Category Archives: Gay Blog

Twenty Years of Titillation

“If in my youth I had realized that the sustaining splendour of beauty of with which I was in love would one day flood back into my heart, there to ignite a flame that would torture me without end, how gladly would I have put out the light in my eyes.” ~ Michelangelo

Mythology is rife with imaginative portraits of humans whose quest for glory leads them to dire ends – Icarus, Narcissus and Prometheus come to mind. There are also Biblical stories where humans’ ingenuity and intelligence sparks an unexpected triumph, such as in David and Goliath. (Figures that sort of hubris would come from the Bible. Are we deities or not? Are we divine or merely human?) I’ve been happy to be merely mortal – a human with hubris, haughtiness, and hell sometimes in my heart – and I contain all the folly that every human has contained since we were created. That means I’ve had the vanity and self-deception to assume that a personal blog could become a work of art. 

“If people knew how hard I worked to get my mastery, it wouldn’t seem so wonderful at all.” ~ Michelangelo

Making a blog into a work of art is perhaps a silly notion. When I consider the great works of art that have survived the centuries, a blog is unlikely to ever be counted as one of them. To that end, I have failed miserably, and will continue to fail in that quest. Making myself into a living work of art is also a ridiculous endeavor. I will fail at that too. 

Yet in the effort, I hope you will find some shred of nobility. In the trying, may you see the striving. In the attempt, may you find the hope. If Icarus never fell, how would we know we could fly? If Prometheus hadn’t dared to capture fire, how would we learn to burn? If David hadn’t stepped forward to face Goliath, how would we muster the nerve to try?

“Every block of stone has a statue inside it and it is the task of the sculptor to discover it. ” ~ Michelangelo

For all of the twenty years this website has been in existence, I have striven to find myself – the man I truly was, the one beneath all of the fluster and bluster. Chipping away at our own thick stone to reveal the tender interior is not only the province of sculptors and artists, but the quest of every human being remotely interested in getting to know themselves. In certain ways, that is the purpose of life. Some may call it vanity, some may call it self-obsession, some might deride it as ego – and all of those play their necessary part – but only when we discover and know ourselves can we look into the soul of another human and possibly hope to see what is truly there. 

“The promises of this world are, for the most part, vain phantoms; and to confide in one’s self, and become something of worth and value is the best and safest course.” ~ Michelangelo

Admittedly, I am no David. Nor am I Goliath, or Prometheus, or Icarus. Far too afraid for far too often to be any of those characters, and far too flawed to have achieved what they did in spite of their folly, I’m only beginning to learn to be comfortable in my own skin. Such a lesson takes longer than twenty years, and the few things I know now at 47 wouldn’t have been dreamed or designed when I was 27. That’s why I’m still doing this. There is so much more to know. The two decades encapsulated on this website are the merest wisp of my life. You think I’ve revealed everything? You haven’t seen anything. We’re just getting started. 

“To know each other is the best way to understand each other. To understand each other is the only way to love each other.” ~ Michelangelo

And so we journey onward – and I use ‘we’ with deliberate care and import. Somewhere along the way of the last twenty years I understood that this adventure would never, could never, and should never be done entirely on one’s own. My most thrilling moments here – the ones I enjoy reading even after I’ve written them – are those which involve my friends and family. Their stories are the often-invisible threads that hold this narrative together, weaving a life’s work into something that approaches art

That which we love is always beautiful, and that which is beautiful is always art. 

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Boston Love on the Blog

Boston has played a major part in this website over the past twenty years, forming the backdrop for many a documented excursion, and the inspiration for many blog posts. It’s still my favorite city in the world, and it’s the place where I can find peace, happiness, excitement, glamour, stillness, calm, joy and adventure. I was scheduled to revisit it this past weekend, but plans were changed due to a stomach flu, so a re-do is in the works. Until then, this linky look back at some enjoyable Boston stays will have to sustain us. 

Boston has always been home to me – even when we were just visiting as children, its size and streets and charm felt cozy and comfortable, thanks mostly to the guiding force of Mom, who took us around and showed us how manageable a city could be. Back then, we stayed mostly to Copley Square, and the safe confines of our hotel. Eventually, I grew out of that sheltered space, and ventured forth into the city on my own. It’s been one beautiful journey after another, and I wouldn’t change a single step. 

Boston was the first place where I ever kissed a man, and despite how that all turned out, I have found a way to cherish that memory

Boston was where I met and forged a friendship with Alissa. We returned there to meet again and again over the years, and whenever I tread the South End streets near where she used to live, she comes back to life

Boston is where I found my first real job, in retail of course, which was the start of a beautiful romance

Boston is where I met JoAnn, which sparked one of the most hilarious moments in my life, right on the steps of Trinity Church. 

Boston was where I reconnected with Kira, who formed a major part of my days at John Hancock, along with JoAnn and the whole OG Hancock crew. She is entwined with my Boston history, happily so, no matter life may bring to us. She also helped me start the Boston Holiday Stroll tradition, something we kept going for quite a few years. Andy has picked up where she left off, and it’s still one of my favorite holiday traditions

Boston is home to several happy holiday traditions, highlighted by the Boston Children’s Holiday Hour, which is one of the more uncharacteristic events I’ve hosted in my Boston home. Thankfully, I’m a pro around the kiddies these days, and I can handle however many hours it might run

Boston was where I was supposed to be on the day of the Marathon Bombing. I was literally about to get in the car to start the drive when messages started coming in asking if I was ok; I unpacked my bags to the news of the lockdown and manhunt for the bombers. 

Boston is the home of the Red Sox, the only sports team that has ever inspired any sort of passion in me, thanks to the way my Dad raised me and my brother. We were a Red Sox household, and that allegiance has never wavered (even when I was the lone sixth-grader in upstate New York rooting for them against the Mets in that bummer of a 1986 season – yeah, I still remember). That played the historical backbone to the BroSox Adventures that Skip and I have enjoyed for many years, a tradition that forms what is always one of the most fun weekends of our summer season

Boston is also a place for drama, and as we get older I find myself in more, and less, of it. Lessons have been learned, and lessons have had to be re-learned, and still the city provides a backdrop and balm for whatever is going on in the tumult of all our hearts and heads. 

Boston is where I love to rendezvous with an old friend, such as this salty old man who has been along for the rollercoaster of friendship with me since 1995. We blame Suzie for introducing us, and Suzie has been in Boston numerous times, lending her own quirky enchantment to the city and finding new ways to dream. 

Boston is a home I’ve had for almost three decades, standing solidly within the brick walls of our condo, obliterating the attacks of every winter storm or stifling summer day, providing respite and reprieve from an ever-frightening outside world

Perhaps most happily of all, Boston is where Andy and I got married – on a bright sunny May day in the Public Garden, surrounded by all the spring blooms and swans and love that anyone could want. We return there year after year – sometimes it rains, sometimes the sun shines, and often it does a bit of both – and it grounds us again, reminding us of that day, that year, and all the years that we’ve had together. 

Boston is Love. 

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Empty Rooms of a Young Heart

It should have felt cold and empty because that’s literally what it was. Not a couch or a bed or even a chair offered a place to sit, and the little cot I’d hastily assembled had already fallen apart, leaving only the thin mattress on the floor. Our newly-purchased Boston condo was entirely unfurnished – not even a log left in the fire-place, as if we were visiting some place the Grinch had just ransacked – yet in this sparse space of echoes and emptiness I couldn’t have felt warmer or more at home. It was December 1995, and I was finishing up the last few days of retail work before returning home for Christmas. Finals had been completed the week before, and as I stood at the kitchen counter looking up at the then-John Hancock tower trinkling in the distance, I’d realized that the dream of me living in Boston – the one I’d had since visiting Quincy Market a decade prior – had finally come true. 

