Losing the Laugher

Losing the Laughter

As a child growing up, nothing and no one could make me laugh till my sides split and my face hurt except my sister, Nanette.  I call her sister though we siblings from another mister if you will.  We grew up and into ourselves with each other from the age of eight. As rural kids we had a free and frolicsome life, running through the woods, riding horses for hours on end, playing in the ancient barn that always seemed unsafe and therefore magnetic.  It finally did fall down one Sunday morning when everyone else was at Mass and I was sitting on the porch, proving it truly was a terror in the making but hey, no animals were harmed in the watching of this incident.

Nan and I always had a unique ability to jointly see the absurd in life and were drawn toward people, places, and feelings that engendered a sense of delight.  The laughter followed naturally and grew over the years.

One Sunday supper, we were maybe 17 or 18, we were in the formal dining room assembled en mass, something the father figure tried to require as a family bonding time but there was such a vast gap in ages that getting us all together was difficult at best, and felt really odd and oppressive to the older contingent of us. There were fancy linen tablecloths, formal china settings and Maida, the grandmother doyenne, was in attendance as well.  It is fair to say the she was not a fan of children so having seven of them at table was already a challenge for her.  She was a New Orleanian through and through so Manners were paramount and we were frankly a feral herd at best.

Dinner was through, the oldest of us were planning our escape to go get stoned and head to the movies so fidgeting was flagrant.  Then Mike came in.  At the time, Mike was Nan’s boyfriend and would one day become the father of their amazing daughter, Brooke Corinne. For now, though, he was the scruffy, barely tolerated hippie who was undoubtedly corrupting their eldest child, so the reception was chilly but hey, it was Sunday, prayers had been prayed at Mass and over food so there was a largesse in the air. Mike pulled up a chair while we were finishing coffee and dessert. 

And then it happened.

Mike reached over Nan’s plate and took a sip of her coffee.  Out of her cup. At this point grandmother Maida could not contain herself any longer.  Someone needed to be the sacrificial lamb for the collective sins of the table that she had endured in silence thus far.  She spoke, acridly, and said

“You allow him to drink from the same CUP as you, Nanette???”

And Nan, the oblivious provocateur, replied:

“Well, I KISS him, don’t I?  Same germs.”

At this point, the oldest of us who were not doing spit takes were watching for the explosion from Maida that just had to be imminent.  What exploded was the laughter.  It launched from a place within each of us that had been tensely restraining our behavior for the entire dinner hour and now, thanks to Nan, all bets were off.  The little kids thought we were simply nuts so they starting screaming with kid laughter.  The stern-faced father was trying to maintain discipline, something he attempted to instill on a completely random schedule so one can say it was laughably ineffective at best and really, only added to the hilarity that was racing around the table like a wildfire.  Nan, not thinking she had said anything out of the norm, finally realized that control had been lost; people were falling on the floor holding their sides and screaming.  Even mom finally ceded her normally fun and cheery façade to history and joined in with her own oh-so-special gut laugh.  She would perfect that laugh over the years much to her mother’s dismay.

And so, the level of laughter perfection that Nan and I have shared was cemented for future decades.  It took very little for she and I to dissolve into gales of guffaws that we honestly had no control over.  Disabling fits that seemed almost medically dangerous when we were in them but again, no control.  They would leave us weak and sore and grinning but something else.  

Peacefully Drained.  

The calm that would eventually overtake us was a shared euphoria of delight. We had shed all the teenaged angst and adult worry and whatever else was inhabiting our darker natures; we had killed the worst in us and let the best of us shine…for a while.  It was therapeutic.  It was delight in each other in that only the two of us knew what the laughter was about (frequently nothing!) and that only the two of had had this moment in life, together. As the years went on, we would set out in the car, sometimes stoned (oh all right, often high), with one destination in mind.  

We were out to get lost.

We drove through the rural countryside of our youth staying only on small, two-lane, back roads and making only turns that would take us away from anything familiar.  We would drive for hours yakking and listening to the radio until that magic moment would simultaneously dawn on us. We were lost.  And for some reason that was the key, the impetus, the trigger that turned on the laugh track that we both craved.  We would sit on the side of some unnamed country lane and scream with laughter at our ability to lose ourselves while being lost. Nothing was really funny, but everything was truly hilarious.

