I'm thinking about becoming an alcoholic. Beer and wine are my
favorites, so I'll drink a lot of them. I don't like hard liquor, but
I'll drink it if that what it takes to realize my ambition. Unlike
some people out there who want things handed to them, I'm willing to
work and am dedicated to achieving my goals.
I have little doubt that alcoholism is a good career move. Under the
Americans with Disabilities Act, employers can't take adverse
employment action against a reformed alcoholic based on his
alcoholism. As a practical matter, this means any time an alcoholic
is denied a job, a promotion, or a raise, he can scream, "It's
because I'm an alcoholic, isn't it!" As Dick Vitale would put it,
"Protected class, baby!"
For guys like me, alcoholism is the only way to get such protected
status. I could also lop off an arm or something like that, thus
becoming genuinely disabled, but I hear that's painful and it would
adversely affect my golf game. (Drinking, incidentally, doesn't—nor
does it impair my bowling.)
I'm not just working the legal angles, either. I also look at
alcoholism as a way to build up my credentials.
I've noticed that reformed alcoholics (and drug addicts) are uniquely
respected. Once a person goes through rehab, he's certifiably
sensitive. I often strike others as unfeeling, so I could use a
credential like that.
Reformed alcoholics often have new career opportunities, too. Once I
go through rehab, I could work to become a counselor: a rehabbed
alcoholic who helps struggling alcoholics. I might also get a job in
a high school to help troubled teens; I'd latch onto those public
school employee fringe benefits without even getting a teaching
certificate.
Alcoholism is one of the few career moves that offers a lot of fun in
the process of earning one's stripes. No long hours of study. No late
nights in the office. Just hit the bars with friends frequently
(something I enjoy), drink a lot of beer while watching TV on Tuesday
night (something else I enjoy), and do some stupid alcohol-induced
stunts that give people reason to believe you have a problem.
The stupid stunt part can be the most enjoyable part, but also the
trickiest. The stupid stunt could be dangerous, like getting drunk
and driving one's car under a low-bridge obstacle, thus tearing off
the roof. As a kid, I remember hearing about an alcoholic doing that;
he had no idea why his car roof was gone.
That type of thing is too dangerous for me—I could get crippled,
killed, or jailed. I'm ambitious, not foolhardy.
I'm thinking more along the lines of extra-marital affairs. I'd get
drunk and start cheating on my wife. Eventually she'd confront me
with my two (or three or four) timin' ways, and I'd get the
ultimatum: Get dry or get divorced. I'd then be forced to check
myself into rehab to save my marriage. Once I'm out of rehab, my wife
would have to forgive me, and in the meantime I would have had a
great time.
And if she didn't take me back, my credentials as a public speaker
would be enhanced ("Alcoholism cost me my car, my wife, my family,
and almost my life. . . .").
But she'd have to take me back, or else come off as
hard-hearted—which would make her look especially bad because, being
rehabilitated, I would be prima facie tender-hearted. And anyone
else I wronged during my drunken years would have to accept me too.
It's sociological absolution. Even the Catholic Church and its 2,000
years of confessional practice can't give that.
Though there'd be a lot of fun involved in the process, I'm aware
that there'll be sacrifices, too. The monetary outlay (.75 for a
longneck at my favorite bar), the time commitment, the hangovers, and
the effects of withdrawal. But few things worth having come without
cost.
I guess I could take the easy way out and check myself into rehab
based on one of those drinking problem questionnaires. Back in
college, one of those questionnaires revealed that all sixty guys in
my college fraternity were alcoholics. I remember one question
distinctly: "Do you ever go out at night with the purpose of getting
drunk?" This question was asked of me when I was a college sophomore.
I thought it was a typo at first and the drafter had inadvertently
dropped a negative: "Do you ever not go out at night . . .". Or I
could answer the question, "Do you regularly feel the need for a
drink after work?" to which I could in good faith answer, "Every
day." Heck, sometimes I feel the need for a drink before work.
I could get away with the easy alcoholism route, not only because the
rehab industry (for some odd reason I can't quite figure out) seems
to encourage findings of alcoholism, but also because I have a fairly
extensive family history of alcoholism. My ancestors were alcoholics
back in the days when they were labeled "drunks" and "bums," back
when there was no glory in it.
With such an ancestry, it would definitely be believable that I could
succumb to the demon of alcohol. Oops. It's not a demon. It's a
dependency. If I'm going to reap the benefits of alcoholism, I better
ditch the terminology that once made it a stigma and adopt the
language that today makes it a credential.