Dinner, and breakfast alike for that matter, consisted of the bagels procured from Finagle-A-Bagel, and a carton of orange juice. There weren’t even glasses in the kitchen, so I drank straight from the carton like some heathenish bachelor, tearing off bits of bagel since there weren’t knives or forks or plates either. A roll of paper towels stood on the counter, while a plastic shopping bag served as the makeshift garbage. It sounds ridiculous, but I was happy and, looking back on the moment, full of hope. Life hadn’t really happened to me yet; the heartaches I tended were largely of my own making, and I leaned into them, hungry for something to feel, hungry for something to signify that I had arrived. That something was ill-fittingly placed on somebody – and his name was George. 

When I set up the general theme of fire for this fall season on the blog, I thought I’d be burning up all the demons and ghosts that had been haunting me from years past – those who had done me wrong, and those from whom I couldn’t break free. Yet when I looked back and re-read my journals from then, and faced my part in things without trying to salvage an image or reputation, I realized that some of the fires I started would have to consume me. This may be one of those stories. 

It had been about one year since I met the first man I ever kissed, and in that year the entire experience had worked to harden my heart against any other men, or women, who happened to cross my path. My defenses were up, as much as I wanted someone to walk beside. I couldn’t see then that I was in desperately in love with the idea of being in love, obsessed with the whole artifice and atmosphere of being in a couple. At such a young age, that betrayed itself in wildly-vacillating mood swings, where I would push people away as badly as I wanted them near me. Figuring that if love was meant to be, anyone who was worthy would see through it and accept me for the wounded little porcupine I was, prickly spikes and all. As a nineteen-year-old young man in Boston, I was also aware of the power that youth held, the sway and swagger it could command, and I was not above using this as leverage whenever the opportunity presented itself. If that meant playing the twink card in situations where gay men might offer something of value, why wouldn’t I work every available angle?

On this brilliant fall day, practically hours after getting confirmation from my parents that I could begin looking for a place to call our own in Boston, I found myself in the South End, traipsing along Tremont to the cluster of real estate offices that were suddenly hustling and bustling with the bubble that was just beginning to grow. It was early afternoon, and the receptionist looked at who was available, casually saying they would call someone. So it wasn’t fate or destiny that brought George into my life, it was his unfortunate availability at being the only agent on duty for my questionably-fortuitous arrival. 

With the know-it-all swagger of a college student, coupled with the unearned pride and power of being able to seek out a new home, I followed him into his office and sat down across from him, his desk between us. 

(When I thought back to our meeting later that first week, I would want it to mean something more than a mere transactional set of unfeeling circumstances. I wanted it to have the alignment of stars and planetary symbols, I wanted it to be the beginning of a romance that would change my life. I didn’t want it to be such a casual and nonchalant nod from a receptionist who said you were the first available and then you appearing as some secondary haphazard quirk. Certainly not the stuff of destiny or dreams coming true. It wasn’t the way I wanted a great romance to unfold. But that’s the whole point isn’t it? It wasn’t what I wanted. In those days my relationships, or non-relationships as they too often were, were solely about what I wanted.)

He had a sign for Tea Dance which I looked at a little too long. He watched me and gave me a quizzical look, as if to say ‘What do you know about tea dance?’ I looked at him differently after that, wondering immediately whether he was gay. I couldn’t tell then, not anymore than I can tell now, whether certain people were gay, and since it never really mattered unless I was interested in them, it’s never really mattered. On that day, at that moment, with this man who gave off a charming smile whose intent I could never quite determine, it suddenly and intensely mattered. 

It was a little lifting of the veil, a parting of the curtain that let us both know the other knew: the secret codes of gay life in certain places back in the 90’s. He winked at me then, and rather than return it with a smile or a laugh for a nod, I snarled. Wolf-like, menacing, and more than an eye-roll, it was the look of disgust, perfected with the smug cruelty of someone who thought he could not be touched, who would simply and outright refuse to be touched. If only I’d known how well it would work…

We talked price range and location and ideas, and my sarcastic quips and testy tone, not entirely-uninspired by Linda Fiorentino’s wondrous anti-heroine in ‘The Last Seduction’, seemed to keep him slightly off his seductive real estate banter. I was not to be charmed or had for the price of a peanut. Still, there was something charming that went beyond the sale before us, and he unexpectedly jumped up and said, “Let’s go look at some places!”

I was not dressed or prepared or ready for such an outing – my backpack and sneakers were not what I envisioned wearing when seeking out our future Boston residence, but George didn’t notice or mind. He said we weren’t going far, just a block or two away, and after crossing Tremont, he wrangled a set of keys out of his pocket, and brought us into a little place on a nearby side street. We ascended to the second floor, and after the dim hallway, the light of early afternoon flooded the place in shocking relief. A small place, indeed, it had some charm to it – an exposed brick wall in the little kitchen, where a depressing bouquet of dried flowers hung desiccated from a string. He walked through the space, pausing to let me take it in, and I made a few cutting comments, as was my wont for so many years of my life. He was alternately puzzled and amused, and as was my other wont in life, I assumed he totally knew it was an act. Break through it, kind sir, break through it. Break through to me…

I said we could keep this in mind, and the only thing I started thinking was how nice it might be to live so close to this guy who was starting to warm to me, and starting to turn on his real estate agent charm, but I hadn’t fallen so foolishly or deeply under a spell that I would say yes to a home without seeing our other options. 

We made a date to set up viewing some other places, and a few days later I returned to Boston. It was further into the afternoon than the day we first met, an hour after most people had finished work and school. The days were getting darker earlier, and there was a chill in the air. I entered his office in a slightly better wardrobe, while he was in jeans and sneakers. I must have made some critical commentary, as he surveyed the moment and asked if I was always so… and here he paused to struggle with the best word… snippy

I’d been called many things in my life up to that moment, and as my brow instantly furrowed, a smile also formed at the same time. Taking it in, I balked a bit, saying I preferred the term ‘prickly’, and he quickly tried to explain himself. It wasn’t necessarily bad, and then he said he was going to start calling me Snippy. 

Is there anything more endearing that being nicknamed by someone you secretly adore? It didn’t matter what the nickname was – it was a moment of intimacy, a little shared something that no one else had to know. Without hesitation, I wore the badge of Snippy as proudly as I wore Aloof and Arrogant and Asshole. Underneath both our stances was another wink, as if we were both playing a game now, and having some element of fun. We walked to his car and he brought us to the second property – a large, labyrinthine floor-through that had been divided into a number of smaller sections and rooms. While it had the most space of any place we would see, it was parceled off so much that it felt claustrophobic. Interior rooms with no windows were not for me. Snippy reared his head again. 

The onset of evening. The cold air. The second fall in which I was falling for some guy I barely knew. Our final place to look at was located right on the beautiful border between Copley and the South End, looking onto the Southwest Corridor Park and up at the John Hancock Tower. This was Braddock Park, he explained, and we climbed the stairs into a stalwart Boston building that had stood there for far longer than the two of us had cumulatively been alive. What history had such a place seen? I thrilled at the notion. 

We walked up to the second floor, and he unlocked the door, switching on the overhead lights as we entered. The hardwood floors instantly warmed the place with their amber hues, and a marble fireplace mantle held pride of place in the middle of the room. Walking to the front pair of windows, he showed me the view, then took a few short steps into the little kitchen area and its window that perfectly framed the Hancock Tower. I don’t know why, or whether this is just rose-tinted hindsight, but it felt like home. That part had nothing to do with George, who was ambling into the bedroom.