Another cleansing of the heart and soul complete.  Peace.  Out.

Years later I was home visiting from California.  Mom was living with Nan and Max in Gettysburg, PA. The big day out with Mom was shopping at the Gettysburg Outlet Mall and movie or lunch.  Olive Garden was the spot.  The three of us got our table and were trading tales and playing catchup. I have never been able to exactly pinpoint what the trigger was, but it happened. Something set us off and Nan and I started to giggle, then gasp, then scream out loud.  Mom, watching us, became infected with whatever insanity had gripped Nan and I, and collapsed with us.  

We tried, really, we did.

We tried at least act normal.  Sugar an iced tea perhaps?  Spilled sugar from the trebling hands only fueled more laughter.  This was not a polite little tintinnabulation of charming voices elevated in modest mirth.  Oh, no.  This was flat out spit your food and howl time.  We were now laughing at each other’s inability to control themselves.  Nan and I were screaming “Don’t LOOK at me!!!”  Mom was spitting “What are we laughing about??” 

That is where it went off the rails.

Diners all around us (oh fine, the entire restaurant) was noticing us.  Noticing may be too demure a term. There were unapologetic glares.  People were corralling their small children and covering their ears and turning them away from the spectacle that was us.

Ok.  Maybe not quite that bad but people were definitely not amused and, the waitress was now hovering around us like a fly on the butter dish and shooting us what can only be described as the “I am about to call a manger” look.

Chastisement is a weapon.

Teachers have used it for millennia. The Look can stop traffic or encase over-abundant behavior.  In our case, the the withering reproachful glare from our waitress had an effect.  It did.  Nan and I having done our time on the floor of many a food service establishment recognized The Look. We knew we were about to be 86’d.  From the Olive Garden.

The utter absurdity of that struck us as, well funny.  So that funny was added into the already funny show in progress and we knew we were going to tell this story forever.  ‘The Day We Got 86’d From the Olive Garden…With Mom’.  And off we went.

I think we just plain wore out funny out because we eventually calmed down, finished up our meal, paid and left.  The leaving was a tad awkward as everyone, I now do mean everyone, stared us out the door and into the car where we once more broke down at the thought of how utterly absurd and perfect that moment had been.

Sharing laughter with Nanette has been a life-long joy for me. I wait for our time together so that we can simply let go and laugh until it hurts.  It is a cleansing ritual that I share with only her.  As Nan let’s go once more, this time of her mortal coil, I must find a way to regain my smile and maybe one day my laughter.  For now…..

I’m Losing My Laughter

President Obama, Please

President Obama, Please

Set the Tone

A return to “Yes, We Can”

We need nuance, facts, direction, compassionate calm; in short; 

Hope

The President’s remarks to the graduating classes of 2020 over the weekend were striking in their simplicity and powerful in their eloquence.  They were the carefully crafted and considered words of a man, a world leader, a figure who stands so far above the political fray of this moment; our moment of national and global crisis, as to shine brighter than the tarnished remnants of the Fractured Union in which we now barely live.  We exist in a nightmarish netherworld of altered reality populated by bloviated expulsions from a huckster and a fraud who never wanted this job that he currently holds and does not have the intellectual capacity to maneuver within.  The current occupant of this global stage plods and plots his daily course with only the inept and mono-visioned focus of a man held captive by his own demons; demons which now have grown to infect, much like the virus he is being defeated by, the entire world’s hunkering and panicked population. 

We ask ourselves daily, “How much worse can this get?”, “How much more damage can he do in three months?”, or six, or however many months or years he will have at his disposal.  With the legislative checks and balances gutted, neutered, or in many cases euthanized, who will stand up to his schoolyard bully-ism?  

Who will speak truth to faux power?

As a populace, we have been beaten into a stunned silence by the barrage of non-fact and fictionalized “truth” by what can only be described as a despotic demon. This is a caricature that he undoubtedly thinks is a good thing based on his fawning obeisance to other world leaders who operate under the protection of militaristic, propped up, potentates.  We know this.  It is a fact firmly in evidence for years now as proven and witnessed by the sycophantic salaaming with which he believes he is flattering those whom he admires, or needs, or wishes he were more like.

