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Welcome to Sobriety Girl at Recovery Life
I started with twenty-four. Twenty-four
Waterford wine glasses. It was weeks before my wedding to the man I so arduously
loved. Some were gifts from my family. Many were gifts from our friends. The
blue boxes with white ribbon poured in like the wine collection I so astutely
built. I took each one out of the box, unwrapping their delicate tissue. The
chardonnay glasses with their spindled stems- as if ready to be caressed by the
sophisticated hand. Waiting for the candlelight to pour through, reflecting
romantic evenings. The cabernet glasses with their wide mouths waiting for a
supple reward. I could tilt the glass back to meet the succulence in my lips.
Finally, my most cherished eight... the Bordeaux glasses. They were the generals
in my army. The glasses were heavier in weight yet far more elegant than the
rest. I sat waiting for the right vintage to begin my revolution.
I whimpered when I broke the first six. Three months after my
nuptials to the man I thought I loved. The expensive vintage collection began to
dwindle. In its place came the bottles that I found at a local winery. Not a
bottle from Georges Duboeuf, but some fine wine. A large soiree, friends
mingling around the fire. Forbidden fruit poured endlessly by the gracious host,
who was subsequently in the Garden of Eden herself. Words began to unfold and
emotions began to erupt. First went the chardonnays. Thrown with such vigilance.
Aimed right at my beloveds head. There went two hundred dollars towards the
refrigerator door. Tearfully, I swept up the shards of glass. But, alas there
were eighteen more. I still had the reds. In my battle, I had lost a troupe but
still had soldiers.
I cried when I broke the next four. In the early light of spring, I
reached for a glass. My coordination stifled by my constant imbibing. I poured a
bottle of inexpensive cabernet into my tall glass. I no longer took trips to the
winery anymore. I had been there far too often; my face was beginning to be
recognized by the patrons. I searched for replacements and conjured up my
imaginary wineries in Southern France. I could pretend. I could pretend that my
wine rack was not empty. I could pretend that I was not alone. I was drinking
away the grief that his silence caused. The grace of the Waterford could not
still my shaking hands. I dropped them. Four of my best friends dropped in one
evening. With such ferocity, I tried to save them. I had my own personal drunken
funeral for my glasses. Tossed into the trash compactor.
I sobbed when he took the next eight. Fall had come. He left
with the decanter. The wonderful Waterford decanter. With it etchings so
meticulously set in the glass. He lovingly wrapped up the reds and left me with
six. He continued the romance, the love affair with elegance and sonnets. Only,
my glasses were now empty on the shelf. No life seeped into them. No reflection
from candles would burn again. Dust began to choke my thirst. And the flames had
been extinguished. Candlelight would no longer pour through the same glass. The
wine bottles taken to a new place. To begin a new life. Without me.
I panicked when I broke the next five. One more left. I no
longer looked at the glasses with a fervent eye. I used them for anything that
could numb the pain. Vineyards had stopped producing the fruit of my garden. In
its place found the weeds of alcohols existence. I could only bring myself to
lift the glass if it contained venom. I had begun to despise the glasses for the
life that used to be contained in them. Glamour had ceased to exist. The
clanging of glasses was not in toast but in concerted effort to forget
celebration. If the glass was not full, I panicked. Pouring into the loneliest,
endless black hole. But not even the last of the glasses could sustain the ache.
I threw them in angst. Threw them into the floor as if I could demolish my past.
As if I could break this state of destruction. Angry rants begot sophisticated
conversation. The stems became daggers into my own heart. One final glass
remained.
I rejoiced when the last one broke. It stood on the shelf. An
icon to my former life. I worshipped the last glass as if it was on a pedestal.
Like a far removed screen star. I looked lovingly at the shining reflection
every evening. Yet, I hadn't touched it in months. Hadn't caressed its sleek,
smooth body. A friend from my old life came. She let it go. It slipped out of
her hand. I watched it. I saw its demise. Falling, falling, it shattered into
tiny pieces. The stem no longer recognizable. The body marred. Suddenly in one
moment, the pieces were gone in the trash. I had scraped them up and thrown them
into the past. I looked up. My heart lifted. The war was over. The Waterford was
gone. The whites, the reds gone from my life. The wine defeated. Swept up into a
pile and discarded into the past. I smiled.
My glass was empty. My life was full.
Kim Park
Author/Lecturer/Creative Recovery
Sober since 2002, Kim Park currently authors Creative Recovery, Sobriety Girl
and a multitude of other articles on the web and in print. Kim was recently
featured in Glamour Magazine in December in an article called, "Staying Sober in
a Party World." She lectures at schools, rehabilitation centers and groups and
also runs recovery art workshops . Kim is also the Judge at Large for the New
York State Annual Recovery Arts Festival.
Kim lives in New Paltz, NY.


© kjpartstudio, 2005

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