Pee in the fridge, and FRÜLI too

Who says you can’t congratulate a kid too much?

Miss V received so much praise for providing a urine sample on Thursday that this morning she took the second empty sample cup out of the Biohazard bag and filled it up too. She even put it in the fridge.

I don’t think anyone’s allowed to get rid of it. She wouldn’t understand.

Next thing you know she’ll be looking for alternate sample cups—Rubbermaid and Tupperware containers that she can micturate into. The fridge will be full of piss.

Fortunately there’s room because we eliminated some near-piss last night. I know, I know—that sounds harsh—but every once in a while a beer gains entry into LBHQ that is almost undrinkable. (And then I drink it strictly to take care of tremors.)

The beer in question was Van Diest FRÜLI, a strawberry Belgian white fruit beer ringing in at 4.1% alcohol. Ordinarily I wouldn’t be grateful to my dad for buying only one bottle of beer, but in this case it would have been tragic to multiply the $2.45 FRÜLI price tag by more than 1.

We went through a fruit beer phase a little while ago with the UNIBROUE sampler pack, which, while a good primer on Belgian-style high-gravity brews, is nevertheless an acquired taste. For drinkers who tend to choose easy-drinking ales and lagers, a beer like MAUDITE, with its bottle-fermented orchard overripeness, can be overwhelming. But it is still a beer. However cloying its fruity characteristics may seem, it is hoppy, grainy, and malty. FRÜLI, on the other hand, is a complete departure from beer.

For one thing, it’s cloudy maroon. There’s no mistaking the strawberry component; the stuff smells stronger than a Strawberry Shortcake doll’s hair. It could compete with strawberry Jell-O or Kool-Aid (powders that should rightly be combined with vodka). Without even taking a sip, you know this beer is not right.

If you’re also an alcoholic, you’ll probably want to pound your bottle of FRÜLI. Classic WYSIWYG: smell and taste line up exactly in an uncomplicated strawberry assault. Let me quote Meet Strawberry Shortcake:

Soon the girls were loading the pink wagon with cookies. Strawberry Shortcake was berry, berry happy—not just to have cookies, but a new friend as well!

OMFG!!! Arghhhhh!!! Drinking a 250mL FRÜLI is like reading 250 pages of Strawberry Shortcake! It’s sappy, sweet, cloying, insipid, and candy-like. Its lack of resemblance to beer is offensive, people. Not even its weak alcohol content redeems it.

Now, perhaps I’ve had a bit more exposure to Strawberry Shortcake than some people. Fact is, if you like fruit but don’t care much for beer, you could drink FRÜLI. You could also put a scoop of Ben ‘n’ Jerry’s in it and call it a float, but it’s not a beer, dammit.

But it gets worse, my fellow inebriates. I visited Beer Advocate to see what my fellow reviewers think of FRÜLI. One of them said it was…sessionable.

That’s because you’d have to drink a CASE of FRÜLI to get drunk. You could get more punch-drunk reading a marathon session of Strawberry Shortcake books to two enraptured little girls, all the while questioning your parental judgment in letting them absorb such mind-numbing rubbish, than you could drinking FRÜLI.

The only thing that upsets me more than FRÜLI is…O’DOUL’S.

FRÜLI is the first beer I’m not sad to see vacate our fridge. It is not welcome back there! Miss V can put ten pee samples in there for all I care, but another FRÜLI …shudder.

ASTROLIQUOR for April 13-20—What the stars say you should drink!

My Fellow Inebriates,

Here’s your booze horoscope:

You’re into everybody else’s business, Aries, with a strange and manic new angle: temperance. At first you’ll be surprised how much detail you remember about other people’s lives when you’re not blasted out of your noodle. You’ll appreciate the peace that comes from a non-throbbing head. You’ll even go for a jog or some such lunacy. Know that this madness will pass. You will start to miss seeing people through beer goggles.

Taurus, it’s not a week for romance. And yet it seems as though the whole world is rutting. Coworkers are getting it on in a closet somewhere, sending out reeking pheromones. Somehow you feel you should get in on this—yet you know it would be a mistake. Stay the course for one more week. You can have fun all by yourself with some vodka, Kahlua, and creme de menthe.

