New Year's Eve.
The time for parties.
And, I know this will surprise you, but
it reminded me of my first real party.
With boys.
I'd like to tell you about it . . .
It was my first real party.
With boys.
I was fifteen.
The basement family room had been
cleaned to a sparkle.
Fire roaring in the fireplace.
Food and nibbles set out in a tempting
array.
Soft drinks table arranged with
numerous selections and/or glasses.
The pool table was set.
Music blaring.
Lights dimmed.
And actual guests circling the room.
Dancing.
Playing pool.
Playing games.
Eating.
Sipping.
Shouting/visiting.
My first party was hitting on all
cylinders.
Then . . . a snag.
Or rather, my younger brother and
sister, aged ten and eight.
Okay, a snag.
The two of them, banned from the actual
epicentre of fun-ness, had been circling the outside of the house and
peering through the basement windows at us party-ers.
During one of their circuits, they came
upon three bottles of beer.
Stashed innocently outside one of the
windows.
One of the party-goers, knowing ours
was a non-acoholic home, had brought his own party with him.
Uh-oh.
Recognizing those three bottles as
potential disaster (their words, not mine) they dutifully came and
reported.
“Oh,” I said.
“What should we do?” they asked.
“Umm . . .” Okay, so I was my usual
decisive self.
They stared at me for a moment, then
left.
Shaking their heads.
Sisters. Pffff.
A short time later they were back.
“We've taken care of it,” they
said.
“Oh? Good,” I said.
And gave it very little other thought.
Until the next day.
At breakfast the next morning, they
told me their ingenious and daring solution to the whole
'someone-brought-beer-to-our-teetotalling-party fiasco'.
They had taken the bottles.
Opened them.
Emptied out the contents.
Refilled them.
With wholesome, nourishing, party
inducing . . . water.
Re-capped them.
And replaced them.
They thought it was hilarious.
I'm not sure what my friends thought.
Certainly no one mentioned anything.
But how can you complain when someone
tampers with the alcohol you clandestinely (ooh, good word!) brought
to a party of fifteen/sixteen-year-olds?
After that, my friends opted to hold
any parties at their homes.
Where the drinks menu could be a bit
more varied.
And a little less secretive.
And tamper-proof.
The jury's still out on whether they
were more fun.
I think it is more fun to be sober at a party, I enjoy conversation and listening to music... I used to drink a little before I joined the church and it wasn't really all that fun at all... ;)
ReplyDeleteCute story Diane...
Happy New Year's and have an amazing 2013:)
Yeah. We're wild and crazy enough without the liquid encouragement. Life is good . . .
DeleteWe still have the alcohol free variety of party....I can be silly enough without fueling the fire.
ReplyDeleteYou'd fit right in here. I'm inviting you to the next one!
Deletesmart little siblings you have!
ReplyDeleteLittle monkeys . . .
DeleteI think Mom found out about the beer and confronted the culprits at the party, if I remember correctly. Of course there was more than one party at our place.
ReplyDeleteAh-ha! I didn't remember that Mom got involved, though that definitely doesn't surprise me. :-)
DeleteI can see the 'discussion'! There were many more parties, that's true. But after that, I left it up to you and our siblings. My party organizing/supervising days were over.
Brilliant solution!
ReplyDeleteHave a Happy New Year!
Thank you, Jenny! Happy New Year to you as well!
DeleteThe ommission of a few facts here or there never hurt a good story.
ReplyDeleteI agree. Why muddle a good story with facts!
DeleteHahaha! That's a VERY creative solution!! But what a shame you never knew how the culprits reacted!!!
ReplyDeleteI know. Wouldn't that just have been the icing on the cake?!
DeleteBack when I had boys that caused a lot of trouble on their own, I devised methods to sabotage their partying. Hmmm, I feel another blog posting coming up...
ReplyDelete"Warming" blog post... even though someone sneaked a few beers outside that were discovered, replaced with water and re-capped, that era still had such the feel of sweetness and simplicity....what great 'rascals' your siblings were! Your friend @grammakaye on twitter.
ReplyDelete