I'm afraid it's an unpalatable truth. Many of us oldies drink because it's the only thing we've got left to enjoy

By Liz Hodgkinson

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Wine o'clock: Liz Hodgkinson is pictured enjoying a glass of wine at home. She says that it¿s almost impossible to wait until six in the evening to have her first glass of wine

Wine o'clock: Liz Hodgkinson is pictured enjoying a glass of wine at home. She says that it¿s almost impossible to wait until six in the evening to have her first glass of wine

At exactly ten to six I arrived at my elderly friends’ flat for drinks. They buzzed me in, and as I entered the living room, there they were, wine glasses in hand, staring at the clock. A bottle of wine was on the coffee table.

Their eyes lit up gratefully when they saw me. ‘Ah,’ said my hostess. ‘Thank goodness you’re here. We’re waiting for the hand to go up to six, but now you’ve come we can bring it forward.’

Within seconds, three glasses were full.

I know just how they feel. It’s hard — well, all but impossible — for me to wait until six in the evening to have my first glass of wine. From about four, I am looking forward to it, and that half an hour from 5.30pm to six passes agonisingly slowly. 

Yet if I start drinking too early, I will have had my daily quota before the evening has even begun. What a dilemma for the elderly drinker!

Just recently, writer Roger Lewis and supermodel Marie Helvin, both of bus-pass age, have rhapsodised about how surprisingly wonderful their lives now are without alcohol.

I’m afraid I cannot share their enthusiasm for the teetotal life. My daily glass (or two) of wine is an absolute necessity to make life bearable and I’ve been doing it for so long I can hardly remember a day without it.

Well, actually I can. All too vividly. And it  was ghastly.

I was spending Christmas one year at an alcohol-free retreat centre. The food was wonderful but did that matter when it was being washed down with apple juice? And although the occasion was adults-only, the festivities felt much like a children’s party: innocent, endless and boring. (The only way to endure a children’s party is to lay on plenty of wine for the adults.) 

I somehow got through Christmas Eve without wine, but had no idea how I would last out on Christmas Day.

The truth is, I didn’t. Desperate for a glass, I persuaded a non-drinking friend to drive me to the nearest pub, where I had the biggest glass of wine the place could offer. And another. It was wonderful; the only happy memory I have of that whole trip.

 

As an over-65 who drinks every single day, it seems I am now a statistic. According to a recent BBC Panorama programme, those aged 65 and over are more likely to drink every day, drink at home and drink alone than any other age group.  Yes, that’s me, guilty on all three counts.

I also, to my eternal shame, contribute to the statistics that say we oldies have more alcohol-related admissions to hospital than any other  age group.

One night about five years ago I was coming home from a boozy party and I vaguely remember getting off the Tube and turning into my street. From then everything went blank until several hours later I woke up in Charing Cross Hospital A&E, along with all the other drunks of the night.

There I was, a modern-day incarnation of Edna, the Inebriate Woman. Old, drunk and disorderly.  So how did I get to A&E? Some kind soul had spotted this smartly dressed woman lying dead drunk in the gutter and had called for an ambulance.

I never discovered who it was, but saw it as a sign that God wanted me to carry on drinking — sensibly, of course, from now on.

Boozy: Liz Hodgkinson says friends giving dinner parties have dispensed altogether with the niceties of pouring with one couple she knows hand guests their own bottle of wine each

Boozy: Liz Hodgkinson says friends giving dinner parties have dispensed altogether with the niceties of pouring - with one couple she knows handing guests their own bottle of wine each. This picture is posed by models

In order to cope with my drinking habits, I have evolved some complicated rituals and an enviable ability to pull the wool over my own eyes. 

Officially, I drink half a bottle of white wine a day, but I know that on many (or most) days I exceed that. When I notice the contents of the bottle going down too fast — surely bottles are getting smaller these days? — I sigh and return it to the fridge.

After a few minutes I take it back out and pour tiny amounts into my glass until I notice there is maybe half an inch left in the bottle. Only then do I put it away for good, telling myself that I have only drunk half a bottle. OK, three-quarters. But definitely not the Whole Bottle.

Buying wine, too, has its own self-deluding elements. It makes sense to buy half a dozen bottles at the wine warehouse and load up the case in the car. Theoretically, six bottles, if drunk alone, should last me 12 days.

However, they are usually gone after eight days. So in order to maintain the fiction that I only drink half a bottle a day, I buy a case of six, then when that runs out I slyly buy an extra bottle here and there until a fortnight is up, and I can return to the warehouse.

