Author Archive

Playing With The Big Boys

I have to say that even though I hear tons of complaints about Blogger, I have had relatively few problems with them over the past two years. Sure, there have been some outages and slow response times. But for someone who didn’t know what they were doing when they started (and some would argue that is still the case), I have to say they made it easy to learn and explore the world of weblogs.

So today, for reasons still unclear to even me, I decided I wanted my own domain name. So I bit the bullet and signed up with DreamHost. In an ideal world I would have loved to have obliquity.com, but of course that was already long taken. So I had to settle for a variation on a theme–one that makes logical sense in the end.

Of course, now I feel as if I’m about to drown in a pool of newness. I received an e-mail stating it would be 2-3 days for the domain to be propagated. In the meantime, I’m starting to look into publishing tools. Frankly, I’m a bit apprehensive. I’m seriously wondering if I bit off more than I can chew.

Right now, I’m exploring WordPress. I’m hoping to find something that is relatively easy to set up and use. Any advice, tips or warnings would be greatly appreciated.

Which leads me to wonder: If you scream in cyberspace, does anyone hear you?

{Footnote: DreamHost is currently having an anniversary promotion. You can sign up for one year of hosting with your own registered domain for the price of $119.40. However, if you use the promotional code ‘777′ on check-out, the year is yours for the price of $9.24. Now that’s a sale.}

Camping


Though Todd Graff’s film took a beating (and some of it not undeserved) from the critics, I have to confess that I thoroughly enjoyed Camp the first time I saw it in a theatre. I rewatched it this weekend on DVD and probably enjoyed it even more the second time. Despite some obvious script flaws (incomplete story arcs, underdeveloped characters), the heart and message of the film shine brightly. The musical numbers are terrific, with a mix of standard show tunes and original compositions from Stephen Trask (Hedwig and the Angry Inch), Michael Gore (Fame) and Lynn Ahrens (Ragtime, Seussical the Musical). If you don’t own the soundtrack, it’s a must-have. I also have to confess to being completely won-over by the lead actors: Daniel Letterle and Joanna Chilcoat.

THINGS THAT MAKE YOU GO HMM…
While doing some research this weekend, I came across an interesting abstract entitled ‘Strange Customs, Familiar Lives: Homosexualities in Other Cultures‘ by Walter L. Williams and James D. Weinrich. One of the most interesting ideas in the piece was a contrasting of religious choice and sexual choice. To summarize:

The terms sexual orientation and sexual preference are sometimes used interchangeably and at other times hotly debated. When debated, it is usually over the issue of choice. Orientation is used more often by those who think there is little choice involved, and preference is used by those who think choice is important. The element of choice can be highlighted by comparing it with religion. At some level, people can choose to be Catholic, say, or Anglican, or Islamic, and a society can choose to make Catholicism or Anglicanism or Islam a state religion. Of course, most people choose to believe what the state has mandated. Of course, there is social value in announcing one’s conformity in such a society, and in some sense there is a de facto enshrining of heterosexuality in modern Western societies as if it were the state sexual preference. Thomas Szasz (1970), for example, compares homosexuality and heresy, homosexuals in his view having the role of sexual heretics dissenting from the heterosexuality mandated by the state. This is an argument that helps fight antigay prejudice in a culture that takes religious pluralism seriously.

Further Decline Of Western Civilization: Case #1279-05


Jessica Simpson.

Jessica Simpson is hellbent on destroying civilization as we know it. Her dumb blonde, big boobs schtick was funny for about 15 minutes (or 2/3 of an episode of ‘Newlyweds’). Stinky butt, tuna, buffalo wings, sex kitten….ha ha, funny. Not.

At this point I could have just dismissed her as another of those mystifying cases of someone earning ‘celebrity’ for stirring someone’s loins with a modicum of ‘talent’. But, no. She wasn’t satisfied with slaughtering Robbie Williams beautiful ‘Angels’. MTV and her idiotic ABC variety specials didn’t offer enough exposure for her heaving bosom. She just couldn’t leave well-enough alone.

