{"id":189,"date":"2008-11-28T22:40:39","date_gmt":"2008-11-29T06:40:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/davidgogel.com\/backroads\/?page_id=189"},"modified":"2025-08-17T22:28:07","modified_gmt":"2025-08-18T05:28:07","slug":"rules-to-drinking","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/?page_id=189","title":{"rendered":"Rules to Drinking"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>77 Rules of Wisdom<\/p>\n<p>1. If you owe someone money, always pay them back in a bar.<br \/>\n2. Whoever buys the shot gets the first chance to offer a toast.<br \/>\n3. Change your toast at least once a month.<br \/>\n4. Buying someone a drink is five times better than a handshake.<br \/>\n5. Buying a strange woman a drink is not a sure way in. Buying all her drinks is dumb.<br \/>\n6. Never borrow more than one cigarette from the same person in one night.<br \/>\n7. When the bartender is slammed, resist the urge to order a slightly-dirty, very-dry, in-and-out, chilled half-and-half martini with a lemon twist. Limit orders to beer, straight shots and two-part cocktails.<br \/>\n8. Get the bartender&#8217;s attention with eye contact and a smile.<br \/>\n9. Do not make eye contact\/lean over bar with the bartender if you do not want a drink.<br \/>\n10. Never, ever tell a bartender he made your drink too strong.<br \/>\n11. If he makes it too weak, order a double next time. He&#8217;ll get the message.<br \/>\n12. If you offer to buy a woman a drink and she refuses, she does not like you.<br \/>\n13. If you offer to buy a woman a drink and she accepts, she still might not like you.<br \/>\n14. If she buys you a drink, she likes you.<br \/>\n15. If someone offers to buy you a drink, do not upgrade your liquor preference.<br \/>\n16. Drink one girly drink in public and you will forever be known as the guy who drinks girly drinks.<br \/>\n17. Our parents are better drinkers than we are. Or at least know their limits better.<br \/>\n18. Never talk to someone in the restroom unless you&#8217;re doing the same thing\u2014urinating, waiting in line or washing your hands.<br \/>\n19. Girls hang out, apply make-up, and have long talks in the bathroom. Men do not.<br \/>\n20. After your sixth drink, do not look at yourself in the mirror. It will shake your confidence.<br \/>\n21. It is never permissible to shout &#8216;woo-hoo!&#8217;, and\/or &#8216;cough&#8217; before or after doing a shot.<br \/>\n22. If there is a d.j., you can request a song only once per night. If he doesn&#8217;t play it within half an hour, do not approach him again. If he does play it, do not approach him again.<br \/>\n23. Learn how to make a rose out of a bar napkin. You&#8217;ll be surprised how well it works.<br \/>\n24. If you can&#8217;t afford to tip, you can&#8217;t afford to drink in a bar. Go to the liquor store.<br \/>\n25. If you owe someone twenty dollars or less, you may pay them back in beer.<br \/>\n26. Never complain about the quality or brand of a free drink.<br \/>\n27. If you have been roommates with someone more than six months, you may drink all their beer, even if it&#8217;s hidden, as long as you leave them one.<br \/>\n28. The only thing that tastes better than free liquor is stolen liquor.<br \/>\n29. If you bring Old Milwaukee to a party, you must drink at least two cans before you start drinking the imported beer in the fridge.<br \/>\n30. Learn to appreciate hangovers. If it was all good times every jackass would be doing it.<br \/>\n31. If you ever feel depressed, get out a bartender&#8217;s guide and browse through all the drinks you&#8217;ve never tried.<br \/>\n32. Try one new drink each week.<br \/>\n33. If you are the bar&#8217;s sole customer, you are obliged to make small talk with the bartender until he stops acknowledging you. Then you&#8217;re off the hook. The same goes for him.<br \/>\n34. Never tip with coins that have touched you. If your change is $1.50, you can tell the bartender to keep the change, but once she has handed it to you, you cannot give it back. To a bartender or cocktail waitress, small change has no value. Do I need to explain this? It&#8217;s not a trick math question.<br \/>\n35. Anyone on stage or behind a bar is fifty percent better looking.<br \/>\n36. You can tell how hard a drinker someone is by how close they keep their drink to their mouth.<br \/>\n37. A bar is a college, not a nursery. If you spill a beer, clean it up. If you break a glass, wait for a staff member to clean it up, then blame it on someone else.<br \/>\n38. It&#8217;s okay to drink alone.<br \/>\n39. After three drinks, you will forget a woman&#8217;s name two seconds after she tells you. The rest of the night you will call her &#8220;baby&#8221; or &#8220;darling&#8221;.<br \/>\n40. Nothing screams &#8216;nancy boy&#8217; louder than swirling an oversized brandy snifter.<br \/>\n41. Men don&#8217;t drink from straws. Unless you&#8217;re doing a Mind or Face Eraser.<br \/>\n42. If you do a shot, finish it. If you don&#8217;t plan to finish it, don&#8217;t accept it.<br \/>\n43. Never brood in a dance bar. Never dance in a dive bar.