Your professional life takes a back seat to socializing, Gemini, giving you a sense of being on holiday even while at your desk. Your brain is certainly on vacation, but your boss doesn’t care because he/she knows how smart you can be when you’re not loaded. But what on earth would possess you to combine red wine and Coca-Cola? Never mind—just do it.

A highly emotional week is on tap, Cancer. One second you’re crying, the next you’re laughing. If that doesn’t demote your credibility enough, you could recite some of your secret poems or bestow flowers on someone you’ve been stalking. What’s the fuel for all this emotive spew? Why, Jack Daniel’s and Yukon Jack in equal parts. You can’t have that for breakfast without results.

Leo, early in the week a close friend surprises you with something small. Even if it’s just a flower, it makes your day. So uplifting is the simple gesture that you spread it on to others—that’s you buying the shots! Next thing you know your head is full of tequila and everyone loves everyone else. Not bad.

Virgo, your tendency to tell it like it is means an awkward moment for a Pisces or Gemini in your social circle. This person is not into you now, but if you hang in there things could change. But don’t obsess! People will start noticing and call the police. My wisest suggestion would be to hole up at home with some blueberry schnapps. That way you’ll be occupied drinking and occupied barfing later.

Libra, this is not a good time for thinking. Simply put, you are a total airhead this week. Do nothing financial. Do nothing mechanical. Let the world go on with its business while you make a fantastic punch:

  • 3 cups Everclear
  • 3 cups vodka
  • 3 cups peach schnapps
  • 1.5 cups Malibu
  • 1 gallon Hawaiian Punch

This doesn’t have to be for you only. Go ahead—invite a couple of friends. One of them will give you a hickey.

Take care of yourself, Scorpio. You’ve been working like crazy, pursuing change in your life, but don’t forget about your health. Scorpios have a tendency to let their own intensity magnify until it explodes. Try yoga or, if you think that’s totally lame, a fruity drink. Fruity drinks make people feel relaxed. Think Bacardi white rum and White Curacao and…I don’t know, fruit of some kind.

Sagittarius, you’re zeroing in on some bigtime work success, but you mustn’t force things. Sometimes it’s better not to try. This is as true of flirtations as it is the office. If you try too hard romantically, you might get arrested again. Keep your flask full of apple brandy and Cointreau; it’ll mellow you out.

It’s all about love this week, Capricorn, even if you’re more focused on the romantic aspect than the getting with. Opportunities present from all sides, producing the same sort of paralysis that comes over shoppers in the vodka aisle. So much selection, so little time. So close your eyes and pick one! Do it! That takes care of the vodka side of it. Now choose a person to share it with.

Aquarius, you need to keep up with laundry, showers, and personal hygiene. That smell on you isn’t “musk.” Don’t be fooled into thinking vodka has no odor. It may not, but you marinated in vodka are quite another matter. Vodka is awesome, though. If you stroll through the vodka aisle you may meet a Capricorn who’s into sharing.

Pisces, your stars are increasingly significant now through November. You feel a strong influence to change your life profoundly. You may move, perhaps even out of jail. You may find a new job or even, simply, a job. Whatever you do, follow your passion. Live large and skip the Bud. You deserve some Mozart chocolate liqueur.

Where my family went yesterday

My Fellow Inebriates,

Usually my parents do my typing, but for a change I’m going to chronicle what happened to them yesterday. I’m going to pretend I was there, even though I’ve learned this whole story after the fact, and even if I spent the day all alone trying to pry a near-empty Malibu bottle open.

8:00

Miss P wakes up after an epic night of vomiting. Radiantly happy—her default mode—she learns she has the day off school and prepares to wax some Batman villains on the XBOX.

8:30

Miss V wakes up after an epic night of sleeping through her sister’s retching. Despite ten solid hours of zzzzzzzzz she is grumpy—her default mode—but scampers downstairs to demand “something” to eat, refuses a dozen breakfast suggestions, and heads into the living room to sulk beside P and challenge her for control of the TV. And then V’s tummy starts hurting.