These other world leaders, however strong-armed and backed by strong arms, know him for the fraud he is.  They know him for the weaknesses he displays and are angling with ever more efficient aim, at the heart of our democracy.  Our time in the sun is passing.  Our American Century is already well passed its “use by” date.  We are two decades into a new century and what nation or global cabal will lay claim to this shredded, barely formed, next 100 years? We can only surmise and none of our worst imaginings will be bad enough when we finally have to face to ultimate reality.

The winner will not be us.  Unless.

Unless our most recent past president retakes the reins of civil discourse and once again shows us why he was the best of the brightest.  Why, in the history of our country, we had eight years of scandal-free governance, global accord, and record economic expansion, innovation, and development; all while literally pulling us up out of the fiscal and cultural morass he was left with as he assumed office in 2009.  It is what, historically, Democrats appear to do best.  They problem solve our way into prosperity when the other party has looted our savings accounts of cash, courage, and convictions.

President Obama’s soft, thoughtful, rhetoric to those students of 2020 whose immediate, hard-earned, transitions into the real world were abruptly cancelled spoke more than just graduation oratory. They resonated into a human core that we have had literally excised from our current consciousness.  Numb to even the most blatant abuses through a daily barrage of instant twitterishness, we are reeling in a boat without a rudder; bobbing on seas that grow more stormy, and more disturbed, and more threatening hourly.

Something is going to snap.

The rubber band that has held our democracy together is old, frayed, and brittle.  The virus appeared as if to prove this point.  It could have been a nuclear attack on an ally, or on us.  It could have been a massive cyber-attack on our infrastructure.  It could have been a thousand tiny arrows aimed at a million points of perceived weakness.  Instead, it is a stealthy, one-celled, unseen, virulent agent that is taking us all out.  The world was stopped as efficiently as if someone had pulled the power cord to our lives.  And in reality, all the rest of those horrific end-times scenarios are still quite possible.  They could be heaped on top of the trash pile we are currently wallowing in. If you doubt that, I beg you not to tempt the universe for fate is, indeed, a cruel mistress.

Now.  This moment.  President Obama chose to speak out, critiquing the current president with the slipperiness of an eel and with a fluidity of words that only the highest intelligence can muster.  Heartful yet truthfully blunted, Obama reintroduced us to statesmanship in a ten-minute lecture format.  He must continue and once again take up a mortarboard of leadership that he set aside for loftier goals in his post-presidency.  It is a requirement.  History will judge this moment.

It is true that past presidents, as a rule, hold their tongues on the current administration’s foibles.  But today, the rule of law is abandoned, the courts are now akin to sacrificial altars of paganistic political power grabs, and the congressional oversight is in hiding. Now we need the shock and awe of a thunderbolt, but one sounded with the velvet-smooth cloth hammer of an orator of good cause.

I call on President Obama to once again pick up the overly onerous task of leading us into that unseen future he promised us once more than a decade ago.  Craft a message and deliver it to the Viral Times we are suppressed by.  Give Ted Talks on leadership, speak to organizations and political action committees, and yes, directly to the people of our country and our world, with the clear-eyed vision of a pragmatist, and from the stolid foundation of someone who trusted us through untested times in the recent past.

To hell with the “norms”.  They are dead.  Let us bury them.

Give us back our hope, Mr. President.  Show us how to think again and what to do and we will cheer you on with a resounding,

Yes, We Can…..Again.

Grateful Is Boring

Grateful is Boring

The world is in many stages of grief, anger, fright, and confusion.  Let’s begin there.  Oh, and we’re all, to varying degrees, in some sort of self or institutional lockdown.  We each come to be in our own private Idaho’s of solitude through no fault of our own but none-the-less each of us must come to our own private reckonings with the hermetic existences we are now enduring.

It happened, for the majority of us, quite suddenly and without any huge, impactful, event.  There were glimmers of a “new” virus out there, somewhere, in some far-off Asian province.  We’ve had these before from other disparate places; Ebola, H1N1, Bird Flu each, if we thought beyond our morning lattes, certainly had the potential to kill multitudes of humans but again, “them”, the amorphous masses that really did not affect us or our daily routines. Much.

And then this virus, this Coronavirus; this CoVid19.

