Monday, July 28, 2014
A Hand to Hold
To you I give my hand to hold
My trust to take
You give to me the security
Of the seat next to you
Words I can believe
Precious love.
To you I give a frightened heart
The self I am unsure of
A nervous laugh.
You give to me a shoulder to hold me up
A smile to change my sight
Permission to exist as I am
And precious love.
Friday, July 25, 2014
Some Poetry from a Hundred Years Ago
BROKEN & BLOODY
How you stole your way into my life
is a mystery, even to me.
I'd lost track of the barricades
I'd constructed over the years, shielding a heart still breaking
from a love and a half ago.
You leaned against nothing but the sky
as it reached the rest of what there was.
Laid back, you slid through life
like a blade on ice.
Something about you
a sculpted face
designed at the hands of infinity,
ravaged with character.
Was it magic or a game
one without rules.
Whatever it was, it is no longer.
For my heart lies nearby
broken and bloody
Too long under your knife.
Yet something about you lingers
probably always will.
You took it all back, Indian giver.
Yet nothing ventured, not a thing gained.
I just caught my breath
Though you've been gone
Forever.
Untitled
Stolen innocence is what I cannot get back.
It was taken from me, taken.
What can I do now, but listen
to the demons that live inside my head
and purge my heart of hatred.
But first wish him dead, because
his death might set me free.
MY LOVE
Your smile, the one I feel in love with in another life
it betrays you, for in its lines and creases is proof
proof someone else occupies your thoughts
proof someone else is held in your glance
In your arms and in your smile, the one I fell in love with
in another life.
my love, where are you when we make love
Whose face do you see instead of mine
Whose name do you say in the solitude inside your head
Just now, I have noticed you hiding
behind your smile
the one I fell in love with in another life
the one I forgot, last night
the last time you held me.
THE MIDDLE OF ME (prayer for a voice)
Fly away! Get away from what stifles you, whatever is holding you back. Be wary of those who tell you who or what you are, or especially who or what you should be. Take charge of your dreams and what images you see. Take charge of your life. My hopes for you, the child, the muse within, have only the ends of the interminable earth, the heights of a dreamy, cloudless blue sky as limits.So go! Be you, whoever that is. Know that happy endings exist, sometimes only for effect. Know that life is seldom fair. Know that sometimes, most times, it is difficult, but know that most things are possible, most times. Know that people are mean, and just as many are kind and openhearted. And know that it is dreams, the process of imagination that life is about. And the sky, the earth, the crashing waves of the ocean.
Take risks, my child. Please don't let my fear stop you! The fear I feel was forced upon me by poor judgement, misconceptions and lies.So I feel stuck. Not you. I'm counting on you to do the work. You go push the limits, fall down again and again, but get back up for when you are on your feet, you can move forward. Sitting in one place, it is so easy to just look back. Take big huge steps. Go and don't be afraid, although it is alright if you are.
I am stuck, but I am setting you free. I'll try and follow. Know that you are so loved. Know that you are mine, yet I belong to you, as well. You live inside of me, a breath. A muse. Inspiration. I call you the Middle of Me for you are. So go! Write. Speak. Do whatever it is and say whatever it is your voice tells you, for your voice can do and say in equal measure. Go now. I'll protect you.
How you stole your way into my life
is a mystery, even to me.
I'd lost track of the barricades
I'd constructed over the years, shielding a heart still breaking
from a love and a half ago.
You leaned against nothing but the sky
as it reached the rest of what there was.
Laid back, you slid through life
like a blade on ice.
Something about you
a sculpted face
designed at the hands of infinity,
ravaged with character.
Was it magic or a game
one without rules.
Whatever it was, it is no longer.
For my heart lies nearby
broken and bloody
Too long under your knife.
Yet something about you lingers
probably always will.
You took it all back, Indian giver.
Yet nothing ventured, not a thing gained.
I just caught my breath
Though you've been gone
Forever.
