Wasted days
Pork by-products, pool
halls, and lying to your boss how to use up your sick time this
summer.
By Adam Martin
I'M NOT NORMALLY this lazy. OK, that's a lie. It's been weeks
since I slept in my bed, which is too far away from the couch. I do
go to work, though, and school, and take showers, and spend the better
part of the day sober. But for some reason I can't wait for those long
summer days to roll around, just so I can relish the task of wasting
the hell out of them. Let me sit on the roof all day drinking beer and
throwing rocks into an empty can and I'm in heaven. Even when my bank
account reads $7.86, I'll happily ditch two days of work in a row just
to perfect a mix tape.
What is it about the season that makes me so slothful? I don't know
maybe it's a holdover from grade school's three-month summer
drift. Whatever the reason, the temptation to call in sick, holding
my nose and rasping, "I cad't bake it id" before heading
to a matinee with a bag of mini Snickers is simply stronger in
July.
And the matinee movie is the undisputed king of wasting summertime.
The blockbusters come out to play, the air-conditioning turns on, the
Milk Duds taste better, and the sights and sounds of exploding cars
and angry mutant superheroes turn the dark theater into a treat for
the senses. Even if you don't sneak in, you can stay true to the spirit
of the exercise by smuggling in your own candy and a beer and
staying for two shows, naturally. Or you could just head over to the
Grand Lake Theater (3200 Grand, Oakl. (510) 452-3556) for a matinee
price that feels like a steal $5.50 gets you a talkie in one
of the Bay Area's classic, circa-1920s theaters. With the savings, you
can treat yourself to a tiny burger and freshly cut fries at Quickway
Burgers (500 Lake Park Ave., Oakl. (510) 444-9413) around the corner
on Lakeshore.
That's all child's play, though. I mean, we wasted time like that in
elementary school and barely needed our friend's delinquent older brother
to tell us how. What you've got to do is go to a bar. Drinking alone
make you feel uncomfortable? Make the work-ditch a group effort. Some
folks I know get together annually for Brick Day, when they all call
in sick and go on a massive pub crawl, carrying with them the eponymous
brick, ceremoniously placed on the counter of each bar they visit. Whatever
the number of your party, though, get ambitious about your laziness.
Don't just watch the sunlight travel across the carpet of your local
dive. Take a tour of your local beer gardens (my personal favorites
are the Eagle and the Mallard) and get a good buzz going before 2 p.m.
Why? Why not? It's not that coming onto a hangover at four in the afternoon
is all that pleasant, but it's one of those things, like an enema or
watching an entire season of Change of Heart, that has to be
experienced sooner or later, if only to be able to identify the hurt.
Also, drinking during the day reeks of power lunches or society matrons,
so you can play "executive" or "high tea" in between
the Bloody Marys and the beers.
Your next sick day this summer absolutely must be a Wednesday at Oakland
Coliseum (7000 Coliseum Way, Oakl. (510) 569-2121). Wednesday is dollar
day, and the best baseball you'll ever see, because you can watch it
over the rim of a 10-pack of dollar hot dogs. There's nothing quite
like the feeling of bellying up to the counter and ordering 10 hot dogs,
knowing you're there alone. Honestly, you can get a game and lunch for
under $5: a deal rarer in this world than a career Oakland Athletic.
Pac Bell Park might have a view of the water, and that big spooky glove
creeping out of the bleachers, and Barry Bonds, but the Coliseum really
is a lot better. You can BART there, for one, and walk right in from
the station. The fans themselves are as much an attraction as the game,
with the drummers and the wacky banjo guy with the green-and-yellow
cape and propeller beanie. Good job, San Francisco: your ballpark is
nicer. A person could take a date there. But when blowing off work,
catch a Wednesday daytime game in Oakland and gorge on hot dogs atop
Mount Nosebleed. The only drawback: Wednesday daytime games take place
only a few times a season; plan ahead and start displaying symptoms
on Monday.
Ironically, some of the best work-ditching fun can be had by ditching
the sunlight that made you want to ditch work in the first place. If
the balmy weather that beckons you away from the office becomes too
much to bear, try the masochistic pleasure of blinking against the daylight
after five hours of dim electric bulbs hanging from the ceiling of a
pool hall, or possibly an arcade. You can combine pool hall and beer
garden at Thallasa (2367 Shattuck, Berk. (510) 848-1766), whose patio
houses 22 pool tables. Crowded on Friday and Saturday nights, the place
is pretty dead on weekdays, allowing you hours of uninterrupted shots.
Or, if you want to recapture that feeling of skipped classes from your
lost youth, try the Amusement Center (447 Broadway, S.F. (415) 398-8858).
This classic arcade has all of the best new video games as well as pinball,
Donkey Kong, and my personal favorite, Rampage, wherein you adopt an
animal identity and go around smashing the city and eating as many people
as you can before the National Guard gets you. Pretend those little
pink snacks are your boss and you can pump quarters into this game for
hours.
Even after you've hit up the movies, gotten drunk, smashed buildings,
played pool, and consumed more pork by-product than anyone should even
ponder, you've only ditched three or four days. It's time to get creative.
Swim at Aquatic Park at lunchtime. Challenge a friend to a salsa-drinking
contest. Take a day off to sample the bacon dogs on Mission Street.
Just make sure you feel like you're on vacation this summer. Those long
afternoons of dumb stuff will make for healing memories to help you
through the winter flu, because face it: you've used up all your sick
days at the damned arcade.
Summer plans
1. Armistead Maupin's Return to Barbary Lane
2. Midnight Mass with Peaches Christ
3. Sleep on Ocean Beach
4. Swim illegally at the Holiday Inn