One day I’m picking up our friend at a nearby airport for a visit and the next day, literally the next day, we were suddenly sequestered together for the foreseeable future.  It’s a good thing we were all very old friends who had traveled far and wide together over the decades and knew each other far better than most so it was really like a small family of three, on holiday…of sorts.

Except for the niggling of uncertainly that the daily news was feeding us if we listened.  This then bred the full-blown fear that rapidly followed.  Without warning the world “out there” was an apocalyptic morass of potential infection, suffering, and death.  Really, overnight.  And “out there” was outside our front door!

What this does to our individual psyches is a very personal yet somehow shared experience.  This isolation idiocy grows in each of us and on each of us in very different but related ways.  But mostly it is the constipated pipes of our freedom of movement highway (excuse the metaphor but really, how shitty are things anyway?) that affect the majority of us the most.  No quick trips to the store, no drives to Five Guys for a burger without masks, gloves, trays for the car and counting how many customers are in the store before you enter.  I met our neighbor across the street tipping a single used cup into his garbage bin.  We locked eyes and he said, with no trace of irony in his terse voice, “If I don’t come out to the trash bin at least twice an hour I’ma kill him.”  Him, being his husband 40 feet away in their house.  I got it.

But here’s where it gets rough.  Grateful.

It’s on Facebook a thousand time an hour:

“I’m grateful for the sunny day!”

“I’m grateful my family is healthy!”

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“I’m grateful for my precious cat, Precious!” 

Grateful is boring.

There I’ve said it. Bad me.  I’d feel shame and self-loathing if there was anyone I’d be actually seeing face-to-face in the next whenever to even care!  And besides, all wagers aside, I’ll wager that each and everyone else out there is of the same opinion.  

Grateful is boring.

Our lives are boring. Period.

My life and home have never, and I mean N.E.V.E.R been so respectably clean, organized, and perfectly presentable.  My mother would be thrilled!  But my mother would not be allowed to come into my house to see this miracle of modern living.  She’d be in quarantine as well if she hadn’t died decades before all this shit hit the fan.  And she thought 9/11 was bad!

We did the hard shit first: we moved rocks, built walls, rearranged plants in the garden.  I, alone, trimmed 185 feet of 16’ tall Oleander trees, both sides, and the top, down to 6 feet.  Forty, count them FORTY, huge, green, bins of waste; I’m still feeding them out to the green waste guy who now has added me to his Stalag-like list of offenders for TOO much work getting done which, I know, seems very UN-Stalag-like in its rock-splitting historical context but none-the-less, is my new reality.  It took me two weeks, 8-hours a day, to accomplish this one task.  Oh, and I had just had a quadruple heart ablation the week this all began.  The general consensus was if that didn’t kill me then either the CoVid would or a heart attack would, so what the hell…….get on with it.

And then the basement was cleaned and organized.

This actually was the beginning of the fright portion of the picture.  This had never been accomplished before in living history (I’m assuming for anyone else out there, as well).  I unpacked boxes from three moves and two decades ago.  But there was no place to take the give-aways as our local thrift stores were….you guessed it….closed.  We actually put some really hard-to-dump items like pool railings and air compressors on the curb with “$50 OBO” signs on them hoping they would look attractive enough for someone to steal them.  Someone bought them!  We shake our heads in wonder.

The real issue for me is that “Inspiration”, along with Elvis, has left the building. 

Grateful is boring.

I wish I could fully absorb the depth of the First-World, White-Person, problems we are confronting, I do!  I’m a privileged, white, talented, educated, individual but trust me, this shit is weird.  And it’s weird for well-off and well-under alike.  We really are all in this together.  The pablum platitudes that are pumped out have a certain ring to them that in my bones I feel resonates the same with my core group of over-indulged retirees the same as it does for those inner city Detroit put-upons who are still unable to drink their WATER no less wonder what would happen if and when they contract this plague.  For them, too:

Gratitude is boring. But what a world apart those two realities are. 

As a writer and a photographer, I’m having a pesky “block”; a creative logjam that is preventing me from having the inspiration I need to pick up a pen or a camera and create something that soothes my soul and maybe captivates others.