He struggled to find the light, but once he did he said this room, and its lovely bay window, was probably one of the main selling points of the place: a floor-through with windows in front and back was not as common as one would think. The bathroom was there, with a half-wall of exposed brick, lending a rustic warmth to the suddenly cold evening. At all turns, I felt a coziness here, a sense of refuge from the wilderness of the city. 

We went back into the main room to discuss the merits of this place, the chief one being its location. In close proximity to the Green and Orange lines, and right near Copley Square, it was as near as I could get to where my Mom had taken us on trips as kids. And throughout it all, the main rule of real estate repeated itself in the back of my mind: location, location, location. George was in agreement as well, and whether he had intentionally saved the best for last, I wouldn’t know, but Braddock Park was the chosen one, at least for me. My parents would have to visit for the final say, and then it was a done deal. A few weeks later we closed on it, and George left us a gift basket with pasta and tomato sauce and breadsticks. For something that would come to mean so much, it all felt like it happened too easily and flippantly, as though we weren’t making a decision that would be grandly fortuitous for us, as though I hadn’t just found a home. 

It also felt vaguely anti-climactic when George invited me to his office Christmas party a few weeks later. I honestly don’t remember how that came to be – whether it was a casual comment he made the last time we saw him, or whether some generic postcard from his agency arrived at the condo a few days later. It didn’t matter – I took it to heart, and with a new place in Boston to call home, I wondered if I couldn’t somehow get a partner out of the deal too. I mean, he did leave a gift basket – do all real estate agents do that for their clients? (Spoiler alert for idiots like me: yes.)

Looking back, I don’t know why I should have been so affected by George. He was affable and decent and cute enough – but what was exceptional about selling someone some property? I think it was just the excitement and glamour of being in that city, at the ripe age of 21, and wanting to taste all of it, all at once, with such passion and intensity that anyone in my periphery would have been subject to such burning desire. Luckily for all involved, I was too chicken-shit to do anything, other than giving him a copy of ‘The God in Flight‘ as a Christmas gift at that office party at which I drank too much and was summarily dismissed (which was entirely appropriate). It took me a few weeks to get over him – this man who really didn’t deserve my love, any more than he deserved my harsh jabs and vicious barbs – and a few years to see my folly and nonsense in the whole situation. Chalk it up to the silliness of youth. I vowed to do better. If I wanted to find someone to share a life with, I couldn’t afford to be Snippy anymore. My heart understood; my head would not be so quick to set down its weapons. 

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A Last Letter to the First Man Who Ever Kissed Me

Dear Tom – 

I don’t think I’ve ever written out your name here. I don’t think I’ve even written you a letter. You were always just the first man who ever kissed me, the first man I ever dated, and the first man who tried to break my heart. I didn’t give you a name because I didn’t want to give you anything. Yet in that very act of attempting to silence you, and everything that you were, I began to realize it granted you more power and sway than you deserved. Without a name, you were this omnipotent force – unbeatable, unattainable and unassailable – when all along you’ve only ever been a man. 

Now that I’m well past the age you were when our lives intersected in that tumultuous fall in Boston, I can see you a little better, and I think I understand you a little more. Though it’s been almost thirty years, in some ways I feel closer to our moments together, because they make more sense to me now in a way they couldn’t back then. It has softened my stance toward what we experienced, without in any way exonerating you. 

I remember the September day we met. It’s embedded in a memory palace like the piano music here. It’s been fading and decaying over the years, from lack of use and occupants, as well as from the physical degradation of my brain. But it’s there, as prevalent and potent as any other formative memory. Beneath the dark gaze of Trinity Church in Copley Square, we passed each other in the dappled light of a Boston afternoon. We both turned around in the way that gay men did before cel phones or social media, at a time when losing sight of someone who instantly tugged at your heart could mean losing everything. And so we held on, both of us, playing some game you already knew so well, a game that I didn’t know at all, though that twinkle in your blue eyes was a signal I still somehow knew things that neither of us were ready to admit. 

When you invited me to walk back to your place, we both understood that I would accept, even if our understanding differed slightly. I could never speak for you, and I won’t make a guess as to what you wanted at that moment. For me, I wanted to experience something. I wanted life to open up like a novel and start my adventures in the world. I wanted to quiet the hunger, indulge in the desire, and be open to whatever might ravenously ravage me, and I wanted to be left like I was ripped inside out. Not that I’d ever tell you that. Not that I even knew enough to put that into words. I was a nineteen year old guy, barely a man, who wanted all of life to chew me up, spit me out, and swallow me all over again. I was insatiable, and would be that way for years. It was something my friends would never quite understand, and, more problematically, something that would frighten away any would-be-paramours, of which you were one of the first. 

To be so nakedly insatiable was to be dangerously vulnerable to the ways of that world I wanted so badly to taste, even if I could never fully fathom its poisonous risks. My heart wanted to bite into the apple, even as my head worried over what might result. A tug-of-war that waged battle for most of my life – and you weren’t even the first casualty. 

In the same way that we burn wishes and letters that we want only to write but never deliver, I’ve spent the last couple of decades trying to burn down our short, shared past. Not the mechanics of it, not the experience of it, and not the differing ways we might view it, but everything that has since ensued – all the drama and hurt and pain I’ve allowed myself to feel because of you. Because for the most part it wasn’t because of you. You were just the one in the way. It would have happened to anyone else who so engagingly bumped into me on that September day, and though anyone else would likely have been much better for me, we don’t always have a strong say in what the universe deals us. Back then, I certainly didn’t feel like I had a say, or a voice, despite all histrionic actions to the contrary. 

Could you have behaved better, been a more helpful guide to someone who so clearly needed it? I think so… I believe so… but I don’t know for sure. The whispers of your own secret world were darker than what I could have imagined at such a young age – and I had a vividly dark imagination. There was also some sadistic attraction to danger and depravity that thrilled my younger self, a need to brush up against someone or something that might at any minute annihilate me. So enamored was I of self-destruction that to put it into the hands of another was merely a self-serving quest. I sensed something in you that would, or could, ruin me, and in my impetuous haste to reach that space, I allowed you to wreak the havoc that you likely never meant to wreak. If you hurt me, I can’t say I didn’t want to be hurt. 

I write this letter to you now, Tom – a first and last letter all in one – to absolve and forgive, not just you, but myself too. We were both innocent in many ways, but both culpable as well. I understand that you didn’t mean to be deliberately cruel, and that is something I cannot say for myself. Even if my machinations were false, the end result was the same, and for my cutting edge, I take full responsibility. A pre-emptive strike to stave off certain heartbreak… and perhaps I protected myself too well.

These sorts of letters are supposed to offer some closure, a sense of finality and acknowledgment that ultimately frees the heart and head to move on with genuine forgiveness or resolution. If that no longer feels possible, if there’s no realistic manner of acceptance I can muster, then at the very least I no longer feel conflicted or angry about you. Initially I wanted only to burn this all down, to set these feelings and memories and everything that happened between us on fire, and let it rage like an inferno. You would have deserved that once upon a time. Looking back on what we were, and knowing the things I know today, I can’t say you deserve it now.

You were an alcoholic fighting to stay sober, and when you failed I didn’t know how to get out of your way. You were an actor supporting yourself as a restaurant server, perhaps sensing that your path in life was narrowing as you approached the age of 40. You were a man living alone in the city of Boston, in a tiny apartment near Beacon Hill, struggling to keep your life together, struggling to stay afloat, struggling like we all have to struggle at the wicked and wretched things that the world throws in our path. I was nineteen and had the whole world ahead of me. How could I have possibly understood you?