Untitled
Stolen innocence is what I cannot get back.
It was taken from me, taken.
What can I do now, but listen
to the demons that live inside my head
and purge my heart of hatred.
But first wish him dead, because
his death might set me free.
MY LOVE
Your smile, the one I feel in love with in another life
it betrays you, for in its lines and creases is proof
proof someone else occupies your thoughts
proof someone else is held in your glance
In your arms and in your smile, the one I fell in love with
in another life.
my love, where are you when we make love
Whose face do you see instead of mine
Whose name do you say in the solitude inside your head
Just now, I have noticed you hiding
behind your smile
the one I fell in love with in another life
the one I forgot, last night
the last time you held me.
THE MIDDLE OF ME (prayer for a voice)
Fly away! Get away from what stifles you, whatever is holding you back. Be wary of those who tell you who or what you are, or especially who or what you should be. Take charge of your dreams and what images you see. Take charge of your life. My hopes for you, the child, the muse within, have only the ends of the interminable earth, the heights of a dreamy, cloudless blue sky as limits.So go! Be you, whoever that is. Know that happy endings exist, sometimes only for effect. Know that life is seldom fair. Know that sometimes, most times, it is difficult, but know that most things are possible, most times. Know that people are mean, and just as many are kind and openhearted. And know that it is dreams, the process of imagination that life is about. And the sky, the earth, the crashing waves of the ocean.
Take risks, my child. Please don't let my fear stop you! The fear I feel was forced upon me by poor judgement, misconceptions and lies.So I feel stuck. Not you. I'm counting on you to do the work. You go push the limits, fall down again and again, but get back up for when you are on your feet, you can move forward. Sitting in one place, it is so easy to just look back. Take big huge steps. Go and don't be afraid, although it is alright if you are.
I am stuck, but I am setting you free. I'll try and follow. Know that you are so loved. Know that you are mine, yet I belong to you, as well. You live inside of me, a breath. A muse. Inspiration. I call you the Middle of Me for you are. So go! Write. Speak. Do whatever it is and say whatever it is your voice tells you, for your voice can do and say in equal measure. Go now. I'll protect you.
Monday, July 21, 2014
The Eye of the Beholder Part 2
I was talking about my first time in a gay bar. I was seventeen and finally, perfectly at home
in a place I had never thought to dream of.
In the bars I made a few friends, mostly acquaintances though; and
because of these people my trips back and forth became more commonplace. Within a month, I’d met a man and not long
after that, we moved in together. By
this time I was eighteen. Ray was
thirty, a bit round with a very hairy chest and a doughy, expressionless face. His hair was dark and curly, unkempt. He was a sweet, sweet man, but not terribly
smart. And I am certain that I hurt
him. Even though, like a kid in a candy
store, I wasn’t at all certain what I liked, I knew what I didn’t like. Ray
worked nights and I spent mine at the bars.
I was, I guess what you would call, a regular, never having difficulty
getting in and being served.
This world that I had found in two gay bars in Minneapolis in the mid-1980s
was fascinating, full of colors and sounds I never knew existed. It was like I had been living life in black
and white, but now the world was before me in full Technicolor. I basked in the beauty of the men around me,
wallowing in desire and occasionally wading in deeper. It didn’t take me long, then, to figure out
what I liked. I did have a type after
all. The men I was attracted to, then,
were all older, but not by much. They
were twenty-one, twenty-two, not much older than that. At eighteen, the difference in age between
yourself and someone in their early twenties can be colossal.
