Irish Independent

Bill Linnane

Brace yourself ! The teen disco is still a hotbed of sex, vomit and alcohol

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Fellow parents, I bring grim tidings from the frontlines of teenage sexuality — it is as bad as we feared. My daughter has been going to the odd teen disco for some years now. First there were the local GAA club discos, sweaty awkward affairs that were mostly for the 12-14 bracket. There was no great debate between us about whether or not she should be allowed go to these — it’s the GAA, sher they wouldn’t know fornicatio­n if it slapped them with a hurl.

After a year or so of those, she outgrew them, and the next step was a sizeable one — to an ultra-glam club night at the dog track, with DJs, spot prizes, PAs by Love Island contestant­s and more fake tan than a bodybuildi­ng convention.

This event was also very well run, with security so tight it seemed like it was designed by a terrified parent. So off our firstborn tottered on six-inch heels, but soon she tired of these too. Then she expressed the desire to go to the teenage club night in one of the city centre venues. She tells you that everyone is going, literally everyone in the whole town is allowed go, even that girl who is homeschool­ed. So you give in, as we did. And you realise that you were, in fact, right.

One of the girls in the group was unwell. It wasn’t booze, but she ended up in a pen that was obviously a holding tank for the trainee dipsomania­cs. Her dad came to get her, and it was from him that we got most of the informatio­n about what goes on in these places. On entering the venue’s main room, he encountere­d what he described as “a mass orgy”, including one couple who he believed were having actual sex.

He said he knew what he was describing sounded unbelievab­le, and he was half tempted to take out his phone and get some video, but then do you really want to be the forty-something dad caught in an underage disco filming fornicatin­g teens, screaming “but I need it to show Joe Duffy” as you’re dragged from the venue? No, you do not.

After that, he went to find the drunk tank, finding a bouncer on his trek, and asked him how he put up with the mayhem. He said he normally refuses to work those shifts, preferring the ordinary drunken mayhem of your average Saturday night, but got called in last minute.

He said all this with the look of someone who was about to cry, shaking his head at the decline of human civilisati­on he was witnessing, a Hieronymus Bosch nightmare set in Tellytubby land. All is lost, all is lost.

Eventually, the man found his daughter and, much in the style of the film Taken, had to shove his way out of there with her lolling in his arms, living to tell the tale of the horror of what he had seen: teenage sexuality, out of control.

When he was telling me about the experience, he had the deadeyed gaze of a Vietnam vet, and

On entering the venue’s main room, one dad encountere­d what he described as “a mass orgy”

he just kept repeating “it wasn’t like that in our day”.

Of course, my daughter’s version of events was rather different. First, we asked the awkward questions — were you drinking and if so, how much did you have. She said three quarters of a naggin, which, in reality, means anything from a full bottle of vodka to four million litres of pure alcohol.

But when we asked about what the place was like, she did have the good sense to admit that it was rough. “I have never seen so much vomit,” was her TripAdviso­r-style summary of the venue. As for the frottage, fornicatio­n and general grubbiness of the night, she saw nothing.

All I could do was try to encourage her to never go to that place — or anywhere like it — again, explaining that there will always be nightclubs that are rough, where people get plastered, and get sick, and get unpleasant­ly physical. It’s hard to try and explain this to her — that she is taking her first steps on a long journey, the same one we all embark on around that age, and that some people break into a run long before they should, and end up stumbling into situations that, as minors, they should not be in.

But all this is a tale as old as time — boundaries being tested, naggins being consumed, and tidal pools of vomit sluicing around the floor of the bus home. Truly, it was the same in our day.

 ??  ?? The nightclub was like a Hieronymus Bosch painting
The nightclub was like a Hieronymus Bosch painting
 ??  ??

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