Yet at the same time, my biggest fear is running out. It’s all part of the skewed logic of the elderly drinker.  Most of my 60-plus friends have also built their lives around wine. One couple always ask me to stay the night when inviting me over to dinner. That way, we can all get riotously drunk and no one needs to watch their intake. 

They say they don’t want to watch me sitting there abstaining because I have to drive home, while they knock back glass after glass. This is actually their policy with all their drinking guests.

And that’s another thing about drinking. We are not just spending the children’s inheritance on alcohol, but on taxis as well. Because we daren’t ever risk drinking and driving, we take taxis everywhere when drinking is involved. Not drinking, needless to say, is never an option.

Stocking up: It makes sense to buy half a dozen bottles of wine and load up the case in the car, says Liz Hodgkinson

Stocking up: It makes sense to buy half a dozen bottles of wine and load up the case in the car, says Liz Hodgkinson

Other friends giving dinner parties have dispensed altogether with the niceties of pouring. One couple I know have got so used to having a bottle of wine each every night that they hand guests their own bottle as well. When I first witnessed this I was shocked; now I can see the point.

One 80-something friend holds frequent events to raise funds for the many animal charities she supports. She knows and I know and everybody else there knows that although she raises significant sums, we’re really all there for the wine. Without the wine, would we go? Probably not.

Then I have drinker friends on permanent medication. Very many older people I know are on warfarin, the anti-coagulant drug originally used as rat poison.

Expert opinion states that the only way to drink safely on warfarin is to be consistent, so they interpret this as meaning that they absolutely must have three glasses of wine every single day.
‘Otherwise I’ll get a bad reaction from the warfarin,’ they maintain. 

One friend recently became very ill and had to take strong painkillers, which made him feel sick. But because he was on warfarin, he still forced down his three glasses of red wine every night.

‘I’m worried about what will happen otherwise,’ he said. ‘If I don’t have any wine tonight, and then have a lot tomorrow, it will put my warfarin readings out.’

Talking of illness, you might wonder how my liver is faring. The answer is: absolutely fine, thanks very much.

A few years ago I had to have blood tests and an ECG before an operation. I was worried because I’d been drinking at a party the night before, but all the alcohol in my bloodstream seemed to have disappeared by the morning. In fact, I was told I had the innards of a woman of 30.

Enjoys a tipple: At 95, Dame Vera Lynn says that she, too, always has a glass of wine at six, with a packet of crisps

Enjoys a tipple: At 95, Dame Vera Lynn says that she, too, always has a glass of wine at six, with a packet of crisps

Yet another sign that God wants me to carry on drinking. 

Since I seem to be in good health, I have persuaded myself that the widely recommended ‘units’ — 14 a week for women and 21 for men — are unscientific nonsense.

Why do I do it? Whatever my mood, it seems that wine can improve it. It takes off that top level of consciousness and allows me to enjoy events in a mellow, relaxed state. It puts everything at one remove, gives that slightly spaced-out feeling which means I can smile at misfortune.

It makes watching the news bearable. I don’t care about anything; at least not to the extent as when I’m stone cold sober. Wine makes boring company tolerable and interesting company even more exciting.

A date with someone new would be impossible without it. Dating sites often advise you to meet initially ‘for coffee’ — but what’s the point? I could never have a relationship with a teetotaller anyway, so why bother?

Half the pleasure of a new date is meeting in a new place for drinks — and, if I’m honest, I often look forward more to the drink than the date.

So are there any downsides? Yes — that wonderful hit of the first glass at six, surpassing everything, means I can’t drink at lunchtime. Nor can I ever enjoy afternoon tea, which for the now abstinent Roger Lewis has become a new pleasure. Even my eating revolves around drinking.

You see, we are advised never to drink on an empty stomach, but that is when wine is at its most enjoyable. If I have just a sandwich for lunch at, say, 12.30pm, this means that by six the wine can course through every vein, uninterrupted by food. 

At 95, Dame Vera Lynn says that she, too, always has a glass of wine at six, with a packet of crisps. I expect that, like me, she is looking forward to it for most of the afternoon.

We oldies have, it’s true, become incorrigible tipplers. I never had this rigid, unbreakable drinking routine when I was younger; I could take it or leave it. 

But let’s face it: us old girls and boys have so few pleasures left in life. And at least we drink in our own homes. We rarely spill out of nightclubs at three in the morning. By contrast, because we start drinking so early in the evening, we are usually tucked up in bed by ten, doing absolutely no harm to anyone.

