It goes around, it comes around – always mentioned, poorly understood and seldom questioned. Now, for the first time in recorded history, Ireland’s greatest gift to the world is here set out in a simple, easy-to-read, tourist-proof formula.

Of course, primitive versions of this system exist in other parts of the world, but, suffice it to say that its purest and most sophisticated form is only evident in dear old Ireland. FACT. But what is it? how does it work? and for what purpose?

For those of you still in pitiable ignorance, the round system basically means that, when arriving at a bar, or some such location of public intoxication, it is incumbent upon drinkers to buy their drinks collectively, rather than individually. This is not a ‘clubbing together’ effort – we’re not fucking hippies. This is the first point to note – the round system is a lot to do with bragging rights. Once you get into the bar simply say ‘I’ll get these’. And then? Then everyone owes you a drink. There’s your nuts …

And why? Well, for one thing, it saves clogging up the bar with single drink simpletons, slowing down the barman. For another, it means you open your wallet less often, not to mention, have to get up from the table less often. Aye, there’s the rub. This is the whole point of the round system, to maintain conversation. Think about it: four people drinking – without the round system conversation broken four times more often than with the round system.

More crucially though, in terms of drinking – which is pretty bloody important too – the round system slows down the lush in every group, and speeds up the slowpoke: everyone drinks, and gets drunk, at the same speed. This is the beauty of the system.

But of course life does not always pan out in perfect symmetry, and drinking is surprisingly no exception. Sometimes, over a course of drinks, it may not be possible for an even number of rounds of drinks to be consumed and purchased. As in the previous example, unless the four people drinking each consume exactly four, eight or twelve drinks (one, two and three rounds respectively, maths fans), someone will luck out on the round.

So what do you do? There are a few scenarios. One, drinking stops (for whatever reason) after your round (i.e. someone owes you a drink). In this case, forget it. Yeah, that’s right, forget it. Don’t bitch and moan about it like a seventeen-year-old, just forget it.  Enemies have been turned by an unreturned round before. With a bit of luck, your magnanimity will be remembered.

Another, drinking stops (for whatever reason) before your round (i.e. you owe someone a drink). In this case, try to remember it. Don’t offer a cash substitute, for the love of God. Just because money gets you booze, doesn’t mean booze should get you money. No! Booze gets booze! End of story. Do remember who you owe a drink! You would be forgiven for thinking that, ‘hey, everyone was drunk! no-one will remember that I owe them a drink! who-hoo! fuck it!’. Bullshit. Everyone (i.e. at least one person) will remember. This is Ireland. Booze is thicker than blood. We all know the ‘drunk’ excuse. Which is precisely why, if you remember that you missed a round, while plastered, and remember to get it back the next time, you will be remembered as a hero. Or at least a decent human being.

Again, if you have to leave while everyone else is still drinking, obviously try to time it right. Do the bloody decent thing and but the round before you leave. Never offer a cash substitute!

And while I’m at it, never skip out a round – i.e. if someone says ‘are you ready for another?’, let your answer always be ‘yes’. Otherwise, you’re ruining it for everyone. Messes up the whole thing. You’re going to want another drink, aren’t you? Of course you are, of course you are … shur, what else would you be doing?

Never, ever, bitch about someone else’s drink being a bit more expensive (unless it’s more than twice the price of the other drinks – if it’s that much, the person should cop the fuck on, and you should get out of the round with them asap). At least have the decency to do it behind their back!

Always, always, always – always bitch about someone’s drink being fruity or skanky. WKD, Budweiser and Coca-cola drinkers beware. But the less said about those fellas, the better.

Anyway, you get the picture. Such is the round system. Of course other countries have admirable social inventions too, but if I had to choose between it and, oh I don’t know, universal healthcare, punctual public transport or haute cuisine, give me the pub that has four or five lads with the right idea any day of the week.

A load of blogs

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Oct 282009

Not for the first time, I have started a new blog – my Facebook Research Blog. The idea with it will be a lot more specific than any I’ve started previously: rather than my inane ramblings about nothing in particular, it’ll be focussed solely on psychological research concerned with Facebook, of which there isn’t much, but it is increasing. I find it all very interesting, both professionally and personally, though the less said about the latter, the better …

Aug 312009

Which isn’t true. I believed. I had believed. I still do believe! Eamon O’Brien took a small, under-rated team of nobodies, to the All-Ireland Semi-final. Not the summer I had imagined! And, with grim statistical precision, we lost. Kerry 2-8 Meath 1-7

The thing is, not that we lost, as predictably we did, but that I had entertained the completely irrational hope – “it is a small chance, but it’s a good chance “- that we would win. It’s the naïveté, the gullibility of it all that’s so … shocking? embarrassing? stupid? … and yet somehow so quaintly beautiful. As Feist puts it

The saddest part of a broken heart
Isn’t the ending so much as the start
The tragedy starts from the very first spark
Losing your mind for the sake of your heart

Oh yes – soft baroque jazz as a sentimental healing metaphor for a broken hearted football fan – that’s how I, ahem, roll. Indeed, it could work the other way around too, All-Ireland campaigns and football matches as parallels to romance and relationships … but that’s another day’s post.

With the greatest respect and much thanks to the team for the memories, not to mention sincere hope for the future: Meath for Sam 2010!