The Urban Dictionary defines a twink as such: “an
attractive, boyish-looking, young gay man. The stereotypical twink is 18-22,
slender with little or no body hair, often blonde, dresses in club wear even at
10:00 AM, and is not particularly intelligent.” I don’t know about the
unintelligent part. It certainly isn’t a
prerequisite for the rest. But the
slender with little or no body hair and certainly the age bracket describes to
a T the kind of man, boy really, who I am attracted to. I was attracted to twinks when I was a twink
myself and I have been for the couple of decades since I was twink age appropriate. Remember when I said that I was young and
skinny? I looked, amazingly enough, 18
or 19 and weighed around 130 pounds from the time that I was 17, first
venturing into the gay community, until I was in my mid-thirties. Imagine my horror the first time I looked in
the mirror and realized I couldn’t pass for twenty anymore. Even the twink state of mind had flown the
coop.
In gay men, I believe there are two things you are likely to
find in common nearly across the board.
I’m sorry, but in my experience it’s true. Many gay men, including
myself base their attractions on the physical, primarily. I’m not saying that
mental, emotional, even spiritual attraction never enters the mix, but
physicality is paramount. I’m also not
saying that it’s necessarily a bad thing.
I balk at those who call it shallow. I’ve always said that, if physical attraction
wasn’t extremely important, there wouldn’t be any such thing as gay or
straight. If in a soul mate, I was
merely seeking a spiritual connection, I would have, long ago, married a woman
and settled down happily. If all I
required of a romantic relationship were things in common, similar tastes in
music or movies, oh how much happier I would have been my entire adult
life. No I needed smooth skin, a flat
stomach, smaller stature, maybe a treasure trail, but no more hair above the
waist than that. Muscle men never did it
for me, bears neither. I liked jocks,
maybe even slightly nerdy types, and especially twinks. It’s a funny sort of conundrum to find one’s
self nearly flip flopped in a role. Who
once was a twink had become a daddy. At
least that’s the gay group I fit into if merely looking at my age and who I was
attracted to, if not always how much money and how many credit cards I had in
my wallet.
Back to the Urban Dictionary, a daddy is defined as Gay
slang for an older gay man with money.
You might hear someone say, “I'm on the hunt for a new daddy. My last
one lost his job,” or, “I'm tired of working all of these hours. I need to get
me a daddy.” Oh how the mighty had
fallen. How could this have
happened? Time marches on, I guess. Thankfully, though, I seem to have gone into
a new phase where I still don’t look my age.
For the last ten years or so, I have looked to be in my early to mid
thirties, even now as I am more than a decade past my mid thirties. Maybe it’s genetics, maybe it’s the expensive
moisturizers and exfoliates I have become addicted to. It certainly isn’t lifestyle. I drink, smoke, and consume massive amounts
of crap, especially diet highly caffeinated soda. Remember how I said much earlier that I
wasn’t born with skin that tanned easily?
This fair skinned Irish boy spent a number of years burning my pale skin
into submission. Sunshine and tanning
booths, god I even remember the years we used to grease ourselves down with
baby oil and literally fry our bodies in the sun. That can’t possibly have been good, but
vanity said otherwise. I only stopped when I had a small skin cancer scare
seven or eight years ago. By then the
damage should have been done, but still, you’d never know.
As I creep into the last half of this decade before fifty, I
am surprised to find that brown hair I found so boring as a teenager is all
still here. It shows no sign of
thinning. Where other men in my family
have watched their hairlines recede, mine is barely further back now than it
was at twenty-five. Fortunately, things
haven’t been as dire as my teenage self predicted either. AS a gay man, I
certainly haven’t remained the wallflower I was resigned to play in younger,
straighter years. There is shyness, not
quite as painful as in my adolescence. I
have no problem approaching, chatting up women.
Some of the performer in me has returned over the years and my command
of a room with it. The shyness I have is
around men I like. This seems to be
mostly in person, as I have no problem flirting shamelessly via the internet.
There’s a movie called The Broken Hearts Club about a group
of gay friends living and in Los
Angeles. At the
beginning of some of the scenes, against a dark screen, flashes a Webster’s
Dictionary looking definition of the group’s adopted slang. One such definition was this: Meanwhile - red alert message amongst
friends signaling them to take immediate notice of a attractive passing
stranger. I saw the movie with
friends and my group adopted the same vernacular. Once at Gay Pride, maybe a year or so after
the movie came out, one of us said, “Meanwhile,” to which a few dozen people
turned around. The secret was out. We
had to come up with a more subtle phrasing to alert each other to approaching
hotness. Our term became
NEVERTHELESS.
