It’s the kind of holiday hangover story most Canadians can relate to — except this time, it wasn’t your uncle, your roommate or that one co-worker already “festive” at the office party.
It was a raccoon.
Staff at a Hanover County liquor store, located in Virginia, arrived to work after American Thanksgiving to find smashed bottles, pools of scotch on the floor and, tucked between the toilet and the bathroom bin, one extremely intoxicated raccoon sleeping it off like a woodland version of a university student after a frosh-night gone wrong (1).
The “masked bandit” had apparently entered through a ceiling tile before going on what animal control described as “a full-blown rampage, drinking everything.” By the time help arrived, the furry intruder was too inebriated to flee — a first, perhaps, in raccoon-human relations.
After sobering up, the animal was transported for “questioning” (which likely involved staring blankly while refusing to make eye contact) before being released back into the wild with nothing more than a hangover and a legendary story.
But between the broken bottles, the blurry CCTV footage and the store’s tongue-in-cheek thanks for providing the raccoon with “a sober ride home,” there’s a strangely relatable undertone: This little creature just acted out what many Canadians feel like doing this holiday season.
But seriously: What this represents for Canadians right now
While this drunken raccoon may have been living its chaotic truth, many Canadians are facing a holiday season packed with financial strain, quiet stress and rising costs.
Here’s what this raccoon caper unintentionally highlights:
1. Stress makes us all do… interesting things
Canadians are heading into one of the most expensive holiday seasons in years, with higher grocery bills, higher interest rates and tighter budgets. If a raccoon can fall through a ceiling and go straight for the budget liquor, surely humans deserve some grace for feeling stretched.
2. People are reaching for coping mechanisms — healthy or not
The raccoon turned to scotch. Canadians might be turning to credit cards, Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) plans, or retail therapy to “make Christmas happen.” But unlike the raccoon, we do wake up to the consequences — and interest charges.
3. Many families are one small crisis wway from a rampage of their own
The holidays can magnify financial pressure. Year-end bills hit. Winter necessities get expensive. Gift expectations pile up. That raccoon breaking through a ceiling tile isn’t far off from how many households feel emotionally: One bad day away from collapsing into a space they didn’t intend to be.
4. Help exists — and planning can prevent a holiday hangover
This raccoon got lucky: No injuries, no charges and a free ride home. Canadians won’t get the same deal, but they can avoid a financial hangover with a few intentional steps:
- Set a holiday spending cap — and stick to it
- Have the “expectations talk” with family early
- Swap pricey gifts for shared experiences.
- Use loyalty points or cashback strategically.
- Avoid financing festivities on high-interest credit.
- Ask for support if the season feels heavy — emotional or financial
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Bottom Line
A drunk raccoon may have captured headlines, but it also captured a mood. Canadians are tired. Stressed. Maxed out. And navigating a holiday season that feels more expensive and emotionally loaded than ever.
If the raccoon gets anything right, it’s this: After the chaos, take a breather. Sleep it off. Start fresh. And don’t go it alone — whether you’re breaking ceilings or breaking budgets.
Article sources
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BBC (1)
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Romana King is the Senior Editor at Money.ca. She writes for various publications, and her book -- House Poor No More: 9 Steps That Grow the Value of Your Home and Net Worth -- continues to be an Amazon bestseller. Since its publication in November 2021, this book has won five awards, including the New York CPA Society's Excellence in Financial Journalism (EFJ) Book Award in 2022.