9:15

The tummy ache is suddenly acute. V announces she will produce the pee sample requested at the clinic the day before. Without so much as a stray splash she fills the jar all by herself and hands it over, sealed and dry. (This blows my mum’s mind. It took her a full pregnancy to learn how to aim in a cup.) Mum packs the kids off to the clinic along with the pee. Standard one-hour wait followed by another half-hour wait in the examining room.

11:00

V has already taken three antibiotic doses for the bladder infection suspected by yesterday’s doctor, who had no pee by which to check. Today’s pee sample turns up minimal microbes, however, and the clinic doc du jour advises blood work and pictures. He tells Mum to take V to Langley Memorial emergency. The clinic faxes her chart to the hospital, which falsely suggests to my mother that things will go smoothly.

11:30

Mum dumps the stroller at home and visits Translink Trip Planner. Realizing it will take two buses and a one-kilometre walk to get the kids to emergency, she calls a cab. This is a big novelty, especially because car seats are not required.* The cabbie is so hot to drive that he takes off before anyone is belted in.

12:00ish

Photo: CBC

Emergency is packed. Although staff members are pleasant, no one will provide a wait-time estimate. In fact, signs everywhere declare that wait-times are unknown, that first-come-first-serve does not apply, and that priority rules. Even if you are front of the line your complaint may easily be trumped by an arriving ambulance. V gets registered and braceleted.

12:30ish

Triage. Mum takes V to the wrong window and gets snarked at by someone who calls herself “just a clerk.” She modifies her inquiry—Is there a Tim Horton’s in the hospital somewhere? Apparently there isn’t. This is one dinky old little hospital.

V protests but eventually submits to a temperature and BP check. Her heart is going 120 bpm; the kid is stressed by the whole situation. Despite being very nice, the triage nurse cannot provide information. She says the wait might be hours.

Amazingly my mum finds three empty seats.

1:00

The woman who came in right before V has appendicitis; she’s pacing the waiting room to get her mind off it. You can’t swing a cat for all the patients plus their oxygen tanks, walkers, wheelchairs and whatnot. If everyone had known they’d be there all day you’d be dodging picnic baskets as well.

One bathroom serves the whole lot—mismatched taps, worn floor, detached toilet roll. V has a new sample cup to fill, but she balks; she is fastidious about bathrooms.

2:00

People get called and new people come in. The room is even more packed now. The woman with appendicitis is talkative; as she chats people up, their ailments become shared knowledge.

Miss P starts to look flushed and hot. She is bored and tired. V wants to know when…when…when….

2:30

An older guy who hasn’t been looking too hot gets called. Apparently his wait has been epic—people clap when he gets up. My mum claps reflexively. People are bonding here. They’ve been together that long.

3:00

As P lies down for a feverish snooze and V climbs over/under everything, stopping periodically when her tummy gives her a pang, still more people arrive. Someone comments that you could pass out here and no one would help. The only distraction is an old CRT screen displaying (thoughtfully) Treehouse TV with no sound. A scattering of magazines fails to appeal, certainly because of the titles (Reader’s Digest, anyone?) and probably because they’re getting handled by the sick. My mum picks up Woman’s World for the first time in her life. Across from her a man is thumbing through O magazine, but getting that next is out of the question—he’s licking his finger to turn pages, in this filthy, germ-riddled place. The chatty appendicitis patient elicits from him that he has a heart complaint, but within the hour he gives up waiting and goes home.

3:30

A woman sitting nearby asks my mum if the kids would like to play with some of her wet wipes. Struggling to think of an imaginative game that would involve wet wipes, my mum declines, pointing to her own stash of conveniently packaged wet playthings.

4:00

My mother defies the ubiquitous warnings and asks what the expected wait time is. Naively, she’s brought nothing but crackers and juice. Maybe it’s fortunate the girls have no appetite, because the triage nurse advises her against leaving. There’s just no way of knowing whether their turn is hours away or right away.

5:00

P’s fever jacks up as she dozes on and off. V, who has wanted to leave for three hours, becomes more insistent. Although the waiting room is thinning out, which allows P a full couch to spread out on, it’s obviously prime time for after-school injuries: one teenage boy after another reports with jutting bones, teeth out, bad sidewalk impacts. All these leapfrog V in priority.