Which brings me to the travesty that is ‘These Boots Are Made For Walking’ and her upcoming role as Daisy Duke. Her obnoxious cover of Nancy Sinatra’s camp classic is one of the worst recordings in the anals annals of music. What the hell is it? Between the breathy overly-enchanced vocals, the music is a polite mess. Willie Nelson, what the hell were you thinking? You might want to lay off the pot for a bit. Seriously, Dude. As bad as the song is, Americans have made it Ms. Simpson’s highest debuting single ever. It’s selling like ho’cakes hotcakes on iTunes. What the hell are you people hearing?

Now, I’m sure the prepubescent teen set is eating up her ridiculous video clip where she wears napkin-sized denim shorts with her ass cheeks popping out and apes none other than Paris Hilton’s Carl’s Jr. wash-the-car-in-my-bikini and her whole one piece of string from being a porn video vibe. I understand the whole red-blooded hormonal male Pavlovian response (and possible a few lipstick lesbians), but really. Sure, I guess she’s attractive (if that’s your thing). But honestly, her boobs don’t sing people. Though, if they did it could possibly make the song sound better or at least make it more interesting than her uninspired cover.

Finally, don’t get me started on her creepy, daughter-obsessed ex-minister father and her ‘La La’ can’t-sing-live sister.

People, just say NO. Put down the drugs and turn off the radio and television.

Why couldn’t Mr Cruise ‘fall in love’ with her and effectively end her career?

Acceptance Is A Word

This is a brief piece of an e-mail I recently received. It’s been slightly altered to protect the identity of the author. It should also be noted that English is not his first language. But, the ideas and emotions are beyond any barrier of language:

‘I never kissed a man, never have some contact with one, and sometimes I feel very sad, because, when you see all your friends dating and loving, well, than you feel very different. When your mother talks about girlfriends,(and your mind is very far from that, in boyfriends), than you realise that you will disappoint your parents, and that was really sad. But worse than that is when you know that your parents are completely anti-gay, and you feel so strange when they talk about gays, in a humiliating way, and you just have the sensation that you will explode and tell them that you are gay. Albert this is my life, everyday, but I’m accepting it better now, in January I tried suicide myself, but someone, perhaps God, don’t let it happen. Now I’m glad for my life, this is me, and I will not change.’

I read the entire e-mail over and over. The honesty and pain was profound and palpable. While I realize this is one young person’s experience, I think there are generalities that can be drawn that do nothing to distill the power of his words.

I know in my own personal experience–as much as I was worried about acceptance from my mom, family and friends that mattered to me–my first test of acceptance was with myself. I would venture to guess that for many LGBTQ people self-acceptance is one of the first and most difficult hurdles to overcome. With time and circumstance, I think for some youth the process of self-acceptance has become somewhat easier. Yet, for every boy or girl that has the freedom to proclaim their individuality and define their person in part by their sexuality, there are thousands of others who live in a constant state of fear and a bizarre self-torture.

Once you get past self-acceptance, then you have to start looking outward to those in your familial and social circle. For me, the most important person to tell was my mother. She was my sole parent growing up and as her firstborn, we’ve always had a very close bond. I think long before my own epiphany with self-acceptance, my mother had an instinct that I was gay. Telling her was one of the hardest and most freeing experiences of my life. Through tears and hugs, I was one of the lucky ones who still had their parent’s love on the other side. My mom loves me unconditionally. She’ll always be there for me–and I will always be here for her. Yet if you asked me if she ‘understands’ my homosexuality, I’d have to say no. That fact is a hard one to process. Acceptance is a funny thing. She accepts the fact I’m gay. I’m not sure she’ll ever really understand my being gay. Sure, it’s partly semantics. But at its root, it’s a distinction that’s much harder to express.

In my own case, there is this invisible wall that floats between my mom and me. It’s not always there. But, it is there because of the simple fact that I’m gay. There are things, feelings, thoughts that I could never (or would never) be able to discuss with her. Is it my own cowardice? Is it my desire to shield her from the unknown? Truthfully, I know not the answers to those questions. The one thing I do know is that love can conquer many boundaries. Not everyone can physically cross those boundaries. But it is the hope of acceptance that moves us to want more–to be who we are.