I really shouldn’t post this up on my internet, but … ah shur fuck it. For your information, I present my Hangover Rating System:

Hangover Star rating system:
1 star hangover *
- feel a small bit groggy, but can get up at the usual weekday hour and do a normal day’s work
- when people ask, you say ‘oh yeah I was out last night, mental!’ and pretend to feel worse than you are, but you’re actually grand and thinking about your next session already.

2 star hangover **
- feel groggy and tired and consider sleeping in but don’t. Grumble but feel better after a shower and breakfast
- if no-one knows, they might not notice. In fact, you regret going home early and think you should’ve had a few more.

3 star hangover ***
- feel groggy, tired and dehydrated and skip breakfast in favour of a small lie-in. A Powerade or Lucozade may be necessary. This one won’t lift til after lunch.
- people will notice. You will say ‘ah yeah not too bad really’ and wish they would fuck off. You remember enjoying the last drink, and contemplate the cruelty of Ireland’s licensing laws.

4 star hangover ****
- groggy, tired, dehydrated and headachy. You sleep in by at least a half an hour. You can get up, but it’d be best if you didn’t.
- You get odd looks in the street but are too jaked to really notice. By venturing outside of the house you are putting lives and property at risk. Even after showering you still smell of drink. The bulk of your thoughts are fundamentally based on ’something wet’, be it a facecloth, ice-cream, a can of Coke or even the sea – just refreshment from the godawful reality of the hangover.

5 star hangover *****
- Sleeping til late afternoon, you roll around trying to push yourself back into the warm fuzzy buzz of drunkenness; however, you ultimtately fail, because of the brickwall migraine across your temples.
- Then you start getting paranoid and your tummy starts to rumble as you sober up. You vaguely recollect being ‘ill’ the night before. If you’re lucky you might be able to take advantage of that narrow window of opportunity between the evaporation of tipsiness and onset of the hangover to take some aspirin or food. Otherwise you will crash and burn on a park bench somewhere, from which you are unlikely to rise, unless disturbed by rapscallion magpies.

6 star hangover ******
- When you wake up you are confused and drunk, perhaps still half-dressed and in the wrong house. This is the faux-hangover: where you feel ‘great!’ because you drank enough for two days, but you do get double the hangover, which will only kick in at midday.
- Obviously you can’t contemplate eating and it’s just as well you can’t leave the house because you still smell of puke from the night before. You have lost something important, and I don’t mean self-respect, because if you have any of that left, you soon vomit it out, a few times. You would choose an hour of buggery over another minute of this.

7 star hangover *******
- Wherever you find yourself, you recognise little of your environment, and in the middle of an angry conversation, and wearing someone else’s shoe, unsurprisingly on the wrong foot. As soon as you wake, you wish you had left your head on the floor, but you can’t, because your immediate impulse is to puke.
- It is a vain hope though, because there’s nothing left to eject, and you spend the rest of the day hiccuping and trying to fix your phone and find your wallet. In such a state, you find that the one thing which cured you of all previous hangovers, be it solpadine, port, sausages or pron, fails miserably. Crawling into a suitcase somewhere under the stairs, you emerge after a minimum of twenty-four hours soliltude with the humility of a saint and a thirst that would kill a camel. And you will never drink again, right?

Aug 252009

This all seems so strange now, but here’s a poem I wrote exactly a month ago. A lot of water under the bridge since then, but as Colum Mc Cann said, “If you stand in the same river for too long, even the banks will trickle past you”.

I am pretty sure that the market for poetry these days is infinitesimally small, and am even surer that that market is wholly dominated by failed and fanstastically pathetic poets.

All of which only matters if you are a poet who cares about the ‘market’, in which case I daresay you aren’t a poet at all.

For my part, I continue to write and have uploaded two more here at the bottom of the page. As yet these are still quite old, but I do hope that I will be soon in ‘real time’, but not yet.

Jul 162009

Navan cinema warns that Sacha Baron Cohen’s Bruno is ‘vile’ - Independent.ie A cinema showing the film Bruno has warned fans it is “vile” and to stay away if they don’t want to be offended. It left a recorded message on the ticket hotline about the tasteless antics

Shaving time

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Jul 142009

I’ve been feeling rather strange of late. I have oodles of time on my hands, and although I have a certain amount of work on my hands, I have been able to do very little of it. Give work to a busy person, as they say.

So, I’ve been trying to pull myself together, without much success. Busy doing nothing, so much so that I rarely leave the house, and have let a substantial amount of facial hair grow, out of some kind of too busy/too lazy bullshit. I need a good kick up the arse, basically.

So I’ve just shaved my head. Very tight, very tight indeed.

Correspondence

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Jul 102009

There’s no point in me beating about the bush on this one: I am absolutely terrible at replying to emails. Days, weeks, months – years even – can slip by before I get around responding. I don’t know how other people do it. Facebook too, I’m bloody awful.

I do try, honestly I do, but as time goes by, and I come in contact with more people, my problem increases exponentially. (This isn’t an apology, by the way, nor an excuse, just an explanation). And there’s no selectivity to it – it’s everyone, from old friends, to new acquaintances, colleagues – the lot.

It might have something to do with being a teacher, and erstwhile writer – I do like to have my text ‘just so’, and correspondence falls precisely in that category. I can’t hurry it, or it’ll end up wrong.

How do I blog then? Narcissism, and safety in the belief that no-one reads it!

And finally

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Jul 092009

I added another blog. Not exactly where I want it to be yet, but it’s getting there. So I did a few things of interest today, and also arranged a select committee for next week. In the pub.

I also had my dinner and tidied my room. I’m feckin’ great so I am.