In my 35 years of life, I had never had food poisoning.
And let me tell you, it wasn’t through lack of exposure. In my travels abroad I have eaten all manner of things that I’ve often thought would either make me ill or give me super powers. Be it insects or testicles or half grown duck fetuses boiled alive and eaten from their own shell (its own story, really), I have stress-tested my intestinal fortitude and it has never failed me. Ol’ Iron Guts - thats me! Or so I thought.
That is until one recent trip to Spain when, with my defences breached, both Miss Meathead and I suffered through a stretch of illness so wretched, so diabolically nasty that, well, let me put it to you this way: Only 2 months after this, while visiting my parents in Texas, I ate something that made me so ill I was robbed of any/all control of my bodily functions which led to A.) my guts and rectum conspiring against me in my sleep, which then meant I had to B.) wake my girlfriend in the middle of the night to tell her that her boyfriend had actually shit the bed and finally C.) in order to fall back asleep, I had to shove one of my mom’s christmas hand towels down the back of my shorts in fear of my body’s betrayal. Well, I would rather go through 10 of THOSE nights than even one like that fateful night on the Spanish coast.
So, what did we eat? Being that we were in Puerto Banus, a district of Marbella which spoons the Mediterranean sea, you could reasonably assume it was some type of seafood. You would be wrong. It wasn’t food at all. It was a fucking cocktail.
| The very drink in question, snapped here only hours before "the incident" |
The day had started well enough. We had just finished hiking up & down a mountain called La Concha (The Shell) which forms part of the Andalusian mountain range running directly behind Puerto Banus. It was a long walk on a sunny day and food & cocktails by the seaside was the agreed reward. After eating at an Italian place we’d warmed to previously (more on how I know it wasn’t this food in a bit), we went to another place we’d already frequented for cocktails the night before. The name eludes me, but it had this friendly chap whose joy in life seemed to come from waving menus at people. The first few times we walked by him I took the opportunity to practice my spanish, which was met with a smile that seemed to be born more out of politeness than engagement. It wasn’t until later that I learned he wasn’t from Spain at all. I’d been speaking Spanish to a Serbian.
Down we sat and ordered our drinks. An Irish Coffee and a Pina Colada. As they shared the common ingredient of cream, my guess is that this was the agent of doom which - unbeknownst to us - had quickly begun its program of destruction.
How do I know it wasn’t the food? Welp, the night before, we had cocktails from this very same place, and then followed them up with Kinder Hippos. Both Miss Meathead and I felt a little queasy that night and mistakenly cursed the Hippos as a result. All is forgiven, Kinder Hippos, all is forgiven.
Having finished our drinks, we bid farewell to our Serbian friend and headed back to our apartment. Not 10 minutes later, we simultaneously looked at each other with distorted faces. Something was amiss. Miss Meathead, sensing what was to come, calmly made her way to the bathroom. Even then, we were both blissfully unaware of what was around the corner.
From 30 feet away and through 2 walls, I heard THAT sound. That unmistakable sound I’ve heard a thousand times from myself and others, usually mixed with proclamations of “I’ll never drink again I swear”....I came to her aid, holding her hair back as stipulated in the Universal Boyfriend Agreement. Glad to do it, it nevertheless set me off, in the same way that watching someone yawn compels you to do the same. I ran like the wind to the other bathroom. (I cringe to think what may have transpired if there was only one bathroom. I'm not sure we’d ever be able to look at each other again.)
And so it began. The floodgates quite literally opened. I vommed so hard I couldn't breathe...I thought I was going to pass out, and just as I thought I was done, my body, now furiously angry, decided that my mouth alone did not suffice as an expulsion point. It turned on ALL the taps, if you catch my drift. I was like a cheese filled sausage being squeeze from the middle. I’d lay on the cold tile, feverish and praying in delirium to anyone that would listen, and have to jump up to sit on the can, then hurl into the tub from there. When there was a pause in the storm, it was only enough for me to lay in bed for a moment in a swirling agony, before leaping for my life and darting back to the 8th circle of hell that the bathroom had become.
Miss Meathead was no better, but by that point we had mutually neglected the other’s existence. There was no head space for sympathy, we just passed each other like moaning ghosts in the night, over and over and over again. If I had a moment to spare pity for anyone, it was our neighbours. These walls were not very thick - we could already hear each other running the bathroom sink or flushing the toilet. Now they had to listen to our throes of perdition, and from dusk til dawn no less.
Oh, and the smell. Christ Jesus, the SMELL. Go out to the desert, find something freshly dead, bury your nose deep in its ass and breathe. Only then might you appreciate how utterly rank the air in that apartment became. It was a bio-chem attack that only served to exacerbate the nausea, thus sending us into a perpetual loop of sickness from which there seemed no escape.
This went on, incessantly, for 8 hours. By the end of it, we were so weak we could barely move. We just stared an empty stare and offered a grunt from time to time, just to reassure the other that we were alive. We had nothing left to offer the world, and my brain ticked over only enough to have the sad thought that I would never eat again.
Finally, desperately dehydrated, we somehow mustered the energy to stand up and make the slow journey to the corner store which sat a 5 minute walk away. It may as well have been at the top of La Concha. We walked down the sun kissed spanish street as if we had cement shoes, barely lifting our feet in short, frail steps. Pale with illness and sunken eyes from the lack of sleep, we probably looked nuts, and I couldn't give less of a shit. We stocked up on Jello and Fruit Ice thingys and Juice and whatever else we thought we could keep down and headed back. There, at ground zero, we spent the better part of 2 days recovering. We eventually were able to eat solids again - the local McDonalds was serving McRibs and the temptation was all too great.
The rest of the trip was so infallibly awesome that *the* night was one we were soon laughing about. Still, even now I greet anything served to me with milk with a suspicious eye. Forgiven, but never forgotten.