As sad as part of the above e-mail makes me, there are parts that are like rays of light to a bigger truth. I am proud and happy for the writer. He is winning his battle with self-acceptance. He’s finally made the realization that his life is worth more than any non-acceptance he might have to face. In him, I see and find hope.
———–

[Footnote: Two things I want to make clear: 1) I'm not saying that non-GLBTQ youth don't each have a certain set of unique circumstances to overcome in their own journeys of self-acceptance; 2) Not every GLBTQ finds self-acceptance--and even if they do, they make the conscious decision to keep that knowledge to themselves or a private few.]

The White House Top 5

The hits, they just keep a comin’….

01. ‘Wait (The Whisper Song) a/k/a ‘The Plame Game’
Karl Rove f/ The Ying Yang Twins

02. ‘Stand By Your Man (Even If You Look Like a Dumb-Ass Doing So)’
Scott McClellan

03. ‘The Sup Sup Song (It’s In His Kiss)’ a/k/a ‘The Abortion Song’
Alberto Gonzalez

04. ‘I Am What I Am (Just Leave $250 on the Nightstand)’
Jeff Gannon/Guckert f/ Lil’ Kim

05. ‘The War Song (People Are Stupid)’
George W. Bush f/ Culture Club

Coming next week, Condoleeza Rice’s stirring posthumous duet with R&B legend Luther Vandross: ‘A (White) House Is Not A Home’

ENTERTAINING YOU
01. The nominees for the 57th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards will be announced Thursday morning at 5:39 a.m. PDT in North Hollywood at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences headquarters. Reading this year’s nominations are actors Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos) and Jami Gertz (Still Standing). The awards themselves will be handed out on September 18th at the Shrine Auditorium with live coverage on CBS.

02. Love and Other Disasters began filming in London on Monday. Written and directed by Alex Keshishian (Madonna: Truth or Dare) the romantic comedy revolves around a group of London friends who discover love plays out not quite like it does in the movies. To an announced cast of Brittany Murphy, Matthew Rhys, Catherine Tate and Santiago Cabrera, Keshishian has just filmed two cameos from friends Gwyneth Paltrow and Orlando Bloom.

03. From the ‘Please Not Another Sequel’ Department–Plans are in full force to deliver the following sequels to your local cineplex Hollow Man 2, Road House 2 and *ready for it* I Know What You Did Last Summer 3. Can Freddy Got Fingered 2 be far behind? Ugh.

04. Songstress Sheryl Crow has signed a deal with Dell Computer to promote her upcoming (as-yet-untitled) album due to be released on September 27th on A&M. The television campaign in entitled ‘Good Is Good’ (which happens to be the first single from Ms. Crow’s project.

I Close My Eyes

The room is so quiet that I can literally hear the seconds ticking off the clock. For a moment, I watch the second hand do its sweep in that herky-jerky dance it loves. As if for a millisecond, it considers saying to hell with convention and debates going in the opposite direction. Unfortunately, it never does.

My thumb rubs across the bottom of my chin and feels the bristly stubble of an unshaven day. My index finger absentmindedly glides across my upper lip. For some reason, it’s a small measure of comfort–a strange security. I look down at the empty paper. I’ve had my Moleskine open for what seems hours. If you look closely, you can see minute pricks of ink where my pen touched on its surface with a thought only to be lifted away repeatedly. Every thought that races through my cloudy mind is eventually derailed by the elegantly trussed cobwebs of memory blocking the tunnel to daylight. It’s like a springy net. The thoughts slam into it and bounce back into the deep recesses of darkness. But, the cobwebs, they remain perfectly intact.

I sigh and exhale in half-time. I lean back in the chair and let my body purposefully slump down. I put the pen on the desk and pull the elastic band around the Moleskine. My head goes back against the neck rest. I close my eyes.