Years after that fall, I would find myself searching for your face when I was in Boston. It didn’t happen all the time, and as the years passed I found myself doing it less and less to the point where I can’t remember the last time I looked for you – it was long before Andy. I used to want to meet you again, to show you how well I survived what I once perceived as your callous thoughtlessness, to show you what you threw away. Time, and humility, gradually erased those thoughts. The one weekend that brought me back to the place where you used to work turned out to have nothing to do with you, and a few years later I realized it wasn’t you at all who haunted some of my Boston visits – it was only me. 

And so I am setting the torch down. There will be other fires I need to start this fall, but none of them concern you. For you, and for this one last time, I light a candle. It’s for that September day when we met, when two men came together beneath a beautiful blue sky, and walked along the Charles River. There was beauty in that simple act, and the gentle, tentative motion of two people beginning to make the space for love, of carving out the possibility for it. Even if that’s not the way it turned out, I can honor it. More importantly, I finally and genuinely realize it cannot hurt me anymore. I hope you have found your peace somewhere too, that you have found your happiness, and that you can still marvel at the world you never wanted to teach me about, but wound up doing so in spite of yourself. 

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Dazzler of the Day: Leslie Jordan

He’s been sober for 25 years, and that’s more than enough to merit this Dazzler of the Day, but in addition to that footnote, Leslie Jordan has been entertaining the world for decades. He’s finally come into his own social media prominence, thanks to his surprising success on Instagram – which was no surprise to anyone who’s followed his hilarious antics. Known by many from his turn on ‘Will & Grace’, Jordan has made appearances on about a bazillion shows over the years, thanks to his wit, hilarity and natural charm and charisma. 

Actor Leslie Jordan poses for a portrait at Pan Pacific Park in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles on Thursday, April 8, 2021 to promote his new book “How Y’all Doing?: Misadventures and Mischief from a Life Well Lived.” (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

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Our Garden Wedding

The morning of May 7, 2010 dawned in sunny fashion, and as I walked out of the bedroom and into the living room of our suite at what was then the Taj Hotel, I paused in the quiet start of the day. Looking out over the Boston Public Garden, at the fresh green canopy of trees and the swans in the distance, I felt keenly, and wonderfully, the day of demarcation from the technically-single life behind me and the married life before me. In that hushed morning, I waited for Andy to stir, and soon we would cross the street to the Garden, where we would meet up with family and friends to officially be married

Today marks our 12th wedding anniversary – a dozen years of adventure, laughs, and love – and we will hopefully go through our usual anniversary traditions, in whatever form they might take in this new world. Having made it through the rough times, the tedious doldrums of life, and the way it wears on the best of romances – especially in the isolation of a worldwide pandemic – Andy and I have found a new respect for one another, and for our marriage. It’s a different sort of love that sustains us now, but I still feel the instant affection and thrill that I did twenty-two years ago when we first met. There’s no one I would rather share this life with, to sit in the Garden and watch the squirrels and swans go by…

Happy Anniversary Andy – I love you. 

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National Coming Out Day

The older I get, the more I start to see the importance of a day like today, especially when I look back at my own childhood and elongated coming out process. I grew up in the 1980’s, and in a rather sheltered/cocooned household. Raised by strict Catholic parents, I never heard anyone talk about being gay, not in my formative years, not when it mattered and would have made a world of difference. And there was no internet or gay bookstore in Amsterdam, NY to help me see any possibility for all the confusing feelings I had. 

If you do not see yourself in the world around you for the majority of the first two decades of your life, you do not see yourself as a valid part of humanity. You feel a little lost, but the truth is there was never a path that I saw, so it’s a sense of being lost that allowed for no way to being found. Looking back at that time, it’s a wonder I wasn’t an even bigger mess than I was. It’s like an orca that has been born and raised in captivity – the dorsal fin droops, there are all sorts of health issues, and the poor little creature doesn’t know any other way of life, so it gets afflicted with all these problems without knowing what its life could have been. Do those animals feel the pull of the ocean, the pull of who they were meant to be? I felt it subtly, without name or explanation, and it mostly came out as me feeling alone and different without exactly knowing why, which only served to feed into my social anxiety and create an absolutely debilitating environment in which to grow up. It’s hard enough for a kid to make it unscathed through childhood – adding these other elements imbued my time as a child with a sense of terror – and the absence of that terror in what I could see in my friends only added to my confusion and feelings of inferiority. 

Whenever I wonder whether I should keep this silly blog going, I think back to my twelve-year-old self, and how impactful seeing something like this would have been. Not because I’m so wonderful and fabulous – but because everything I’ve put forth here is a pretty accurate reflection of my mundane, dull, boring, yappy, crappy, sappy and happy life. I didn’t need to see a famous celebrity come out, or a glamorous historical figure outed – I just needed to see the possibility of being gay as something that existed. I needed to see someone simply living their life, being accepted, occasionally celebrated, and working on just being a better person. Instead, I saw a heteronormative world that had no place for me or what I was feeling. For twenty years – arguably the most important years of a person’s life – I did not see myself. That’s something that doesn’t ever go completely away, and it’s the reason that moments like National Coming Out Day still matter. 

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Pride on the Sabbath

 “When you hear of Gay Pride, remember, it was not born out of a need to celebrate being gay. It evolved out of our need as human beings to break free of oppression and to exist without being criminalized, pathologized or persecuted. Depending on a number of factors, particularly religion, freeing ourselves from gay shame and coming to self-love and acceptance, can not only be an agonising journey, it can take years. Tragically some don’t make it. Instead of wondering why there isn’t a straight pride be grateful you have never needed one. 
Celebrate with us.” ~ Anthony Venn-Brown

With Pride Month in full swing, and a large number of Pride events happenings as the vaccinated among us move more freely than we have in well over a year, I’m taking a moment to be both serious and silly about this special month. Hence these photos, taken so I could update my social media profiles with something more seasonally gay

Next weekend is when some of the main Pride events are happening in Boston, including Pride Night at Fenway Park with the Red Sox. More often than not, Skip and I would find ourselves there for such an event, and it always thrilled me to see the rainbow flags flying at Fenway and on the Boston Public Library. While we mostly skirted the big parade (we did it properly once) it was good simply to be in town for such celebratory fun. Boston enjoys an electric-like excitement in June, whether from the residual glow of graduations, or the exuberant arrival of summer, or probably a bit of both – and it’s sort of a glorious finale right before the city seeps into its sleepy summer slumber (which I tend to appreciate even more). 

On the serious side, all the rainbows and unicorns and fluffy party scenes mask the heartache of the history that we in the LGBTQ+ community have endured and survived – and it’s worth a moment to recognize and remember the many of us who didn’t make it this far. It’s also worth challenging ourselves in analyzing the privilege and distinctions among intersectional groups and individuals within our widely-varied community. We are making progress, but this is a long journey, and it’s largely in its infancy. Let’s keep going, and growing, and learning. 