Once while leaving a different movie with my best friend
Melissa, the two of us were on an escalator going down. Another couple clearly like us was on their
way up on the escalator across from us.
He was gorgeous, I had noticed out of the corner of my eye, whispering
with his female friend. Melissa and I
were still discussing the movie we’d just seen.
Once we’d stepped off the escalator, Melissa leaned over and asked, “Did
you hear that? That guy just totally
NERTHELESSED you.” Thank you, Mother
Nature! The point, though, is that I am
never likely to notice that sort of attention, maybe it’s just that I don’t
expect it. Thank goodness for friends,
the varied wingmen, or predominantly women I have had along for the ride
throughout the years. Hopefully they’ve
enjoyed the flirting on my behalf at least as much as, occasionally, I have reaped
the rewards of their efforts.
So I have said that my tastes have changed very little over
the years. I still love twinks; the age
appropriateness of this attraction diminishes with each passing year. So does the likelihood that someone I find
attractive will return the finding.
Obviously there are those who are attracted to older men for whatever reason.
There are all types in this gay culture, the aforementioned twinks and daddies,
fetishists, those who are into bears. I
recently heard the term otter used to describe a much thinner version of a
bear, slighter of stature, but just as much body hair. I guess you could say beauty is in the eye of
the beholder and thank god for that!
There’s hope for everyone after all.
In the dating game, I haven’t had many opportunities to
close in on the scenario I painted earlier, when speaking of my mother. Remember I theorized that my love for her
only served to enhance her beauty in my eyes?
This is common. Couples who have
been together for a long time, I think, see their attractions to each other
grow and change based obviously on more than just the physical and as these
changes take place, they must only serve to enhance the physical. But where did it all begin? The ideal for me, I think, would be to find
someone I am physically attracted to and then see that attraction grow as we
fall in love and discover everything there is to know about each other, the
things we have in common and the differences we must celebrate in one another. Sadly, I am forty-six years old and have yet
to really experience anything like that.
The love of my life, to date, very likely exposed me to HIV, twenty-five
years ago. Our relationship continued,
off and on, for years after that. We had
friends in common and our shared past continued to bring us together. I haven’t seen him in about ten years, but I
hear of him from mutual friends. Thank
fully, the news doesn’t affect me like it once did. I no longer live for his attention; no longer
crave any scrap of affection he might throw me as I had, for years, even after
he shattered my trust so irrevocably. I
do expect to find someone. I need that
hope like I need breath. My friends
sometimes suggest that I am too picky and perhaps that’s true. Again, I place physical attraction pretty
high up on the list and I don’t really see that changing. Why should it?
Earlier I said that I thought there were two almost
universal things about gay men, number one being that physical attraction was
of much higher importance than it is for women or even for straight men. Secondly, I think many gay men mistrust other
gay men. Even if there isn’t a deep seated mistrust, it’s far easier for us to
turn to a woman for comfort, friendship, almost anything, except of course for
sex. I think that those younger gay men
not into older gay men must mistrust their older brothers even more. The term dirty old man comes to mind. It’s a shame really because there are many
more well intentioned, compassionate, and even wise men out there that have
taken part in the movements towards gay rights and a treatment or cure for
AIDS, many who came out of the closet in a time where no one even thought to
dream of gay marriage. Look at us now. How fascinating it is experience an entire
history through the eyes of those who created it. I maintain that even if there isn’t a mutual
physical attraction much can be gained by keeping an open mind when it comes to
friendship within our community.
That said, I have limited myself over and over. When two straight women become friends there
are reasons having to do with social and economic status, shared interests,
spiritual and even emotional attraction, but rarely, if ever physical
attraction. It might not even exist, but
if it did, why would it matter? I laugh
when I go to gay social networking sites.