In the background, Patti LaBelle & Elton John belt out ‘Your Song’. It’s a little bit funny this feeling inside… Don’t you know it, Elton. I know it’s not much but it’s the best I can do… Sing it, Patti.

My shoe scuffs against the tile to the beat of the music. My fingertips gently press against my upper eyelids. Eyes still closed, I smile at that thought that’s wedged in my cerebral cortex. It won’t see the light of day for now. It’s going to be selfish and keep itself…at least for the moment.

I hope you don’t mind…

The Hot List

01. AngryBlackBitch: First, I have to thank hottie Homer for turning me on to one of the wittiest, funniest blogs I’ve come across in some time. I am telling–nay demanding–that you go read this woman’s brilliance. If you’re smart she’ll end up on your MUST-READ list. Fierce, insightful, outspoken and so money, I loves me some AngryBlackBitch.

02. Sure, he’s my Editor over at Subter.com, but I have to say this would make my Hot List even if I wasn’t making his spleen burst with my late deadlines. Mr. P. Bradley Robb writes a sublime piece on the media, Judith Miller and bloggers entitled ‘The Media Is Dead. Long Live the Media.’ over on Subter.com’s blog called subTEXTS.

03. Transamerica: Not scheduled to open until December 2005, I’m telling you now that Felicity Huffman’s performance is an utter knock-out in this indie film to be distributed by The Weinstein Co.. I’m talking Oscar nomination good. Huffman plays a character curiously named Bree, who happens to be a born-again Christian and a pre-operative male-to-female transsexual in this film written and directed by Duncan Tucker. This will be one of the standout performances of 2005.

04. Juice Beauty Green Apple Peel: First, I love Juice Beauty products because they’re organic. Secondly, every skin type male or female needs a hydroxy-acid peel now and again. This new peel from their Green Apple Collection uses apple and lemon juices with a host of antioxidents and essential nutrients for a true in-home spa experience.

05. Mr. Charles Dera:

Miscellanea

01. FREE Judith Miller!
02. Lil’ Kim goes to prison. Something tells me she won’t get an ‘Apprentice’ knock-off out of the deal.
03. GWB crashes on a bike….again. Maybe those training wheels need to go back on?

04. Kelly Monaco & Alec Mazo deservedly win Dancing With the Stars inaugural competition after a free dance that scored a perfect 30 points..
05. I know it’s sad, but I’m looking forward to Big Brother 6.
06. Cable news networks: I used to be a great fan of CNN. Now, I just avoid all of them.
07. AI season four runner-up, Bo Bice has recorded a duet with Carlos Santana for an upcoming Santana album (September).
08. London becomes the first world city to host three Summer Olympic Games (1908, 1948, 2012).
09. San Francisco Chronicle: the circumcision debate.
10. Free your mind.

Life’s A Bowl Of Fruit


Lately, I’ve become annoyed with a disconcerting trend. I keep finding myself entertaining homosexual thoughts about straight men. By homosexual thoughts, I’m not necessarily meaning sexual thoughts (not that I discount that fancy completely). I think the thing that is really bothering me is that I can find more straight men who share common interests than I can gay men.

Now before I proceed, I feel I should address what is commonly referred to as a BIG GAY MYTH. That being, that all homosexual men are sexually interested in heterosexual men. Contrary to what you’ve heard on the streets, this is not true. (Okay. Actually for a segment of the indicated population, it is true. But there are some weird sports-identified and/or self-indulgent fantasy components to this that we shall address at some other time.) I think I’m being sarcastic about that last part.

Next, it’s time for a true-confessions moment: I, myself, have been sexually involved with a straight man before. Okay, two straight men. Bitches, you just had to yank it out of me! (Note to Self: You’re really making this way too easy.) Yeah, I know there are so many things wrong with that confession. But look damn it, we all make mistakes. Besides, I can honestly say I’m gay. They still say they’re straight, but whatever.