This is such a shit problem when compared to food lines, ER meltdowns, ventilator goodbyes, and the myriad of other tortuous pathways humans all over the world are traversing.  For them, gratitude is also boring but in a much more life or death sort of scenario. They literally having nothing to be grateful for.  Nothing.  They are bereft, seemingly forgotten, and without even hope which I posit is a prerequisite for gratitude. 

No hope=no gratitude.

So for now, from whatever end of the polar-opposite spectrums we all come to this same, fraught, fearful place we find ourselves in as humans, let us at least try and dig as deeply as we can into the fabric of the lives we are living and at the very least, fight for a glimmer of hope.  Then, clinging as hard as humans can to that, maybe we can get to; 

gratitude.

December 12, 2019

December 12, 2019

Community

The Second Greatest Showman

Community

For a simple, declarative word, Community is as amorphous as an amoeba; shape shifting with time, place, people, and purpose.  How we define community is a very personal attribution, it provides the outlines for our own world as well as telegraphing information about each of us to the greater world as a whole.  We spend a major portion of our lives moving in and out of various communities at varied times.  Our immediate family is, of course, our first real venture into co-existence with others; we had no choice. As we moved further along in life many of us make concise and sometimes extreme and painful choices about our original community of relatives that helped to inform our early selves.

Things and people and places change.  We grow, hopefully, for the better.

School, sport’s teams, scout groups, church, best friends, old friends, new friends; they have all been community for us, for a time, at a time.

For me, as a young gay man graduating from college on the east coast, I was definitively in search of myself and a community; one I could not define, had not seen, and had no clue as to how to access.  With a grand leap of faith and an airline ticket begrudgingly given to me by my parents for graduation, I landed in San Francisco in 1977.  To be slightly more precise, I landed in a Victorian flat on Castro St., the quintessential, ready-made community for a mid-century gay male.  A party.

While there, I did manage to define myself in many ways, made lots of friends, expanded horizons I did not know I even had.  I became a nascent version of the man I would someday become; one who still, even now, is searching for yet more ways to push myself further while at the same time dig my roots deeper into my community….as I know it now, today.  It is radically different from the community I had forty years ago; it should be if I am doing things correctly.

When the party in San Francisco ended, everybody died.

Yet I lived, on and on and on, and continued to try and recreate a community, any community, that reflected my life up until then and one that promised to hold me up for the life yet to come, however short or long or uncertain.  I lived in many cities after San Francisco starting with Palm Springs. At that time, the mid-1980s, it was not a comfortable fit for me, but it provided me a career, a home, travel, and many of the trappings of community or at least a community I could exist within for a time.  But I knew there was more. Waiting.

The question was; did I have enough time to keep searching?

And so, as Cervantes said: “Until death, it is all life”

So, live on I did, in many places and many communities.  I met the man I would spend the remainder of my life with and together we maneuvered the world thorough many more communities, many more families of friends and then one day, seemingly suddenly but in reality not, we were older!  And what we were to do at that point came forcefully into view; as if by chance but really, by the design I had set in motion, along with the plan he had sojourned along for years before we met. Those paths combined with a need we both now had for something more, something tangible in terms of community.  We really wanted an ease of existence that included friendships as yet unseen and a place that the sun had blessed with time and space and a personal largess of wonders.

Welcome home.  Welcome back. Just welcome…..to Palm Springs.

Cathedral Cove, Home, within Community

It was not even a decision, the house up north sold itself and the home in the desert found us, exactly the way that an entire hoard of friends would magically appear and cement themselves into the form of a new and lasting family.  The ease with which this transition happened was so stunning that it was nearly undetectable; perhaps a sign that “truth will out” to toss a Bit of the Bard in.

Last night, we were at a free holiday gift from our Community God; the movie “The Greatest Showman”

There are no words to emphasize how truly remarkable it is to walk into a local movie palace filled with 300+ members of the larger community and realize that you know about one third of them personally!  It is a grounding of one’s soul; a peace of being that permeates your body and sends intermittent rushes of joy and gratitude coursing through you.  This is one theatre in a place of hundreds of thousands but the community spreads out from there and it does so in large part because of one person:

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Eddie Kreg Anderson, our own Greatest Showman

It is Eddie’s mission to found his own community and to share it, gleefully and with purpose, with the rest of the town, valley, and all who enter herein. And boy does he know how to throw a party to celebrate this community.  Confetti cannons, water cannons, exploding balloons, flaggers on stage; all designed to enhance the interactive movie experience that is “The Greatest Showman”.  Think “Rocky Horror” (he does that one as well) but with more heart and more of his entire soul wrapped up in it like a Xmass package for us all.