My son Tom says he cannot start drinking as early as six, because then he will get too drunk as the evening wears on. His starting point is 8pm, about the time I’m thinking of turning in.

I wish that, like him, I could hold out — but I can’t, I just can’t. Even when a friend is calling for me to go out to a restaurant at eight, I am  still on my first glass of wine at six. So after downing veritable rivers of wine in my time, am I sniffing delicate bouquets  and appreciating rare vintages?

I am not. Like Iris Murdoch before me, I stick to cheap wine on the understanding that at least I will always be able to afford it, whereas fine wines might compromise my pension. And if I get a taste for the fine stuff, I may not want to go back to cheap plonk.

Drinking as I do, there is the additional problem of disposing of the empties. I live in a house of four flats and, sadly, seem to be the only drinker in the building. I am always horrified when I take my empties to our recycling bin, only to find that the empties already there are also all mine. Do the other residents realise they have an old soak in their midst? 

At such times, I say to myself: I must stop drinking, or drinking so much or so regularly. It’s a resolve that always lasts — until exactly six o’clock.

 

The comments below have not been moderated.

Oh dear! When I used to drink and boy, when I drank.........I drank! It was a bottle of brandy a night, collapse into bed and come round in the morning! Thankfully, that period only lasted 3 weeks, while I split up with my boyfriend. Now, I am sober, I never drink and you know what.......I just don't want to drink. I have brandy in the cupboard and it just stays there, even though the mixer is also in there.......I just don't care. Why the change.....I now have a life! I have a boyfriend, a family and work mates, plus friends. I'm not sitting alone, feeling sorry for myself......going through the 'Poor Me' stage in my life anymore. My mother was the same, so was my boyfriend and we all would now, rather have a cup of coffee or a cup of tea......and remember what we talked about and what we did, - without it being a blur. We just grew up, in our way. We stopped feeling sorry for ourselves and took our own lives back. It's not good and the sooner this poor lady does the same, the better.

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Tolerant-to-a-degree.cardiff, 03/11/12 20.40. My so called addition to !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! doesn't damage my health like drink, and is very easy to remedy should I ever want to !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! and is my finger tips !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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What a miserable, lonely woman. She doesn't have friends. She has drinking buddies.

Click to rate     Rating   1

The "oh, silly-me" tone of this piece is utterly depressing. What a waste of precious time.

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sad sad sad when a woman making light of her serious alcohol problem gets to be paid for writing about it in a news article. Enabling someone with such a bad problem is disgusting and anyone writing comments applauding has a serious drink problem too. all alcohol is bad for your mental and physical health everything else is rationalisation not rational. for every excuse and justification you point to there is another study proving the damage that even one glass of wine causes. Alcohol is a killer not a cure. wanting to drink a sedative in order to be able to socialise is bad enough but to feel the need to do so just so you can sit with yourself is a tragedy. been there done all that and sober for 16 years thankfully.

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I am exactly the same, except I am only in mid 50's. 13 years ago I was drinking half a bottle of wine most nights; a glass when I got home from work, a glass while cooking dinner and another with dinner. However, raising a child with aspergers on my own, I needed my wine more than ever. Now I continue until there's only a glass left in the bottle - except I have finished off last night's bottle first, so that doesn't count. I don't feel ill, infact I have had less time off work than any of my colleagues, but I don't want to get worse and know the only way is to give up. There's plenty of free help out there for smokers and no stigma attached. If I admitted my alcoholism, I would probably lose my job, my income, my driving licence and my reputation and my child.

Click to rate     Rating   7

At last, a non pc DM article. You look great on it Liz. Can we please meet up and do something together for the half hour before 6pm, then after a fantastic sesh we can open a bottle together. Love it.

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Imagine living your whole life being sober *shudders* lol. Can't beat a glass or 10 of wine to relax, have a laugh and forget all yerrrrrrrrr worries.

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Wel it didn't hurt the Queen Mother did it so who knows you might live to 102!

Click to rate     Rating   12

A glass or two a day of wine is good for the cardiovascular system. It's known the French have fewer heart attacks because they usually have a glass of wine with their meals. Glad to see I have plenty of company with my glass or two of wine, but I drink only once or twice per week or when I have a bottle in the house. Ummm... I just had a glass of sherry, with Havarti and Brie with crackers. Truly a special moment and that's what wine delivers -- special moments. Now that you mention it, think I'll have another. Bottoms up!

Click to rate     Rating   11

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