Now that I’ve confused everyone, let me continue with my original discourse. This whole romanticization of the straight man thing can be read a couple of ways. It depends on whether I approach it from a purely psychological perspective or more of an emotional, gut-level response. (I bet you thought I was about to spill my fucked-up brains all over this page, didn’t you? That’s not scheduled until sweeps week. Stay tuned.) But, the truth of the matter is that it’s merely and indication of where I’m at in this point of time.

I’ve finally left behind a lot of excess baggage in the form of unresolved conflicts, unrealized emotions, and a heaping dose (or two) of heart ache. The truth is I think about a lot of men in the romantic–and I do mean romantic as opposed to sexual–sense. It’s time for me to find someone to start new adventures in friendship and les liaisons dangereuses with. It’s time to start finding out what I have to share with someone and vice versa.

Now before every gay men I know starts worrying that I’m going to start rubbing up against them. Let me assure you that this won’t happen at least not until a week or so from now. So, yeah. Life is a big bowl of fruit and this fruit is ready to commingle. Ooh, that sounded….ripe, didn’t it?

I Can Love You ‘Til Forever…Or At Least Monday

Though it’s only been three days, this holiday weekend has seemed to drag on for a week. Not that I complaining, mind you. But for some inexplicable reason, my internal body clock gets thrown for a major loop. All day Monday has felt like Sunday. One in the afternoon feels like nine in the evening. It’s strange how out of tune your body gets when you don’t follow a prescribed (or at least semi-static) schedule. Nonetheless, I hope everyone had a good holiday and that everyone still has all of their appendages in tact.

As for me, I went the overindulgence route on everything: sun, food, sleep, guywatching, movies, keeping cool, etc. Now it’s Tuesday and my body still somewhere in Saturday night. There really should be laws against such things.

My house is about ten miles from Elephant Butte Lake. One of the few lakes (and the largest one) in New Mexico, Elephant Butte was the fifth largest manmade lake in the U.S. when it was finished in the early 1900’s. Formed by the damming of the Rio Grande River, Elephant Butte Lake got its name from a dormant volcano cone that forms an island in the lake’s center that has the uncanny shape of an elephant. (Gee, I suddenly feel like I’m giving a history lesson.) The point of all this is that during the summer months and particularly holiday weekends, the size of our town suddenly blossoms exponentially with the overflow of lake visitors. It can make for interesting times in a town that is normally just over 7,000 in population.

A lot of times, it will mean that I’ll get to see friends from college or other states that are spending long weekends nearby. This holiday, I was left guestless. So left to my own devices, I did awful and shameful things like:

–eat an entire jar of manzanilla olives with a pair of chopsticks
–watch ‘The Machinist’, ‘24th Day’ and ‘We Don’t Live Here Anymore’ on DVD
–had a play date with my kitty
–went man grocery shopping
–avoided (for the most part) ‘accidentally’ running my cart into single men wearing shorts and exposing tanned gams
–worked on a couple of writing projects
–did some serious magazine reading
–avoided the sun (and heat) to the best of my ability

All in all, it was a string of days filled with languorously listless lollygagging. (Today’s entry brought to you by: alliteration)

INTERESTING READS
01. The New York Times: Benedict Carey:
‘Straight, Gay or Lying? Bisexuality Revisited’
02. The New York Times: Todd S. Purdum:
‘Presidents, Picking Justices, Can Have Backfires’
03. Editor & Publisher: E&P Staff:
‘For July 4: Three Editorial Pages, Three Views of War’

A MEANS TO A MURDER?
The following is the beginning of a story that’s been fermenting on my brain for the past several weeks. It’s a bit darker and moodier than my normal fare. The seeds of an idea are germinating, and yet, I’m not quite sure what it is and where it’s headed at this state. I’m assuming at this point it will be a short story. But, who knows?

Anyhow, I thought it might be interesting to start fleshing it out on my blog and see what happens to it. There may yet be a pay-off for someone in the end. I’ll be revisiting this story over the next several months and I will keep the sections linked together for those of you who want to follow along.

We’ll just call it an ‘experiment’ and see which of us is injured first.
==========

His head exploded.