Before the movie started, he told us his story, his evolution, his search for himself and for that community that could feed and nourish his person. Moving to Palm Springs he found many elements already in place.  But Eddie wanted to elevate that experience, include more people in the community and throw the doors open to inclusion, uplifting friendships, and a non-judgmental nature that would welcome all and threaten or demean no one.

“The Greatest Showman”

A movie about Freaks and Geeks who find THEIR family in a circus, as so many of us have done throughout the years. The joy and companionship demonstrated in this film actually leap off the screen and energize the audience.  Filled with music and movement that transcends mere earth-bound realities, “Showman” shows us how to BE the community we are looking for.  How to become the people who create their own community that supports itself and each other.  I only heard a happy babbling consensus of joy as we left the theatre.

Eddie Kreg Anderson is OUR Greatest Showman

Tonight, I am over the moon grateful for our community.

 
 

I’ve Written a Letter to Daddy

I’ve Written a Letter to Daddy…..

Baby Jane Hudson, 1964

I have heard for years about writing a letter from my younger self as a means of catheterizing the slowly oozing wounds of childhood that seep forward to infect adult life.  All well and good except that when I try and think about what to actually say from the undeveloped, infantile, hurting, little boy that I was, I come back to the same conclusion; I need to decipher who I am as an adult first.  The adult that was formed and fed by the damaged boy I grew from.

And so, I will flip this suggested narrative and speak to that young boy through the ages and lenses that time has imbued me with and, in the process, maybe I’ll uncover some truths about the me of now as well.  We shall see.

Hey, you!  Kid. Listen up.

As I look back, it sometimes feels as if I am in the Hitchcock movie “Vertigo” with the innovative (at the time) telescoping film technique (Dolly Zoom) that was meant to visually describe Stewart’s extreme vertigo. From this vantage point of a great many years passed, it feels daunting to drop into the vortex and hope that I can identify the pinpricks of truth and insight that would have greatly benefitted you, then, and might, just might, assist me in untangling the webs of time that have clogged my heart and soul for too long now.

So, let’s begin.

I wanted to talk to you about fear.  The fear you felt as a very young boy, fear of your parents, individually and as a collective force.  Not physical fear so much as an emotional smackdown that all too often took you by surprise.  It did feel physical to you though, as well.  That gnawing pit of fear in your stomach that consumed you from the inside as you waited for that verbal hammer to fall, again and again, was physical. It always left you depleted when it was over and lessened in a way that you realized even then would come back, sooner than later, and jerk your insides into turmoil all over. The Groundhog Day, a movie you have yet to see but that you will revile forever forward. Resistance was futile.

You were five years old.

I really believe that had you known it, this was about where your emotional life turned on a dime and you would never be the same.  This was when you started school, kindergarten.  The omens were so overt as to be a text in a witch’s handbook of spells.  As you were waiting, excited, on the front porch for the bus to rumble down the country lane for your very first day of school, your father was waving goodbye from his car in the drive.  Your mother was holding your hand.  Then as you both watched him put the car in gear and back out of the drive, you also watched him run over your beloved dog, Maggie, in front of your eyes.

Her cries were horrific.  A suffering animal was your worst nightmare.  They scooped her up and rushed her away to the vet, both of them.  She was injured but went on to live a long, much-loved life. You were left to board the bus to school, alone, and go through your entire first day of school sobbing for your dog you thought had been killed.

Sorry you, the neglect and insensitivity started early.

Adding another element to the tragicomedy of your young life was the narrative, forever unanswered, as to where your sister is in all this? Honestly this is a major problem.  She was, and is, ten years older than you, forever.  You were both in the same school, granted she, at 15, was a sophomore? In a separate building but yet, based on your childhood hysteria of this your first day of school, wouldn’t the school have gone and gotten her, at least, to come comfort you? There was no recall any interaction with her then, or after.  

