Liquid Addiction
Liquid Addiction Denzil Jayasinghe 3 min read · Just now In our house in Dalugama, liquor did not arrive with drama. It arrived quietly, in a brown paper bag, and then disappeared into the cupboard as if ashamed of itself. My father drank only at weddings or office functions. The bottle he brought home would stand upright behind folded table linen, gathering dust with a patience that seemed almost moral. I never saw him drunk. Never heard his voice thicken. Never saw the foolish gaiety that cinema associated with men and drink. If anything, the bottle seemed more restrained than the rest of us. That was my first lesson in alcohol: that it could exist without ruling a household. My own first drink — that awkward initiation I have written of elsewhere — came not from rebellion but from curiosity. There were friends, older boys, the scent of adulthood in the air. A glass passed to me. Laughter too loud for the hour. The burn startled me; it was less pleasure than proof. Proof that I could...