“As a young gay African, I have been conditioned from an early age to consider my sexuality a dangerous deviation from my true heritage as a Somali by close kin and friends. As a young gay African coming of age in London, there was another whiplash of cultural confusion that one had to recover from again and again: that accepting your sexual identity doesn’t necessarily mean that the wider LGBT community, with its own preconceived notions of what constitutes a “valid” queer identity, will embrace you any more welcomingly than your own prejudiced kinsfolk do.” ~ Diriye Osman

 

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Revisiting the Moon and A Lost Friendship

{This is a more evolved look-back at this earlier post titled ‘The Moon and the Fag’.}

The two of us – one straight guy (a young man I already considered a friend) and myself (still in the closet in my first semester at Brandeis) – made our way back to the dorm from our usual dinner at Sherman Hall. It was a crisp November night, and the air was clear, allowing for a stupendous showing by the moon, who rose overhead and elicited my notice mostly due to my having been studying her all semester in an Astronomy course. I pointed her out to my friend, who slowed to a stop and eyed me with a slight look of apprehension in his eyes. “Look at the moon,” I said innocently, about to dive into a scintillating explanation of its phases and how quickly they changed.

He stopped, sizing me up suspiciously in the way he did when something truly confounded him, then tilted his chin slightly higher. I’d seen the gesture in our dinner debates when I made a point that challenged everything he thought he knew. Then he said the words that would forever chill my heart: “You’re not going fag on me, are you?” It wasn’t entirely malicious, yet it wasn’t entirely a joke either. I knew him well enough to know he wasn’t kidding. And I knew myself enough to know I had to leave him behind. 

WHY DID YOU GO? WHY DID YOU TURN AWAY FROM ME?
WHEN ALL THE WORLD SEEMED TO SING, WHY… WHY DID YOU GO?
WAS IT ME? WAS IT YOU?
QUESTIONS IN A WORLD OF BLUE

In that moment, instantly and irrevocably, I shut down any opportunity of a friendship between us. My heart broke a little, the proverbial ground beneath my moral standing shifted, and the world turned a shade dimmer because I knew immediately I had lost a friend. As jarring as it was – he’d never made any derogatory remarks about gay people before – and as startled as I felt, I laughed and reassured him, stumbling over a nervous reference to what I was studying in Astronomy. Inside, though, everything had changed.

That was a choice – and it was an internal choice mostly at first, but a definite decision, one that would eventually and definitively destroy whatever friendship there was between us. Neither of us knew that yet. We continued walking, laughing it off. Maybe I was a tad bit too defensive. Maybe he understood something not even I did at that point, and realized it as soon as the comment came out of his mouth. Maybe he wanted me to understand what would not stand in his world. There were so many maybes back then.

HOW CAN A HEART THAT’S FILLED WITH LOVE START TO CRY?
WHEN ALL THE WORLD SEEMED SO RIGHT, HOW CAN LOVE DIE?
WAS IT ME? WAS IT YOU?
QUESTIONS IN A WORLD OF BLUE
 

I only knew that I couldn’t have someone like that close to me. And so the distancing began. It was unintentional and imperceptible at first. We continued going to dinner, but something was altered. In my reticence and reluctance to fully reveal any more of myself, in my pulling back and edging away from the closeness that fosters friendship, I’d already begun the irreversible slide to becoming strangers again.

It was unfortunate, as he had quickly become my closest friend at Brandeis, and at that point in my life I desperately needed a friend. I think he did too. He lived in the room next door. His roommate was a total dick, and mine was never around (I loved him for that), and so we ended up going to dinner a lot. He was staunchly Republican and conservative, and I’d been raised in a Republican, conservative household, so we held a lot of the same values. I’d not really taken any interest in politics at that time, even though I held strongly liberal views on social issues. We would make fledgling attempts at discussing the issues of the time, and I’d often take the liberal viewpoint just to be the devil’s advocate, to challenge him as much as I was challenging myself. We could agree to disagree, and somehow came out at the end of every dinner a little closer for it.

WHEN DID THE DAY WITH ALL ITS LIGHT TURN INTO NIGHT?
WHEN ALL THE WORLD SEEMED TO SING, WHY… WHY DID YOU GO?
WHY, WHY DID YOU GO?
WAS IT ME? WAS IT YOU?
QUESTIONS IN A WORLD OF BLUE
QUESTIONS IN A WORLD OF BLUE

For the remainder of that fall semester we acted as friends – even as I felt myself moving away from him. He obviously thought nothing of the night of the moon, and I was too insecure to bring it up again. I hadn’t even come out to myself, much less anyone else, so it didn’t much matter. Without being honest to anyone, it was impossible for me to get truly close to people. Still, someone who could so easily roll the word ‘fag’ off his tongue and tinge it with slight derision and warning was not someone I wanted in my friendship circle, whether or not I turned out to be gay.

When we left for Thanksgiving break, something was already broken, and in the few weeks before winter break, I let the cracks deepen and widen, moving us further apart even as he was largely unaware of the seismic shift. I went home for the holidays and didn’t think much of him. When we returned for the spring semester, we met only sporadically for dinner, and when our Freshman year was done, I don’t even remember saying goodbye to him.

A couple of years later, after I had come out and become comfortable with that part of myself, I saw him briefly as we passed each other near the commuter rail. It was an anticlimactic reunion, rushed on both sides. He eyed my leopard-print velvet scarf with that same suspicious glint in his eyes, and told me it was… interesting. There was a lot said in that, and more in the deliberate pause that came before it – at least I attributed a lot to it – but looking back there may not have been anything. It was a meeting that lasted a few seconds. We said farewell and I never looked back.

MOVING NEAR THE EDGE AT NIGHT
DUST IS DANCING IN THE SPACE
A DOG AND BIRD ARE FAR AWAY
THE SUN COMES UP AND DOWN EACH DAY
LIGHT AND SHADOW CHANGE THE WALLS
HALLEY’S COMET’S COME AND GONE
THE THINGS I TOUCH ARE MADE OF STONE
FALLING THROUGH THIS NIGHT ALONE

If there is a main regret of my college years, and I’m ok with admitting a few now, it was that I shut down so substantially that I didn’t give us – and our friendship – another chance. I wish I had reached out to forge a bridge and talk about it, rather than burning the bridge and burying what bothered us before talking it out. The failing was mostly on me. His comment, in hindsight, may not have been the homophobic accusation it felt like at the time. Maybe it was just guy talk in the mid 90’s, which was a long time ago, in a decidedly different world. I may have given up too soon.

LOVE, DON’T GO AWAY
COME BACK THIS WAY
COME BACK AND STAY
FOREVER AND EVER
PLEASE STAY

That brings us to this moment, when division between people is at an all-time high. Rather than pausing to seek out understanding in what separates us, we instantly take a side, and we dig in and hold tight to our positions even when they are brought down by fact and reason, even when we might know we are wrong. For many years, I stood by my dissolution of our friendship. And to be fair, I understood myself enough to know that I was not evolved enough to offer forgiveness or understanding, nor did I have the knowledge or strength or will to work on communicating with someone who could so flippantly let the word ‘fag’ fall effortlessly out of his mouth. But that’s not fair to him.

I wish I had been more open to that. I wish I had not been so quick to judge and condemn. I had killed it. One-sided friendships simply don’t work, especially if there is subterfuge and resentment bubbling beneath the surface. In my own closet of fear and shame, I’d shut the door to any meaningful connections, most regrettably to a potential friend, as different as we might have been to each other. That was a failure on my part, and I may have lost out on an enriching relationship, on a connection that might have made both of us into better people.