What did happen was your teacher, Miss Graham, took you to the old library building, a former Quaker Meeting House in the woods next to the elementary school. Looking back, the memories I have as an adult involve you in this ancient library, the smell of the dusty books, the creak of the old hand-hewn wooden floors.  It was a comfort all of your childhood and maybe it sprung from that day, in 1957, when you spent the morning sobbing in the children’s section waiting for something, someone, anyone. 

This, young man, set the tone for the rest of your fractured educational journey.

In your life you will attend five schools before you are a senior.  Most will be great institutions but ones that you will only alight in for a short time. Your bad behavior will play a role, but your mother will hold a larger-than-life presence here. She actually will start and expand a school that you will remain in until ninth grade.  You will have eight children in your class.  Your mother is the principal.  You will have to ride home with her every day of your childhood, many times after being sent to the principal’s office and waiting on “the chair” in the hallway for all the other kids to see.

This life will cower you, almost permanently

I will tell you right now that kindergarten seems to have been the Rubicon that you will have to hurdle in order to take your first steps into personhood.  That same year your mother, an educator, politician, and self-made women of the prewar era, took another step that would inform literally the rest of your life. She went to that same kindergarten teacher, Miss Graham, and asked her if she thought you were gay.

Now gay wasn’t a common term then, I’m sure homosexual was bantered about and to this day and I wonder what that conversation was like.  I also admire, in a polluted, corrupted, way, the courage it will take for her, your mother, in 1957, having lived in D.C. through the Army/McCarthy hearings, to air this washtub full of dirty laundry.  We lived in a small town, in the country.  She told me about this decades later but only the bare bones.

Those bones included the fact that your father is also gay.

This fact will not be revealed to you until your fortieth birthday. The timing, mid lifespan exactly, will leave the adult you, struggling with career, HIV, a new relationship, and life in the 90’s, to absorb and contemplate what might have been.  When it comes, it will be yet another staggering blow of betrayal, one you will regurgitate for the rest of your life. The bifurcation of your life, orchestrated by both of your parents, will resonate throughout the years and I can tell you from where you are now that where you will go with this newfound information will be truly the journey of your life.

Your parents gave you life. Your parents fucked it up as well.

But before you get to turn Forty, you must navigate a world that will explode everything you know and alter you forever forward.  After your mother spends the next dozen years, from five to eighteen, desperately trying to remake the you she created into someone who will not be gay, you will find out anyway. You will cement the installed attractions to guys, men, and use them like pavement on the highway to your freedom.  You will actually never deny your sexuality.  When asked by friends if you are gay, you will simply say “Are you interested or are you taking a survey?” Case stated, quietly with humor, and flipped back to the questioner.

But that quick-witted answer comes after.

After holding the “Secret” so close to your core for all those tumultuous teenage angst-riddled years, you seriously consider, often, what it would be like if you were not here any longer.  You’re now sixteen/seventeen, what we now know to be prime suicide territory for teens and young adults.  But when you get to this point, in1968, the world is exploding, there are no suicide hotlines, no PSA commercial on TV sending you to get help.  You will navigate this abyss alone. 

You will look around your small rural locale and find your best girlfriend down the lane, and she is living the life you want.  Popular, engaged, thriving.  And so, you will model yourself after her.  You will remake your own personality before your eyes. As you transform you know it is only a mask but like Mardi Gras, masks will give you the permission to become anyone you would like to be.  You will leave the dirt of your birthplace and flee to San Franciso. 

It’s 1976.  It is a party.

First it was Heaven.  Then it was Hell.

Just as you will be fine tuning the nascent, adult, gay guy you’d never even conjured in your wildest dreams, the world will shift.  They killed the mayor and Harvey Milk.  The spontaneous tear-streaked vigil will begin at your doorstep, 717 Castro St.  It will be the inaugural year for CNN and your front stoop will be live streamed into every house in America.  Much like earthquakes here in California this event will shake, rattle, and roll your psyche like almost nothing has since the death of JFK.  The tremors will continue through the capture and trial of the murderer, the slap-on-the-hand verdict, the riots.  It will all seem SO personal and devastating.