Is Gay.com even a thing anymore or has it all but been replaced by
Grindr and Scruff? I don’t doubt that
some of the men on, especially Gay.com are, as their profile says, looking for
friendship. Why then have they included
in their profile a preferred age group and why, oh why have they listed their
dick size?! I have gay friends whose
cocks I have never seen, nor would care to.
I know that we’re obsessed with dick size, but come on. I feel that wilting under the weight of this
common mistrust of each other; we are sadly robbing ourselves of a sense of
community that goes beyond gay pride, beyond our common goals. We do come together fiercely when our rights
are threatened. We certainly, many of
us, come together, one weekend a year to celebrate our commonality, even as we
revel in our differences. That’s Gay
Pride. I wonder if when there is no
parade, no festival, no gay day at Six Flags or Disneyland,
no amendment to vote for or against can we still come together? Some can certainly. And do.
Mistrust is mistrust.
Everyone’s feelings are certainly valid.
Where does my mistrust come from?
I suppose a large part of it stems from being objectified, though
seriously isn’t that objectification what I sought? The rest of it, for me anyway, comes from
crap that was never foisted on me by gay men, but by straight men. And yet, I leave it for the gays. Why? I
shudder to think it has to do with protecting myself from hurt, being as I’ve
rallied against others doing the same thing.
Certainly no older gay man ever hurt me enough for me to mistrust an
entire generation of them. So we’re back
to physical attraction. Is it really
that confusing being gay men and separating attraction, sex and friendship? Apparently
so. I have to do better. I must remind myself that, even though I am
looking for love, the romantic, soul mate kind of heart and mind altering love
that has alluded me for three decades, I haven’t given up. And in that pursuit, from time to time, I
have dated men who turned out to be far better friends than sexual partners. Also, I have stumbled upon gay men I had no
physical attraction to and somehow, because of circumstance continually
throwing us together, we, too, became friends.
Sadly, had life not demanded it of us, we may have never gotten to know
each other.
Most of us know that beauty is not skin deep. There are many gorgeous looking men who seem
to have very little beauty inside. We
all know them. And there many not very
physically attractive men with souls and hearts so beautiful, if you just take
a minute to look, you’ve already forgotten what their appearance told you in
the first place. And there are those of
us in between, the average looking ones, with personalities, senses of humor
that for survival sake placed our looks in the backseat. It really does take all kinds and it really
is important to remember what our hearts and souls craved in the first
place.
Saturday, July 5, 2014
The Eye of the Beholder: Part 1
I was born forty six years ago in a small town in Minnesota. We had one grocery store, one drug store, one
gas station, one church and three bars.
There were cornfields all around us and, although I did not grow up on a
farm, many of my firsts happened in those fields. The first time I kissed a girl, the first
time I kissed a boy, my first cigarette, my first Playboy, my first Playgirl. Yes, I virtually discovered I was gay in a
cornfield, sitting in the dirt, paging through Playgirl. I always felt as if I was born in the wrong
place, always had fancier designs on what my life should be. Those designs certainly had nothing to do
with cornfields or with towns offering just one of anything. I didn’t always know there was more; TV showed me.
Inside that tiny box I discovered there were private detectives, high
priced prostitutes, fashion designers, drug addicts and alcoholics, alcoholics
that looked nothing at all like my parents or their friends. I didn’t see the sadness or stark reality in the
things depicted on television. I only saw the glamor. I guess you can say I found some kind of allure in tragedy. I fantasized about
being a private detective. I even fantasized about being a high priced
prostitute and a drug addict. I know
that these situations were, of course, sensationalized on TV. I knew the inherent horror behind the glamor, as well. The problem was that that
these people were attractive in a way I’d never seen before.