5:30

A volunteer appears with coloring books and crayons. Imagine! my mother thinks, if we’d known about these five hours ago. The volunteer works the room, commiserating. It seems this is a day in the life for Langley Memorial’s ER. Someone remarks to my mother that a 12-hour wait wouldn’t be unusual. V says her tummy hurts, then it doesn’t, then it does. She wants to go home. She wants a drink, but not an available drink. Mum caves and pours all her coins into a machine for water (which V rejects), then potato chips of V’s insistent choice (which she rejects). More bleeding teenagers arrive, trumping her with open gashes and split faces.

6:00

P’s fever ratchets up and Mum adds her to the triage list, wondering if she’ll be shunted to last in line or included. Thankfully she gets to bounce to the front of the line with her sister. Apparently the girls are next.

7:00

Apparently the girls are next.

7:30

Apparently the girls are next.

7:45

My dad arrives with half a box of Timbits. Fellow waiting-room denizens are by this time commenting on the girls’ patience and good behavior—they can’t believe there hasn’t been a meltdown yet. The girls are too tired.

8:30

Cue angelsong/godrays here; the ER door opens and the girls are called in to a bed. P immediately sprawls across it, hot and shivering in her jacket. V sets about injuring herself, climbing and jumping over the bed. Her tummy ache is in abeyance, and Daddy is here, which signals playtime. She makes a jungle gym of him and the bed until finally she scratches herself on a bed corner, which freaks him out because of those crazy superbugs you find at hospitals. He gives her his phone.

8:45

No next steps are explicated. The family is occupying a stall. Nurses and orderlies pass but no one makes eye contact. Next door the kid who got his teeth knocked out is being treated. His friend looks just like Jonah Hill. P sleeps while V continues her bid to really get admitted. She’s punchy now, bouncing from bed to Dad to bed and back, squealing with delight. Every time she seems too happy, my morose mother asks her about her tummy. V usually says it hurts. Every once in a while she winces with the hurt. In between those times she bounces.

9:00

The kid next door has been patched up. Maybe the girls are next. When my mum dares to ask, she learns that this is just the medium-priority ER ward. There is another much more urgent area for the (two?) doctors to attend to. Two hours’ wait probably, guesses the person my mother guesses is a nurse.

9:15

V loses it. She has been waiting in various places for almost 12 hours. She has taken three successively more uncomfortable shits in unfamiliar toilets. The last one hurt. She howls and howls. She is done. She howls directly beside her sister, too deeply asleep to notice. And my mum is done. She lets V scream, hoping it will penetrate someone’s consciousness. She goes on the prowl, looking for somebody to help right now. And finally, a doctor with the longest name anybody ever pronounced comes over, smiles, and says they’re next.

But first he has another patient to see.

9:30

The doctor returns, gains V’s trust immediately (!), says her pee is clean, listens to her bowel, and sends her for an x-ray.

Meanwhile Mum wakes P and takes her to the grotty-looking bathroom, where P sprays the whole room including Mum’s coat and luckily the cup itself with urine. By the time the pee is in the cup the doctor has diagnosed V’s problem: distended bowel, causing stool to build up without ever fully evacuating. The problem has probably been building for months. It’s not a big deal—the doctor’s own daughter had this problem when she was little too. She just needs a stool-softening prescription, which can’t be bought tonight because it is almost

10:00

P’s pee is at the lab. The doctor says he’ll phone with the results. (And he does, later! Urinary-tract infection, and he’s phoning in a prescription for next-day pick-up.)

10:05

To think Dad considered buying only a couple of hours’ parking. Luckily he spent the extra two bucks for longer-term parking.

The whole family is in the car at last. It’s a ten-minute drive home this late at night.

It feels so good to be out of that crappy hospital. My mum says she hopes that ER doctor makes a million dollars a year.

10:10

Dad pulls hard over to the shoulder. V is throwing up all over herself. Car sickness? Another bug?

Perhaps she’ll be in a waiting room again tomorrow.

10:30

I got my family back. Everyone is asleep.

(But if you’re probably wondering if I ever got the Malibu open, no, I didn’t.)

(More importantly, V didn’t barf again. She’s feeling fine and has her new prescription.)