Legend has it that the
Jaclyn, who’s from
I can’t say I was tremendously excited about the whole thing. I’m so tired all the time and I’m so wrapped up in my work, that when I do have time to kick back and relax, I’d rather hang out quietly with a couple of good friends than spend the night at a loud, drunken party. And try though I might not to make comparisons, I couldn’t stop myself from thinking how different it was from last year. By this time last year we were all pretty good friends, and certainly I had figured out who my close friends were going to be. The party was exciting because it was getting ready together, and hanging out before everyone else arrived, and then all just being crazy and having memories together. This year isn’t like that for me at all. My close friends in
Still, I wanted to go in costume this year- I hate crapweasling out due to lack of time, as happened last year- but it had to be something that would require minimal effort. So I went as a
I will say that people really went all out with costumes. Louisa was a mummy, which was fantastic, except that her bandages kept falling off in rather important places, so halfway through the evening she put on the PVC nun suit again. I don’t know what Dave was but his head makeup, courtesy of Louisa, was amazing. Spalding and Russell were a dance-competition duo- their outfits were fabulous. The Minster House ladies and some others came as a set- Claire’s boyfriend was Henry VIII and the others were his wives, so Ashley was Katherine of Aragon, Christina was Anne Boleyn, Lauly (who came back for the party) was Katherine Howard (I think), and Ehren was Anne of Cleves, complete in Apollonius-gold heels. I’m not sure if Claire was Jane Seymour or Katherine Howard. Michelle and Garrett were zombies. Gerrard (also in town for the event) wore a lot of Dutch-flag themed clothing and a trench coat and came as a Dutch Rapist (which, for anyone reading this who didn’t live here last year, is pretty much an inside joke).
Of the new people: Carolyn, the other American (she’s from
And then there were about two hundred other people who showed up, almost all of them in costume. I have no idea who any of them were, to be honest. It was the most massively enormous party we have ever had here at
I did not intend to be the sober guardian of the drunken masses. In fact, that was exactly what I didn’t want to be. But someone, early on, had the arguably wise/arguably foolish idea to use
The truth is, I don’t know how much fun I would’ve had out in the crowd anyway. There were just way too many strangers there, and way too many people in general. I don’t like not feeling able to breathe in a mob. And the moments that were fun were the few when I managed to sneak away from the table and hang out with the Old Guard, who were all bunched up in a corner by the DJ table. There it was comfortable and familiar, although even that wasn’t perfect: in being surrounded by the remains of last year’s crowd, I missed everyone who wasn’t there that much more (which is saying a lot, because there are people I miss terribly pretty much 24/7 anyway).
My only real break from it was to take care of the drunks. We had more people who were really, truly, falling down drunk at last night’s party than at any I have ever been to in my life. Apart from the people I knew who got quite tanked, there were a lot of strangers bumping into things and falling over. I have, it would seem, a particular talent for coping with them, so I was the one escorting people outside to get air and convincing them to drink some water and generally trying to keep an eye on things. One guy was absolutely falling over himself, so I walked him out to the back garden. He yelled at me for pointing out that the steps were coming up, because he “wasn’t stupid or so drunk he couldn’t figure that out”. Immediately after which he pitched down them on his arse. I was oddly unsympathetic, and people that plastered don’t usually get hurt (beyond what I’m sure are some lovely bruises today). (He was sober enough by the end of the evening to say thank you to me before stumbling, quite literally, out the front door.)
I think I stayed up until about three-thirty, four o’clock, at which point I was practically dead on my feet from exhaustion, and all I really wanted to do was go down to my room, have a really good cry, and go to bed. (No, I was not drunk. I didn’t even achieve tipsy. Which is sad- you’d think that two Black Russians heavy on the vodka, a glass of cider, a glass of wine, a screwdriver, and a pint of equal parts vodka and cola, would do something, if only because it’s a hideous shmay of booze. Nope. Not so much as a tingle.) I found
This morning I slept until about noon, and then had breakfast with the reunion crowd- Louisa and David, Gerrard and Ehren, Ashley and Lauly, and Michelle and Garrett. It was absolutely lovely and felt just so… more like the way life is supposed to be. (I wonder if I am ever going to adjust to it not being the way life is supposed to be anymore.)
Then it was off to clean up. Jaclyn had planned on having everyone do cleanup on Sunday, but the house was such an indescribably shit-sty that it really did have to tackled right away. Honestly, I have never seen a house this filthy in all my life. Wait, that’s not true- I have, after a couple of really ghastly frat parties I got dragged to with friends. I remember being at them and thinking, God, I feel so horrible for whoever has to clean this up tomorrow. Well, now I am who has to clean up tomorrow. Johnny, his brother, Lucy, and I started rounding up the stray bottles and cans and throwing out the general garbage. It took a couple hours, but we managed to get to hooverable before I went out for tea with Lauly. The common room is mostly presentable at this point, although we still need to wash the walls. The foyer is better, but needs to be hoovered, and the loo, which is so revolting I actually will not set foot in it, still needs to be tackled, but I wash my hands of it. I did enough pick-up, and most of the dishes, and I’m done for. (The only good part of this was that someone left unopened bottles of fairly good rum and peach schnapps lying about, which I squirreled away into my growing liquor cabinet, along with some cheap beer for baking bread.) We really should wash the steps and hoover the stairs, because they are repellently sticky, but I don’t think it’s going to happen. The real question is whether or not the cleaners will get to it.
I think the party would be considered a resounding success. Everyone seems to think that the general state of filth is proof of that, although I’m not sure I equate minging revulsion with a party well thrown. But everyone seems quite pleased with it, so I’m not going to argue. I’m just glad it’s over, and I get to worrying about the next event looming on the horizon- not the dissertation, but my upcoming formal Samhain dinner this Wednesday. I am way more excited about that than I was about the Halloween party, maybe because I think anyone can throw drunken debauchery pretty successfully, but a formal dinner part is an art form. And Samhain, as opposed to Halloween, has been a more solemn, less debauched holiday in my world for many years now, so that’s more comfortable for me.