I think every little boy has a moment when he looks at his
mother and sees the most beautiful woman in the world. I certainly did. My parents were having a party and my mother
had excused herself to tuck me in. I was
five, maybe six years old. She brushed
the hair from my forehead and leaned in to kiss me gently. I knew in that moment that there was no one
more beautiful than her. I was filled
with a sense of awe. I wondered how did
the other kids feel knowing that my mother was more beautiful than theirs? Clearly I loved my mother and her beauty was
based primarily on the fact that I loved no one in the world more than her. At some point, though, my definition of
beauty strayed from love and became about fascination and desire, innocent at first,
but eventually even lust.
Now would be a good time to tell you that I was born with
brown hair and brown eyes. I wasn’t born
with skin that tanned easily. I wasn’t destined
to grow tall and muscular. I was short,
skinny, and awkward. I was cute as a child, but as I grew into adolescence, I became pretty much
just average, certainly not the teenage boy of a teenage girl’s dreams. I was the boy who would watch the girl’s
purse when she danced with the boy of her dreams. I had been cursed with looks that screamed,
“GET A PERSONALITY and do it quick!” And so
I did. I told jokes I had memorized,
became a storyteller, a performer. I craved being the center of attention and I was. I was the youngest of seven children. The nearest in
age to me was six and a half years old when I was born. For many years, I did not lack regard. And my personality grew and grew until it nearly arrived at a place five minutes before I did.
The thing about a personality is it’s less
marketable than beauty. How do you dress
up a sense of humor? What color goes
well with charm when the charm is not preceded by a tan, blonde hair and blue eyes.
Adorable doesn’t always play as well as
gorgeous.
So at four, five,
and six years old, I could command a room.
The thing about the rooms though, is that they were filled with people
who already, at least in theory, adored me.
Sometimes, maybe, they were people who adored the people who adored me,
always a source of embarrassment for my poor brothers and sisters. Imagine any of our surprise when the further
I got in school, the more shy I became. The
further away from my audience I traveled the less inclined I was to perform. By
the time I was seven, my oldest siblings were away at school or getting
married. Miserably my fan club was
dwindling. The recipe for disaster inherent in this proposition wasn’t just
that I was getting less and less attention; it was also that I was craving it
more and more. I was a preteen
egomaniac, an attention whore. I suppose
this isn’t entirely abnormal. I imagine
there are many parents of teenagers and preteens that see the same qualities in
their children, although perhaps not put quite as darkly.
For a long time I did have something going for me. I was thin and I was young. Our culture certainly celebrates those
attributes especially in girls, but yes even in boys. My adolescence was, not uncharacteristically,
filled with heartache, real and imagined.
My parents separated when I was fourteen and my mother moved away,
further isolating me. I did spend time
with her on weekends, but most of my time was spent with my father and one
older brother. By that time, the five older siblings were all gone, too. I retreated even further into television and
into myself, the child star turned
introvert. In school I sat in the back of the room because I didn’t want anyone
behind me. I didn’t want anyone to see me.
Body image issues, shyness, shame for
being gay, it’s a miracle I ever attempted to have sex, but that takes me
back to that desire I was referring to earlier.
Thank goodness desire is stronger in most people than
self-consciousness. I had both in abundance. I was seventeen and not out of the
closet when I learned of a bar in Minneapolis
called the Gay 90s and knew I had to go.
I agonized over how to accomplish this, for weeks, until finally hatching
a plan. I had no idea if I could even get into the bar, but I took the bus from the
suburbs to downtown Minneapolis anyway
I knew I could get there, but the
buses didn’t run all night, so I wouldn't be able to get home until morning.
I didn’t care. Not in the
slightest.
