What an entitled, reckless, bloody idiot.
That’s pretty much what went through my head when I read about the drink driving accident allegedly caused by Jodhi Meares on Saturday night.
It takes sheer arrogance or perhaps, more simply, a complete and utter disregard for authority to drive when your driver’s license has already been suspended.
Yet it takes an astonishing level of stupidity to get behind the wheel of a car (a 4WD, no less) when you are allegedly three times over the legal limit.
Meares’ blood alcohol concentration allegedly clocked in at .181 last Saturday night when she hopped into her Range Rover and decided to drive herself through the streets of Bellevue Hill at 9.30pm. As we all now know, she is accused of crashing into three parked cars and rolled her own. It’s not surprising really.
According to DrinkWise, a Blood Alcohol Concentration of 0.08-0.12 means you are 10 times more likely to have an accident.
But let’s drill down a bit more. DO you know what 0.181 looks like?
Substance addiction website In The Know describes the physical affects of a blood alcohol concentration of 0.18-0.25:
Drinkers are disoriented, confused, dizzy, and have exaggerated emotional states. Vision is disturbed, as is perception of colour, form, motion, and dimensions.
Drinkers have increased pain threshold and lack of muscular coordination. Drinkers stagger or lose the ability to walk and have slurred speech. Apathy and lethargy are typical.
The obvious answer is, she wasn’t. And I don’t mean that flippantly.
I don’t know Jodhi Meares and I’m sure (should she read this column), I never will. But here’s what I do know.
The last thing Jodhi Meares would have wanted to do was put the lives of other people at risk.
Top Comments
Speak for yourself. I don't drink alcohol at all. Not because I'm a reformed alcoholic, not because of some religious conviction, not because of a dysfunctional liver and not because I'm better than you. I don't drink simply because I choose not to drink.
Despite what you might think, it's actually not compulsory to consume alcohol, ever. It's actually possible to get through the day, week, month or year without having "just a small one" or without making the excuse "I'm just a social drinker" or "I deserve it". I've managed to avoid it for thirty years, and I barely ever drunk alcohol before that. I've never had, for example, a full glass of beer, wine or even champagne.
Alcohol is not a reward, though you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise if you watch Aussie Rules, where a winner will boldly announce they'll "celebrate with a few long necks".
You might be a part of the problem Rebecca, but don't assume everyone else is too. That's just an easy way of excusing your own bad behaviour and, in doing that, you assist all those like you who also want believe their actions are actually acceptable because they're just like everyone else.
Oh bec did you write this article to get heaps of hits?