DUST IS DANCING IN THE SPACE
A DOG AND BIRD ARE FAR AWAY
THE SUN COMES UP AND DOWN EACH DAY
THE RIVER FLOWS OUT TO THE SEA
LOVE, DON’T GO AWAY
COME BACK THIS WAY
COME BACK AND STAY
FOREVER AND EVER
THE WORLD SPINS.
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Twenty Years Ago Tonight…

“You’re not the man of my dreams, but I fell in love with you anyway.” ~ Andy, circa 2000

Perhaps it’s as close to perfect as life gets that Andy often has the most succinct way with words. Case in point was this quote, spoken to me in the earliest days of our relationship, which on first reading (and hearing) seems ripe for criticism, but has since come to embody an exquisitely honest illumination on the most enduring romantic relationship of my lifetime. Twenty years ago today I met Andy VanWagenen while minding my own business and having a rare solo Sunday night out at a sleepy Oh Bar. Looking back through my Backstreet Boys day planner from 2000, I see the entry, so seemingly simple and matter-of-fact: meet Andy at Oh Bar, overnight. I went home with him and that was that – our life suddenly laid out, the next two decades designed to unfurl in happy fashion, guided by the gentle nudges of destiny and forged by a shared commitment to one another. It sounds so simple when taken in such celebratory context, as if every day of twenty years didn’t come with its own challenges, the way life interrupts and throws its road-blocks up when you least expect or want them.

Andy lost his Mom as we were about to spend our second holiday season together. I lost my favorite Uncle and my Gram. Friends and family members got married. Some ended up getting divorced. Some had kids, and we had a new niece and nephew, and even a grand nephew. When it was finally legal, Andy and I got married too (ten years into our relationship). Life had its wild and unpredictable way with us, granting us joyful days tempered with difficult ones. Andy lost his Dad, and we both started to lose friends and people we’d grown up with. Through it all, whenever things turned especially sad or bleak, as much as when they were giddy and ecstatic, we would turn to each other. For two people who were in many ways loners at heart, we found a wonderfully comfortable companionship, one that has sustained itself for twenty years.

We still argue, we still laugh, and we still discover new things about the other even at this late stage. Most importantly, we still love. Even when we fail and fall short, we still love. Even when we’re not the men of our dreams, we still love. Two decades into our shared lives, we still love…

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Our 10th Wedding Anniversary

Ten years ago Andy and I were married in the Boston Public Garden.

How do you encapsulate a decade of marriage in a single sitting?

Moreover, how do you contain two decades of sharing your life with another person?

Overall, the tapestry we have created is a beautiful one. Like any marriage, ours has had its share of peaks and troughs, and these are woven like mistakes into the fabric of our history together. At this point we can appreciate them for helping us make things better. They add texture and nuance and contrast to life. You appreciate happiness and contentment a little more when you’ve had some share of sadness and hurt.

So much of what I am and do and love is due to Andy. So much of our life together has enabled us to weather the difficult times ~ lost loved ones, disappointments, and even the current crazy state of the universe. Whenever the world has gone dark and run amok in terror and strife, we have had the good fortune to close the door and turn to each other, finding comfort and solace in love and companionship. Andy has been that safe haven and home for me. I’m fairly certain he would say the same.

Today we celebrate and honor ten years of married life, and I remember with love and deep fondness the day it all happened…

Awakening first, I pad quietly out of the bedroom into the sitting room of our suite overlooking the Public Garden. The sunlight is streaming into the room. Remnants of an impromptu gathering before the rehearsal dinner stand on a side table as I make my way to the window that looks onto the Garden. Grateful and relived for the sunlight, I breathe in deeply and find myself unexpectedly ensconced in the moment, making an indelible memory and smiling at the luxury of realizing it as it happens.

Andy and I had already been together for ten years, so in some ways marriage seemed like a mere formality, yet on this day, at this moment, there is something sacred in the atmosphere, some shift to something more resonant and powerful. A touchstone moment of commitment and love and promise. It is, I realize, an important day.

Soon, our little wedding party arrives, and we meet up with them in the Public Garden, walking to our chosen spot near several flowering cherry trees. Andy and I are dressed casually in jeans and polo shirts. When all was said and done, it never really mattered to Andy what I wore, and he was just as happily comfortable in jeans as a suit and tie. We would get fancier for dinner. For our wedding ceremony, all I needed was Andy and a bouquet of peonies. (I wasn’t just wearing any pair of jeans either ~ they were the same pair I’d worn when I met him ten years earlier.)

Our friend Chris performed a lovely ceremony ~ simple and sweet and surprisingly moving. After ten years together, you don’t think you’ll be moved, but then it arrives and it’s a little overwhelming in the best possible way, so you let those tears well up a little, and you hug your new husband tightly after the kiss because you’re just so happy to be there with him, to have made it through all those years together, to have such a partner in life and not have to go through it alone.

In the ten years after those first ten years, life has brought what life usually brings – more love, more loss, more tears, more laughter, more happiness, more difficulty, more comfort, more work, more gratitude – more of life, and like all humans, we want more of that. Even the sadness and sorrow, even when we miss the people we’ve lost, even when we occasionally lose ourselves. 

In the end we always came back to the life we created together. It’s a life we work on every day, and it’s a life of shared dreams and desires. It’s a home in which we can find refuge when the world turns dark, a place that offers comfort and warmth when the winter rages, and a space where the promise of spring will always be followed by the sun of summer.  

And so we add to our tapestry, weaving new rows in different colors and textures, enriching and fortifying what we have while adding nuances and grace and the rich resonance that comes with knowing someone so well, and still being able to learn more about them. I love that we are still growing together, and I love that Andy is the person who has shared his life with me. 

Happy Anniversary, Drew. I love you. 

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Gay Blog

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Questions?

PS – It’s a gay blog. 

PPS – Gay blog.

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The Boys Playing Basketball

It was the first warm day of the year. So early and unexpected was it, there were still patches of dirty snow on the ground. In my bedroom, the window over the garage was cracked open for the first time. A few splinters of old paint fluttered to the ground below as I broke the winter seal. I breathed in the spring air, even if it wasn’t technically spring yet. It was coming, and after a winter of confinement it was more than welcome.

Lying on my bed and daydreaming, I envisioned summer days, pool romps, and the freedom from cold and ice. I happily thought of the freedom from school. Summer vacation felt like an eternity then – but also an eternity away. It was a Saturday or Sunday, and the weekend was small solace when juxtaposed with the idea of summer – indomitable, endless, sun-swaddled summer. Still, the sun was shining, the day was young, and I luxuriated in the solitude of a ‘Crazy For You’ moment – those brushes with the sublime that you can only ever have when you’re by yourself. Wishing… for something. Hoping for more. Finding a way.

In the distance, the sound of something approaching. I heard the dull thuds of rubber on cement, of footsteps, of voices and shouts and laughter. Even then, my senses pricked up in agitated fashion; the possibility of a social encounter left me instantly on guard. I didn’t like my solitary revelries to be interrupted or intruded upon. Safe in my bedroom, however, I felt relatively removed from any forced interactions. It was the closest thing I had to an ivory tower, and I embraced the notion of being a captive as much as I embraced the isolation. We didn’t have terms for social anxiety then, not for twelve-year-old boys at least.

I saw a flash of rust out of the corner of my eye. Unsure of whether a squirrel was crossing the garage roof, or a robin alighting on the barren hawthorne outside the window, I moved closer and suddenly a basketball rose in the air right below my vantage point. Word had already gotten out, in one short day, that my brother had a basketball hoop. Not only that, but also the tantalizing fact that it was substantially shorter than the regulation basketball hoops, allowing the older boys of the neighborhood to slam dunk a shot if they had enough momentum and height going. For this reason, it was an instant hit, and a dangerous magnet according to my parents. The boys had but a few hours before my Dad came home from work and put it to a fast, and loud, end. But for now they were there, in my driveway, drawn by my brother and the possibility of acting out basketball slam dunk glory.