All of the thoughts that had lined up against the hall of mirrors that bisected his brain began to hit one another. Shards of glass, at once brilliant and frightening, were flying around in his skull waiting to pierce any little thought that dare get in the way. He felt his body fall backwards and yet not hit the ground. The force slung him against the semi-erect chain link fence that separated the parking area from the abandoned warehouse in the background. He wasn’t sure if his eyes were opened or closed. Yet, flashes of light exploded in his mind’s eye. His hand had instinctively reached toward his stomach. A warm flow of hot liquid seeped between his spread fingers.

His body gave a slight lurch as it slammed into the fence and slightly rebounded falling further down the incline. To the birds flying overhead, his figure cut the ghoulish specter of a half-fallen scarecrow who had seen his better days in some sunny cornfield. In this darkened, empty city block, the last sound he would remember over the cacophony of whizzing bullets were the footsteps that calmly traced their way back to the car and the familiar hum of the car’s engine.

It was all about to end–here. Here, wherever he was feeling the fire of life drain out of him. A guttural, gurgling sound was the last to escape from his vocal chords. The shards of mirror all crashed to the floor of his skull. The sparkling glints intensified and then began to flit out like fireflies escaping from a jar on a hot and humid evening.

The light was extinguished.

HAPPY BLOG-A-VERSARY
Today, Obliquity is officially TWO years old. A lot has transpired in two years. But, constants remain and I hope the sentiment contained in what follows still resonates here. Here is a copy of the very first post to grace this weblog:

IT BEGINS…
Welcome to this place…this space. A cursory glance often leads us to look at things in a narrow field of vision. We are too readily satisfied to accept anything at face value. We live in a World of three dimensions and usually see things in two. Obscuring our judgement is the lack of angles. We live in a place where it is too easy to see the black and white of an object, but never the greyscale. The greyscales that defy the logic of our labels. We are attracted to the the polar ends of any spectrum, where the labels are easy to define–and the small print is never read. Everything and everyone must have a safe cubby hole in our “perfect” Universe. Sorting people and things–ideas and opinions–into well-defined cubbyholes is safe. It’s comfortable and familiar. But, square pegs never fit in round holes. We all have our own unique angles. We don’t fit into the same holes. If we did, what a lackluster World we would live in. I’m always searching and exploring my angles. I hope you do as well.

To all my readers and friends, thank you for enriching my life. I am humbled by your gifts. xox A.

Friday Free-For-All

01. Happy July 1st! Is it just me or does this year seem to be flying by?

02. Back in 2000, I came across a great indie album by Canadian Daniel Powter called ‘I’m Your Betty’. He’s a terrific singer/songwriter and I’d wondered what had happened to him. Turns out, his major label debut will be released August 23rd on a Warner Bros. label with production by Mitchell Froom. The eponymous disc was released in France and several other European countries earlier this year and you can get a sneak preview on a four-song EP entitled ‘Free Loop’ (which is available on iTunes). The first single to be released is ‘Bad Day’. I haven’t taken the EP off repeat since I got it. His music is hook-filled and melodic, but pay special attention to the lyrics. Great stuff.

03. Despite my better intentions, I’ve been hooked on ABC’s ‘Dancing With the (Questionable) Stars’. While the judges have made it evident that they favor John O’Hurley and Charlotte Jorgensen, I’m going to have to say I like Kelly Monaco and Alec Mazo much more.

04. If you have a taste for the sour in life, might I highly recommend Altoids Apple Sour Chewing Gum. It’s pucker-licious.

05. Beauty Product of the Week: C.O. Bigelow’s Fruit Extract Body Scrub. Quince and mango make for a delight and helping someone scrub their back could be fun.

