo!”
and make lots of exaggerated thumbs-down gestures whenever a kid skips up to the stage to receive a perfect attendance certificate at the end of the school year.

Sure, it’s a little unorthodox—some might even say rude—but I don’t think it’s any ruder than risking everybody else’s health just so you can get a stupid fill-in-the-blank award certificate from Office Depot. You know what our little family got for your kid’s perfect attendance? The month of March with a scaly rash and violently unpredictable diarrhea.

Well. You asked.

Perfect attendance awards are usually presented at that tasty combo platter that is the year-end assembly, awards
presentation, fifth-grade graduation, and nacho bar. It gores my ox every single year. Hence the booing.

“What’s
wrong
with you?” asked my fitness-freak mommie friend. I try not to hate her because she always arrives breathless from something called spinning class. For the longest time, I thought she was doing something with yarn but then I found out there’s actually a class where all you do is sit in a room and ride a bike that doesn’t go anywhere. You need a class for that? How about breathing in and out? Need a class for that, too?

Fitness mommie was pissed at me. She would need to do a few dozen downward-facing dogs and journal for at least an hour to center herself.

“You just booed a
child.
Who does that?”

“Boooooooo!!!”
Guess she got her answer.

“Stop it! Those kids are going to get their feelings hurt. Here. Have some edamame. It’ll keep your mouth shut.”

Fitness mommie is always able to wrestle huge Ziploc bags of edamame from her purse at any given time. I just laugh because I grew up surrounded by soybean fields and hog corn, both utterly useless when faced with actually needing to prepare
food.
But now edamame is every damn where and I am so over it.

As the guidance counselor gave with the left and shook with the right, and the proud kid with the
wet, hacking cough
blew his nose on his shirt and waved happily to the crowd, I turned to “Edda.”

“He’s a snot factory. Same as the rest of them. Look at
’em. They’re so stressed out trying to get that perfect attendance certificate that now half the third grade has fifth disease. If it weren’t for kids like him, there probably wouldn’t have ever been a first through fourth disease. Hey! Thanks for coming to school with a
hundred-and-three-degree fever, loser
!”

Edda scurried away to find another seat but I just raised my voice. Like a crazy person.

“Look at that woman with the camcorder,” I hissed to no one in particular. “Her kid hasn’t missed a day in
five years.
I heard his appendix burst one Thursday and she told him ‘Don’t be such a pussy; that’s what weekends are for.’ ”

The parents drive this craziness, you know. Oh, sure, by about sixth grade, the kid has totally bought into it: Must. Have. Meaningless. Certificate. But it’s the parents’ fault in the beginning.

I know a woman who got a little brass lapel pin for never missing a day of school all the way through twelfth grade.

“I went to school with
measles
,” she said ruefully one day. “Can you imagine?”

Hell, no! I laid out of school if there was a freakin’ wedding on
Another World.
Fortunately, my mother understood this addiction and cheered me on.

“Let me write a note,” she’d say.

I usually handled the note-writing because, to my mother, actually laying out of school to see Rachel get married yet again was a perfectly logical excuse.

“No, no!” I’d say. “We can’t tell the truth! It needs to be
something really dramatic, something nobody wants to really follow up on.”

Fetching notepaper from a kitchen cabinet and plopping into a recliner, I’d compose an entirely respectable letter to the teacher that usually included the phrase “agonizing pain emanating from her females.”

(In the South, and perhaps elsewhere, a girl or woman refers to her inner workings as her “females.” I have never heard a man call his workings his “males,” but it wouldn’t bother me particularly.)

Over the years, my friends and I had gotten extremely clever with the writing of sick notes. I like to think it was the start of my professional writing career. Only then, I was paid in Sugar Daddys or Black Cows. Some people are born to greatness; others have it thrust upon them. So it was that most of the dumbasses in my class would come to me for a great sick note. One showed me a note her mother had scribbled.

“Nobody’s gonna believe this. It don’t even make sense,” whined Opal-Anne.

The note was truly awful and, no, it didn’t make no sense at all. Written in Opal-Anne’s mama’s sad little scrawl, it read, “Please accuse Opal from gym class. Her period has done swooped down on her.”

From that day forward, I always thought of menstruation as a huge hawk that would dig its wrinkled yellow feet into your scalp for five to seven days a month and just sit there going “Caw! Caw!” or whatever the hell noise hawks make.

My mother’s willingness to be a coconspirator on keeping me out of school for important weddings of TV characters has carried over to the raising of my own precious cherub, Sophie, who gets much of her own health information and life guidance from TV, just as her mother did before her. Family traditions are sacred, y’all.

Sophie’s getting a crash course on some of this stuff now that the nightly news has informed me that one in four teenage girls has a sexually transmitted disease.

All together now: “Ewwwww.”

Naturally, I summoned the Princess to the TV so she could hear it from Brian Williams’ own mouth.

“Mooooommmmm,” was the response, accompanied by a big eye roll. “That’s gross.”

“Indeed it is, little missy,” I said.

It’s hard to believe my baby is going to middle school in a few weeks. It seems like only yesterday I was lying to kindergarten teachers about having to go out of town on business just so I could avoid having to bake shamrock-shaped cupcakes.

Good times.

And it really
was
just yesterday when the school nurse called to say that the Princess had thrown up during Human Growth and Changes class.

“Some students are just more sensitive than others to these videos,” the perky nurse explained as I applied a wet Brawny towel to Soph’s pale forehead. “One little boy actually
fainted.

I looked at the nurse for a few seconds and realized that I should choose my words carefully. I am, after all, a mature adult.

“What kind of perverted shit are y’all showing these kids?”

Yeah. I said it just like that. I’m pretty sure the nurse was considering recommending me for in-school suspension but she knew my lumpy ass would never fit in that tiny desk.

Listen. I happen to believe that schools don’t need to be in the business of teaching sex education to children.

That’s what TV is for.

Which is why I’m making sure the Princess learns everything she needs to know from a trusted, reliable source that stresses consequences:
One Tree Hill
on the CW network.

It’s like Human Growth and Changes, only it has an actual plot and the music is sick!

The Princess and I watch
One Tree Hill
together, which is my own way of educating her about nasty stuff. Sure, it’s a slightly unorthodox approach, but
OTH
covers everything she needs to know: the perils of unprotected sex, the perils of drugs, the perils of ignoring the creepy Goth kid, the perils of cheating at love and basketball—it’s all there.

Plus it’s filmed in my hometown so I’m partial to its addictive charms.

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