<br \/>\n44. Never play more than three songs by the same artist in a row.<br \/>\n45. Your songs will come on as you&#8217;re leaving the bar.<br \/>\n46. Never yell out jukebox selections to someone you don&#8217;t know.<br \/>\n47. Never lie in a bar. You may, however, grossly exaggerate and lean.<br \/>\n48. If you think you might be slurring a little, then you are slurring a lot. If you think you are slurring a lot, then you are not speaking English.<br \/>\n49. Screaming, &#8220;Someone buy me a drink!&#8221; has never worked.<br \/>\n50. For every drink, there is a five percent better chance you will get in a fight. There is also a three percent better chance you will lose the fight.<br \/>\n51. Fighting an extremely drunk person when you are sober is hilarious.<br \/>\n52. If you are broke and a friend is &#8220;sporting you&#8221;, you must laugh at all his jokes and play wingman when he makes his move.<br \/>\n53. If you are broke and a friend is &#8220;making sport of you&#8221;, you may steal any drink he leaves unattended.<br \/>\n54. Never rest your head on a table or bar top. It is the equivalent of voluntarily putting your head on a chopping block.<br \/>\n55. If you are trading rounds with a friend and he asks if you&#8217;re ready for another, always say yes. Once you fall out of sync you will end up buying more drinks than him.<br \/>\n56. If you&#8217;re going to hit on a member of the bar staff, make sure you tip well before and after, regardless of her or his response<br \/>\n57. The people with the most money are rarely the best tippers.<br \/>\n58. Before you die, single-handedly make one decent martini.<br \/>\n59. Asking a bartender what beers are on tap when the handles are right in front of you is the equivalent of saying, &#8220;I&#8217;m an idiot.&#8221;<br \/>\n60. Never ask a bartender &#8220;what&#8217;s good tonight?&#8221; They do not fly in the scotch fresh from the coast every morning.<br \/>\n61. If there is a line for drinks, get your goddamn drink and step the hell away from the bar.<br \/>\n62. If there is ever any confusion, the fuller beer is yours.<br \/>\n63. The patrons at your local bar are your extended family, your fathers and mothers, your brothers and sisters. Except you get to sleep with these sisters. And if you&#8217;re really drunk, the mothers.<br \/>\n64. It&#8217;s acceptable, traditional in fact, to disappear during a night of hard drinking. You will appear mysterious and your friends will understand. If they even notice.<br \/>\n65. Never argue your tab at the end of the night. Remember, you&#8217;re hammered and they&#8217;re sober. It&#8217;s akin to a precocious five-year-old arguing the super-string theory with a physicist. 99.9% of the time you&#8217;re wrong and either way you&#8217;re going to come off as a jackass.<br \/>\n66. If you bring booze to a party, you must drink it or leave it.<br \/>\n67. Beer makes you mellow, champagne makes you silly, wine makes you dramatic, tequila makes you felonious.<br \/>\n68. The greatest thing a drunkard can do is buy a round of drinks for a packed bar.<br \/>\n69. Never preface a conversation with a bartender with &#8220;I know this is going to be a hassle, but . . .&#8221;<br \/>\n70. If you are 86&#8217;d, do not return for at least three months. To come back sooner makes it appear no other bar wants you.<br \/>\n71. Anyone with three or more drinks in his hands has the right of way.<br \/>\n72. If you&#8217;re going to drink on the job, drink vodka. It&#8217;s the no-tell liquor.<br \/>\n73. There&#8217;s nothing wrong with drinking before noon. Especially if you&#8217;re supposed to be at work.<br \/>\n74. The bar clock moves twice as fast from midnight to last call.<br \/>\n75. Understand that some bartenders observe the &#8220;fast lane&#8221;, learn what this is before driving in it.<br \/>\n76. You will forget every one of these rules by your fifth drink.<br \/>\n77. If you&#8217;re sent alone to the bar to buy the next round for the table but can only carry so many&#8230; drink the shots at the bar and carry only whatever the ladies ordered. When your buddy(s) ask where are their drinks, just say; &#8220;I left them up at the bar&#8221;.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>77 Rules of Wisdom 1. If you owe someone money, always pay them back in a bar. 2. Whoever buys the shot gets the first chance to offer a toast. 3. Change your toast at least once a month. 4. Buying someone a drink is five times better than a handshake. 5. Buying a strange [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-189","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/189","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=189"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/189\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":866,"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/189\/revisions\/866"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/bluehighways.us\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=189"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}