And then it all changed, again

HIV will creep in on cat’s paws but, paws with claws.  Claws drawn and ready inflict decades of fear, pain, loss, and almost every emotion you can conjure that a human might encounter.  And then some. Your friends and acquaintances will begin to disappear from daily life.  You will not see them strolling the Castro much anymore, if at all, and those you do see will be suddenly gaunt shadows of themselves, on walkers, with friends solicitously helping them navigate.

And then they will only be obits on Star Pharmacy’s wall of shame.

As almost the last of your friends vanishes, your visits to the AIDS ward at SF General will subside.  Frankly you are almost glad, the stress will grow too large for you to handle. You will not be tested, yet.  There are no tests. You already know.  You are next.  You will do what you have done rest in your life, flee.  Run from danger.  But what will you turn towards?  In a little over a decade, you will find yourself back at that crossroads of life and death.  You will run, alone, to the desert.  To die.  It will feel inevitable.  You will not want witnesses.  You will do this alone. You will be terrified that the confidence of the mask you have built will crack and you will want no one to see the agony that you will have seen.  You are tested. Finally.  You knew the results; you will have felt them internally and seen them in all of the friend’s eyes you searched as they lay dying.  There will be no counseling.  No referrals. No treatment that does not kill you as it will have killed every one of your friends. 

Alone Again, Naturally

            Gilbert O’Sullivan 1971

You will be barely thirty when you wake up and realize you must begin again.  Living in God’s Waiting Room out there in the desert will stifle you and you will realize that you will have to live, until you die.  But always with a backup plan for a quick exit should the need arise.  You will think about it, plan it, and obsess at times over having this Suicide Safety Net always ready.  And yet you will move forward, surprisingly.

You will roam around the country, seemingly on whims (really, exactly on whims) until you land in the fetid low country of the south.  You will not know why you end up there; it was not anywhere you intended to be. But in a year or two you meet a guy!  You will be forty years old; he will be five years older.  You will have that infamous conversation with your mother on your fortieth birthday where she outs your father to you.  Still shaking your head from the absurdity of the forty years you will have lived so far you will move, six weeks later, with this guy you just met, even further into some sort of Sordid Lives prequel.

And Your Adventure Begins, Anew

You, the very young you I am speaking to, will find it hard, impossible in fact; to imagine but you will spend the next thirty-five years with this man.  He will support you in every way no one has ever supported you before.  He will carry the load you will often find too much for you alone to manage.  You will craft a series of lives that you both make up from whole cloth, lumber and screws if you will, but lives that others envy, laud, and cite as a model of everything gay.  This will be, must be, your ultimate reward.  The fuck you to everyone along the way who ever doubted.  Especially to the you who will tend to doubt and judge yourself more than the world could ever care to.

Shake my hand, young man

It’s good to know you. You are meeting yourself now but seventy years in the future.  I have the advantage here, I know.  I lived your life and am living it still.  I wish I had had a me back when I was you.  You will do the best you can.  I will do my best to remember and celebrate the you I never really knew but that I inhabited all these decades.  And so, it falls once more to lyrics; songs, touchable moments in your and my history that carry more weight as the years pile on.

I don’t remember losing track of you
You were always dancing in and out of view
I must have thought you’d always be around
Always keeping things real by playing the clown
Now you’re nowhere to be found

I don’t know what happens when people die
I can’t seem to grasp it as hard as I try
It’s like a song I can hear playing right in my ear that I can’t sing
I can’t help listening

And I can’t help feeling stupid standing around
Crying just ain’t gonna ease you down
‘Cause I know that you’d rather we were dancing
Dancing our sorrow away
Right on dancing
There’s nothing you can do about it anyway
Just do the steps that you’ve been shown
By everyone you’ve ever known
Until the dance becomes your very own
No matter how close to yours another’s steps have grown
In the end there is one dance you’ll do alone

Keep a fire for the human race
Let your prayers go drifting into space
You never know what will be coming down
Perhaps a better world is drawing near
Just as easily it could all disappear
Along with whatever meaning you might have found
Don’t let the uncertainty turn you around
Go on and make a joyful sound

Into a dancer you have grown
From a seed somebody else has thrown
Go on ahead and grow some seeds of your own
And somewhere between the time you arrive
And the time you go
May lie a reason you were alive
That you’ll never known

Jackson Browne

  1974