George W. Bush tells Oprah this week that alcohol was ruining his family life, so after getting “drunk as a skunk” on his 40th birthday, he just stopped for good the next day.
The former president’s media blitz won’t exhilarate the political Right or Left but, for the psychologically inclined, there may be some closure–the final chapter in the tale of a middle-aged man who, with no self-knowledge whatsoever, replaced an alcohol addiction with one for power and piety, never understanding what drove him to either and the distortion of reality that comes with both.
The exchange saved his marriage but put the country through hell. At a low point of his presidency, his father’s former speechwriter Peggy Noonan wondered why, unlike other presidents under stress, Bush was always in a “good mood.”
“Americans,” she wrote, “like the president to be the cool-eyed realist, the tough customer who understands harsh realities. With Mr. Bush it is the people who are forced to be cool-eyed and realistic. He’s the one who goes off on the toots. This is extremely irritating, and also unnatural. Actually it’s weird.”
Now he’s back, recalling an ancient bumper sticker about his father: “Bush reminds every woman of her first husband.”
It’s like suddenly seeing that ex-spouse again at a wedding or funeral–old feelings stir, muted but still painful, and you wonder how you survived years together when he starts telling stories with the same clueless confidence that drove you crazy back then.
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