I actually dressed
up. How cute! How embarrassing! I wore dress pants, a sweater and boots, an outfit I wouldn’t be caught dead in, in a gay bar,
today. I got downtown about 8PM on a
Friday night. It took me until almost 10 to muster up the courage to attempt an
entrance. Before that, I had walked
around and around the block, studying the people going in. I was absolutely terrified and have no idea
how with my shyness and awkwardness, I expected to pull this off, but finally I decided to go for it. There was
a group of 4 or 5 guys going in and I did my best to blend in with them. My heart felt as if it would pound right out
of my chest. I didn’t count on there
being a bouncer. I’m sure I didn’t even
know what one of those was at that age, but just inside the door of the bar was
a six and a half foot tall, easily three hundred pound man with a beard. I nearly fainted. He wasn’t checking anyone's IDs, but he certainly
looked me up and down. He made some kind
of obligatory greeting to my imaginary friends, each one something different,
and when he came to me he simply said, “Evening.” That was it.
It was in easy as pie, though I have no idea how I’d managed to not wet
myself.
I walked into a
long room filled with tables and chairs.
There were booths along the wall, a bar almost the length of the entire
room and a tiny dance floor all the way in back. On the bar were two incredibly beautiful men,
in just underwear, dancing to Taylor Dayne’s Tell it to my Heart. Thank god for gay bars! In many I have been in since, there have been
beautiful men in nothing but underwear dancing on the bar. Those tend to be my favorites. It’s almost a given that I will prefer a bar
with strippers or a piano. The second
gay bar I ever set foot in was a piano bar.
Having grown up on a steady diet of Country music and Neil Diamond, it
was in that bar that I was introduced to and began a love affair with
the music of Joni Mitchell, Elton John, James Taylor, Van Morrison and even
Fleetwood Mac that continues to this day. That, of course, is a entirely different story, so back
to the men.
For me, watching male dancers undress on stage
was akin to watching television. It
really transported me into a world where I was somebody else. The hick kid from small town Minnesota who
just a couple of years earlier was discovering his homosexuality in the pages
of a Playgirl magazine, by himself, in a cornfield, was all but gone. At the Gay 90s, that night, I became who I was
meant to be. I was, for the first time
in my life, in the right place. I’m
fairly certainly I gaped moving through that huge bar for the first time. The Gay 90s is almost a city block long and a
quarter of a city block wide and two stories tall. Throughout the night, I noticed the bouncer eying me and although a small part of me was afraid I’d be kicked out on my
ass at any moment, again I didn’t care. I had
found a place where I belonged and nothing was going to dampen the euphoria. I was 17 years old and for the first time,
probably since that night my mom had put me to bed and kissed my forehead, ten
years earlier, the world was beautiful again. There was purpose.
At the end of the night, bar close, I made my way to the exit on a cloud, through the smoke and
the sounds of music and laughter and the amazing scent of cigarettes mixed with
alcohol, mixed with men. There are
certain elements to that combination that have, over the years, become less pleasing,
but on that night and many, many to come, it was the scent of drugs and
pheromones that made my head spin and my breath quicken and my heart smile. At the exit, I saw the bouncer again. I can't begin to tell you how imposing he was, especially to a five foot eight, hundred and thirty pound brown eyed boy in cowboy boots. He smiled at me and there was a gleam in his eye I hadn't noticed before. It was something like love. I realized he hadn't been watching me as much as watching out for me. As I stepped by him, he grabbed me and spun me around by the shoulder picked me up in a huge bear hug
and whispered, “You’re home, handsome.”
And I was! That bouncer’s name was Adam. You should have seen him in drag. It was a sight to behold. Even in flats, this man towered over nearly
everyone. He did only camp drag, usually
keeping the beard. He was a flurry of feathers and sequins and costume jewelry casting
a shadow of love anywhere he went in the bar.
I wouldn’t say we were ever close, but we knew each other by name and by smile. I’m certain he knew I had no business in a
gay bar, no business drinking, no business pretty much to do anything and he
turned a blind eye to it all, knowing how desperately I needed to be there,
whether it was legal for me to be or not. Adam died of AIDS several years ago
while I was living on the West Coast. I
came home to find him gone. How strange
it was to walk in the door of the Gay 90s and not see him.
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