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Drift
Reality > London,
England > Drunken Diva Wheelchair Club
I
would like to preface this story by stating that I am a heterosexual.
That being
said, last night, the Drunken Diva Wheelchair Club (DDWC) of John
Adams Hall held their inaugural event. It started when a couple
friends and I returned to the halls inebriated after an evening
in Soho, feeling somewhat unfilled and unprepared to go to bed
at 2AM.
Walking in,
we found Aphrodite, a young Greek girl who had broken her ankle
and was confined to a wheelchair, sitting on the staircase looking
sad. When prodded about her morose nature, she admitted her broken
ankle was getting her down.
“Have
you considered drugs?” I asked innocently. “Maybe
some codeine?”
The question
was ignored as my friend George started asking Aphrodite to sing,
as she was an operatic vocalist back in Greece.
“No,
I don’t feel like it,” she responded, but we persisted.
Eventually, we managed to convince her to come to George’s
room and sing for us.
After a few
moments of nervousness, she began singing with one of the most
incredible voices I’ve ever heard live. It was an old Greek
song that she had known from childhood.
After she
was finished, there was complete silence. I think George may have
even been crying a bit. Suddenly, the three of us burst into applause
as Aphrodite smiled nervously.
“Another,”
we shouted.
“I want
to sing something in English so you will understand me,”
she said to Mike and me.
Mike asked
her to sing Andrew Lloyd Weber, but unfortunately, she admitted
that she did not know the lyrics to the song. Suddenly, her eyes
lit up as she said, “Oh, I know the song from Titanic. I
just don’t know how it starts.”
Without hesitation,
I began my best impersonation of Celine Dion and she quickly joined
in. Throughout the next hour, we collectively sang (or rather,
Aphrodite sang while the three of us whined like banshees) Toni
Braxton and then Whitney Houston’s classic, “I will
always love you,” from the Bodyguard soundtrack, during
which time I picked George up and began carrying him around the
room, bringing to mind Kevin Costner’s classic pose where
he is cradling Whitney Houston in his arms.
The night
came to a crashing halt when the Hall manager came and yelled
at us. Sadly, we all departed for our rooms but not before we
made a pact never to tell anyone of what happened that fateful
night.
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