Then, we got Brexit and Donald Trump and Pokemon Go.
So, you have a good excuse for last night's excesses. Unless you lived through Hitler's 1943, the Black Plague of 1348 or the year Taupo's eruption sent an ash cloud all the way to China, 2016 was probably the worst year in your lifetime.
But, ultimately, it wasn't the violence and deaths and surprise election outcomes that made the past 12 months the worst. It was the giant backwards step we willingly took.
The United States started the year with the first black president and ended with the electoral college approving the first cartoon president.
After decades of globalisation and air travel bringing us closer together, crowds cheered when Donald Trump threatened to build a wall, and the world sat on its hands while Hungary's government actually did build a wall.
In what's expected to be declared the hottest year on record, the Americans elected a President promising to bring back coal, and Kiwirail decided to replace electric trains with diesel locomotives on the Main Trunk Line.
Every now and again, academics spot what they call watershed years. Those are the years that impact disproportionately on the world for decades to come. The last year like that was 1979. In that year, free market proponent Margaret Thatcher became Britain's Prime Minister, an Islamic Revolution gripped Iran and China began to open up to the world. Decades later, the Western world is run by free market policies, Islam and its followers are in the news, and China is in our kids' toy boxes.
It's possible we'll one day look back at 2016 as a watershed year. We've already seen signs the world is starting to change. The Brexit vote to put up policy walls around Britain, a failed coup in Turkey, the assassination of Russia's ambassador to the same country, the murder of Jo Cox - the first killing of a sitting British MP in more than two decades - the election of Donald Trump. To say the rules are being broken is generous. I'm not sure we're even bothering to keep a copy of the rulebook on the shelf anymore.
So, if you can bring yourself to raise another glass tonight, raise it to the fact that you're lucky to live in New Zealand. Because, as terrible as 2016 was, and as bad as the hangover in 2017 might be, at least we live in a paradise far enough away to be able to see the fire, but not yet feel its heat.