Thursday, October 09, 2008

Not Bragging, Just Saying

So tonight after work I stopped in one of my favorite dive bars in Manhattan, Grass Roots on St. Mark's Place. I have been there countless times before and at one point was enough of a regular that the bartender John would include me in his private jokes that inevitably revolved around the foolishness of other patrons.

So tonight I walked in and the bartender, who has waited on me before, carded me.

I realize this blog is mainly read by those who know me; either my relatives or friends. But for those who have never met me, who landed here by either by happenstance or some strange internet algorithm, let me just point out this one odd fact about being asked for identification to prove that I am old enough to drink legally:

I was born in 1965. I'm forty-three years old, for Christ's sake.

I realize I look younger than my years, but not that young. If I had impregnated someone on my 21st birthday, my child would now be old enough to drink legally.*

Yes, I know I should feel complimented. But tonight I was more worried about the fact I couldn't find my driver's license, given the fact that I have a new wallet and live in New York, which means the license is less important to me than my library card or MoMA membership card.


*Sadly, there was little chance of me impregnating anyone on my 21st birthday. I turned 21 the summer I was living in Ocean City, Maryland, and try as they might, my friends were unable to make my birthday particularly memorable. They had made me a cake but wanted to wait until our friend Amy got home from work before celebrating. Unfortunately, on this evening (June 19, 1986) Amy was late getting home from the restaurant where she waitressed because a family had come in 20 minutes before they closed and no-one else would wait on them. Not because they were late, mind you, but because they were black. After Amy finally arrived, we had the cake and then headed to a bar that had a JRR Tolkien-theme, complete with Hobbits, broadswords and faux old trees. I didn't drive at the time, so I couldn't offer an ID to get free drinks from the bartender and it was early enough in the summer that all my friends were too broke to buy me a drink.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

1. Your 21st birthday story is one of the saddest stories I've ever heard. So, you just sat at the Hobbit bar and had soda?

2. I still get carded, too, but only in liquor stores. Once after carding me, the liquor store guy said, "Oh, I didn't realize you were that old." I was 35. Thanks, asshole.

the hanged man said...

No, I had beer at the Hobbit bar. I wasn't carded that night (that really would have been salt in the wound); but I also couldn't boast of my birthday in an attempt to scam a free drink from the bartender.

We didn't sit at the bar, either. We sat a large glass aquarium that doubled as a table and was filled with plants and yes, little gnomes.

Anonymous said...

You realize, of course, that all the women (particularly the women) who have read this, whether they know you or not, are going to hate you. At 43, he is still being carded! OY!
The aquarium in Ocean City didn't have any fish in it? Weird.
Love you,
Mom

Anonymous said...

So, you weren't carded when you were 21, but now you're being carded at 43?

Hmmmm. . . perhaps you are getting younger? At 60, you'll be a toddler? Cool.