I was separate and apart, but still connected by proximity and secrecy. It was characteristic of so many of my childhood encounters. (The first sentence I ever uttered according to a baby book kept by my Mom was, “I like to watch.” There is a telling lack of participation in that, the first shy steps of a boy who felt safer standing on the outside than venturing in.) Still, it was a thrill to hear it all happening right below me, particularly when the only noise the house typically heard was my brother and myself, and the occasional shouts of our parents having to quiet us down. The boys playing basketball were suddenly a welcome diversion.

I listened to their screams and exultations, how they supported one another and sparred, and the way they grunted and exhaled from all their exertions. It wasn’t a sexual attraction, I wasn’t quite old enough for that yet, but it was close. It was the first spark of realizing I liked boys better than girls. Yes, I liked to watch. Yes, I liked to watch men.

I moved surreptitiously to the only other spot affording a broader view: the attic. It was a storage space back then – unheated and dusty, with corners of cobwebs and only two small windows on each end letting the light in. Yet one of the windows looked out over a wider swath of the driveway, and my watching eyes could observe without danger of being discovered.

I saw my brother sitting on the side of the driveway and talking to someone, I saw a boy (and a friend) I knew from school, and I saw a couple of neighbors I knew by sight but not name. I watched the way they came together in the common goal of sport, and the way they seemed to shirk off any social uneasiness. How I envied them their easy camaraderie, how I longed for it as much as its simple nature confounded and repelled me.

In the dust of the space, as the afternoon sun slanted through from the other side of the room, where childhood stuffed animals roamed and Christmas decorations smelled faintly of pine, I felt an ache and a wish to belong – to anything… to anyone. Somehow I felt destined to do this for the rest of my life – to systematically move myself further and further away from human connection, from the possibility of being hurt or embraced – whether by a carelessly-shot basketball or something more probing like the heart-piercing pricks of love.

Slowly and carefully, I opened the window. I wanted to hear them. It was no longer enough to watch. Though part of me had moved further away from the boys, part of me was reaching out to get closer. It was the beginning of a lifelong battle.

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School, Saddle Shoes & Shame

When I was in third grade, saddle shoes were all the rage. At least I thought they were – the way they contrasted so delightfully in and of themselves, the way they sharpened an outfit. I didn’t pay much attention to who exactly was wearing them, but I loved the way they looked and soon became obsessed with getting a pair.

At Buster Brown there was a pair of saddle shoes – for boys in fact – and I rejoiced as I slid them on my feet. Ahh, the glory of a pair of shoes! These shone in shiny black and white, beacons of pride and joy, like tickling piano keys as I walked. I marched around the store, admiring them in the shoe mirrors. They were bold, and at first my feet were unaccustomed to something so demanding of a second look. Could I pull them off? Of course! How could I not? I thought of those pretty little girls parading around in their pristine saddle shoes, topped by perfectly-white frilly socks. How they glided along on dainty footsteps, how they made it look so effortlessly elegant and easy, and how I wanted to do the same.

The first day I wore my saddle shoes I felt like I was floating into school. I was making my own black-and-white checker-tiled dance-floor, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers all rolled into one (before I even heard their names in the ‘Vogue’ rap).

Yet the whispers upon my entering class were not of awe or envy. I knew those whispers even then. These were whispers of confusion. These were the whispers of discomfort. These were the whispers of ridicule. I thought I heard someone say they were girl shoes.

Then, sudden and swift and irrevocable, the onslaught of shame. With reddened face and panicky disposition, I seethed in inner agony. I quickly took my seat and swung my feet under my chair, away from prying eyes. At heads-down time, I peeked under the desks to study the feet around me. Only girls were wearing saddle shoes.

I shrunk in embarrassment. I cringed at the monstrosities on my feet. I’d made a fatal misstep. I who never faltered, who never failed, now felt the hot flush of being the almost-object of ridicule. I felt myself teetering on the brink of becoming ostracized from the only people who seemed to matter. Yet I never let on that those whispers bothered me, or even made it to my ears. I never let on how badly they crushed my ego and destroyed the silly bit of joy I got in those shoes. I never let on that when they tried to break me, they had in fact succeeded.

I didn’t wear the saddle shoes much after that – just a few more times so as not to arouse the suspicion or ire of my frugal parents for not making use of new shoes. They went back into their box, worn only at home or on vacation or where I could be myself and not worry about being chided for it.

Everything I do today, every strange, questionable object I wear, is done in honor of that little boy who was robbed of such joy, held captive for the rest of his boyhood by a gang of innocently cruel children. They were taught by the world to dress like a boy or a girl, and there was never room for anything in-between. Another line between innocence and shame. Another demarcation of growing up. The way we erase our identities to fit in, to feel like we belong – I didn’t know then that it was the very way I would grow to hate myself. It would take years before I returned to my quirky style. Years of khakis and polos, and jeans and sneakers, and trying to be the boy everyone wanted me to be. Years in which I pushed my lovely saddle shoes into the dark recesses of my closet, and the life-loving fun that should comprise every childhood into the hidden recesses of my heart.

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The Moon & The Fag

Apart from my first and last semesters of college, I didn’t socialize much on campus during my years at Brandeis. I didn’t relate to much of what college-age kids were talking about or going through – I wanted out, and I wanted out as quickly as possible. For such a supposedly progressive group of people, so many were so immature. Yet there were glimmers of hope, along with the possibility of friendship in that first semester, so when I started hanging out with my next door dorm mate I thought I might have made a friend.

He was from the south – New Orleans I believe – and he had a smooth Southern drawl and a bit of charm that matched his earnestness. Don’t misunderstandI did not have a crush, I did not have an infatuation, and it was clear that he was very straight. At that time I was still pretending to be too, with a girlfriend from high school still in the picture. He didn’t have anyone other than a semi-casual girlfriend, and he also wasn’t confident or courageous enough to ask anyone out, even if he was rakishly handsome in his way. So that left us alone, and together.

There’s no set way for how a friendship develops, particularly between two young men. A few shared walks to class, a couple of shared dinners, and the usual freshman dorm ice-breakers and monthly meetings are sometimes enough to spark it if it’s ever going to happen. Living next door aided in that too – so much of life occurs due to sheer proximity. We passed each other first thing in the morning, and last thing in the evening. In boxers and t-shirts, in glasses and mussed hair, in hope and in dread. He also had a dick of a roommate whom we all pretty much disliked, and I had a roommate who was hardly ever there (and whom I loved for it.) In some ways it was only natural that we’d become friends.

He also had a fondness for pop music and for guessing which songs would hit the top of the charts. At the time, Ace of Base was big, but the latest entry from Mariah Carey was also about to begin its Billboard climb. He was thrilled with ‘Hero’ and proclaimed it the next big smash. While never a big Mariah fan, I did enjoy the song, though I wondered if it would make it to Number One. Of course, it did. (To this day that and her Christmas song are about all I can stand.) ‘Hero’ brings me instantly back to that late fall at Brandeis, when I was first starting to awaken to the fact that I’d made a new friend. And it was a guy – a straight guy – something rather rare in my female-centric cloistered world.

 

There’s a hero
If you look inside your heart
you don’t have to be afraid
of what you are…

Now, it sounds like he could very well have stood on the gay side of the Kinsey scale (Ace of Base? Mariah Carey?) but believe me, he most certainly was not. There was incessant talk of hot girls and breasts and butts and sometimes it was all I could do to hold my tongue to stop the flow of objectification that spilled from his southern mouth. It was never mean-spirited though, and never degrading – it was simply child-like and unrefined. In short, it was the stuff of straight guys – and it fascinated me. More than that, though, it taught me that I could be friends with someone who didn’t share all my politically-correct beliefs. No one was perfect, as I was finding, and you had to take the bad with the good because sometimes it was worth it. We challenged each other, and those challenges often led right to the verge of real arguments, but in the end we could agree to disagree and still walk back to the dorm together and meet up the next morning. This was new for me.

There’s an answer
If you reach into your soul
And the sorrow that you know
Will melt away…

By November of that year, I was finally getting the hang of college life after a couple of questionable months. I’d whittled my class-load down from an initial overly-ambitious schedule to just four courses (one of which was Water Aerobics – much more inviting at the end of August than in the first chill of November). I also had two difficult science courses, the first being Astronomy (which I also took with the hope it would be an easy pass of looking at the stars, not counting on all the physics and equations involved). In addition to the math, however, we did get to go outside and look up at the night sky from the roof of the observatory building.

Around us, the campus laid in quiet wait, and in the distance the glow of Boston once again beckoned to my desire. Above, the sky opened up and revealed more of itself as our eyes adjusted to the darkness. The moon, brilliant if only halfway in light floated in a corner, while the belt and sword of Orion stood at an angle. There was a brisk wind, and we hurriedly plotted things out on paper, took some measurements, and soon were set free by the professor. I walked down the stairs and back to my dorm. The hissing of the radiator was the only thing that greeted me in the darkened room. That hiss could be the loneliest sound in the world. Outside, the branches of a pine tree shifted shadows from a streetlight. I popped down the hall to see if he was around. There was no answer to my knock, and I went back to my room. The mark of a friendship is the dejection you feel when they’re not around. I put on the stupid Mariah Carey song and smiled. Maybe a guy could be a friend and a hero and I didn’t have to fall in love with him.

And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on
And you cast your fears aside
And you know you can survive

So when you feel like hope is gone
Look inside you and be strong
And you’ll finally see the truth
That a hero lies in you.

For his part,  I’d like to believe that he felt similarly about me. Neither of us had a large circle of friends, and his southern friendliness was somewhat shocked by our cold northeastern indifference. We were both outsiders for vastly different reasons. He was on a pre-law track, and I was about to default to a degree in English and American Literature (hence all the science and water aerobics courses [?]) While we didn’t share any classes or interests, we had started sharing dinners at Sherman Hall, and spirited conversations that ranged in topic from Madonna to racial divides. I think each of us thought that he had the upper hand, and when that happens you sometimes create an unintended equality between friends that results in a mutual admiration. It’s so much easier to think better of someone if you actually believe that you’re better than that someone. Yet as misguided as we both may have been, that didn’t mean the burgeoning affection wasn’t real. Of course, I don’t know that for sure. I haven’t seen him in about eighteen years. Maybe he just didn’t want to eat dinner alone.

It’s a long road
When you face the world alone
No one reaches out a hand for you to hold.
You can find love
If you search within yourself
And the emptiness you felt will disappear.

In the way that it has often happened in my life, all it takes is one person – one friend – to galvanize me into confidence and serenity. Just knowing that another person out there cares, and is willing to come up to you across campus to say hello and have a chat about the day – it eases any loneliness in a way that no other source of strength can match. This was in the time before the bromance was an acknowledged part of life, a time when guys kept their distance for fear of being thought gay. It was only 1993, and it feels like a world away.

As November ripened, and we neared the Thanksgiving break, it was dark when we headed out to dinner. The first brisk days and nights that hint of winter to come are not always unwelcome, and I wrapped my arms around each other, pulling my coat close. We sat down to a warm dinner and talked of holiday plans. My drive in Thanksgiving Eve traffic would likely be just as long as his flight south. I realized then that I might miss him. I was just getting into a new way of life when suddenly I’d be whisked back to Amsterdam, to the past, to the town I’d tried to escape. He was excited to be going home, though, and I was happy for him. He missed Louisiana, he said. His friends and family. Even when it’s less than ideal, there’s no place like home. We finished our meal and dropped our trays off near the exit. Pulling our coats on, we met the night and the cold and hurried up the hill back to our dorm.

As we neared Usdan Center, the moon appeared from behind a stand of pine trees. It was glorious, almost full, and I said innocently, my recent Astronomy class still in my mind, “Hey, look at the moon,” as I pointed to the sky.

He paused in his stride and looked at me quizzically, in the way he sometimes cocked his head and questioned something I said. “You’re not going fag on me, are you?” he asked, rather seriously, and without a laugh or a smile.

Somewhere, the joy and hope I’d thought I was finding in another person froze. Something shifted right then for me, not only in our friendship, but in the rest of my world, and for the rest of my life. Something died in me. The little amount of faith I held in humanity diminished just a little bit more. And I felt someone I trusted – someone who was, or had already become, a friend – slip away. I waited for him to qualify the remark, to offer a joke or something to take away the sting of what he had said. I’d been called a fag before, and I would be again, but never by someone I considered a friend. Never someone so close.

I’m not one who usually cries, but at that moment, in the instant the words came out of his mouth, I wanted to cry. I swallowed hard instead, and then insisted of course I was not a fag, even managing to embolden the lie with a convincing laugh. I explained that I was merely commenting on the moon and what I’d learned in Astronomy that week. We were quiet for a few moments, then separated and went our ways. I think we both knew then.

The Lord knows dreams are hard to follow
But don’t let anyone tear them away
Hold on, here will be tomorrow
In time, you’ll find the way.

We had a few more dinners after that, and carried on outwardly in much the same way as before. But after Thanksgiving break, I mostly stopped going to dinner with Tony. I wanted to be alone then anyway. I was coming to terms with the fact that I was gay, and even if I wasn’t, I knew I couldn’t be friends with someone who could use the word ‘fag’ so flippantly even if it he didn’t mean it, even if it didn’t mean anything. Words matter – at least they did to me.

After winter break, when snow was on the ground and trudging through campus proved both depressing and difficult, it would have been nice to have someone to bear the burden, shoulder to shoulder, but when he knocked on my door and asked if I wanted to grab dinner, I repeatedly bowed out. He stopped knocking soon enough. When our first year was over, and my parents had loaded the last of my things into the station wagon for the ride home, I didn’t say good-bye to him. I’m not even sure where he was that day, because I had honestly stopped caring.

And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on
And you cast your fears aside
And you know you can survive
So when you feel like hope is gone
Look inside you and be strong
And you’ll finally see the truth
That a hero lies in you.

Somehow, I never saw him for the next two years. It’s strange, as Brandeis is a relatively small college, but I was keeping to myself, lying in wait until I could get into Boston and away from college guys who equated looking at the moon with being a fag. He may have nudged my closet door closed completely, but in the ensuing months it only made me want to kick it down more.

In my last semester, I saw him for the last time. It was at this time of the year again – November or December – and I was waiting for the commuter rail to go into Boston – where I had just moved. He was getting off the outgoing train, and I remember watching him walk down the steps and thinking I knew him from somewhere. He flashed the same puzzled recognition before we realized and recognized. We exchanged hurried pleasantries and caught up a bit. I noticed how his eyes traveled down my outfit: a velvet scarf tied around my neck, and a top coat in black wool. His gaze focused on the velvet.

“That’s an interesting… scarf,” he said with the slightest bit of derision. It looked like he wanted to say more, but he didn’t. I wanted to say more too, but I followed his lead. It was almost dark, and the wind was picking up. We said our good-byes, and when the train pulled away I watched him cross the tracks as I stood there waiting for the next train to Boston. The velvet scarf fluttered behind me as I stood facing the wind.

There comes a time when you have to be your own hero.

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