BEACON
open your tired eyes
let the colors mesmerize
falling from grace
doesn’t qualify the race
when you’re inside-out
let me salve that doubt
i’ll never let you lose the way
i’ll be here to save any day
despite what they say
i’ll love you anyway
—arg, 07.01.05

Sins Of Thy Father

My mother allegedly had sex when she was twenty-three with the man who is my biological father. I suppose the mere fact that he had something to do with my eventual existence is somewhat notable. Beyond this act, my relationship with the man that sired me has been less than ideal. My parents were divorced by the time I was five. From that time until I was around sixteen, I had one of those ‘occasional visit/two-week summer vacation’ type fathers. The kind of father who somehow felt gifts were a stand-in for love. During that time, my discontent and eventual loathing of my father festered like an invisible splinter in your thumb. There were things and actions on my father’s part that were inexcusable in my eyes. I think in his eyes I was a disappointment because I was not going to grow up with his inculcated and unwarranted machismo. Maybe it’s a Latin thing, maybe it’s just a stupid thing. But by sixteen, it was starting to be obvious to me (and perhaps others) that I was going to be a maricón.

One day while having a telephone conversation with him, something in me snapped. I can’t tell you what specific thing it was–something said or heard–but it uncorked a torrent of things I’d wanted to say for a very long time. Before that call was over, I knew that it would most likely be the very last time I would ever speak to my father. It’s been a curious tight rope walk. My sister (and her two children) still have a relationship with him. I, of course, would never do or say anything to in any way affect that relationship. He remembers their birthdays and Christmas and occasionally visits with them. Meanwhile, I just politely disconnect.

I realize in writing this I may end up sounding like a cold-hearted bastard. I would argue that in many ways, it’s the exact opposite. I feel too much with my heart. I remember things from my early childhood. I know things that maybe I shouldn’t. It’s difficult to articulate these without feeling like I’m bleeding across your monitor.

The reason I even visit any of this is because I was recently thinking about some of the things my father impressed upon me (whether he knew it or not). Some of these things may sound silly in hindsight, but believe me when I say they left fingerprints that lingered well-beyond my formative years.

I’m not much of an imbiber of alcoholic beverages. That’s not to say that I don’t enjoy an occasional cocktail. But, I honestly can only recall being what I consider ‘drunk’ one time in my life. In college, the whole alcohol thing became a dilemma for me. As is normal during that time, there were parties and nights out with friends. I never made a decision to not partake–but I was careful to moderate my intake. The one time I remember being drunk was during this time. I think in the back of my mind I was always fearful that I could be an alcoholic like my father. Whether that fear has any basis in reality is beside the point. The fact is I was terrified of becoming anything like the man who was my father. Even after college, I always wondered about the genetics involved. While I’m still not much of a drinker, I no longer have those fears. Somewhere along the way I learned that we are not destined to become the sins of our fathers.

Along with his alcoholism, my father possessed an all-consuming anger that tormented him. It, unfortunately, was also vented on the body of my mother. There are so many things to say about battered women and children who grow up in that environment. So many ways that bruises remain long after the blues and blacks have clotted away. However, I am determined to keep this introspection focused on me.

For many years, I had a gnawing trepidation when it came to my want (or lack thereof) of a family of my own. Again, part of this is an irrational fear. But for the longest time, I was convinced–or convinced myself–that I would never be a father. I didn’t want to bring children into a kind of world that I grew up in. I didn’t want to have such a glorious responsibility and screw it up royally. I now know that my own childhood–my own father–was the impetus for such fears. I can say I no longer have these either. I’m still not sure how I feel about the issue of children, but I don’t outright discount it.

Finally, there is perhaps the most twisted artifact from my relationship with my father–and trust me when I tell you this is going to sound very weird. So weird, that I almost hesitate to share it. But, in the end, it was a truth that affected who I am today. When I first encountered my gay-self, I was always curious if I was gay because of my father. On one hand, I hated everything he came to represent in my life. So the knee-jerk reaction is to become the farthest thing away from him. Of course, this pseudo-logic falls apart when I realize that I am attracted to men. If men, as a generalization, are so horrible, why did I want to be with one. It was this circular argument that I fought with during my teen years. Silly thoughts like I wanted to be gay to spite him. I wanted to be gay so I could never have a family. I was gay because I lacked a father-figure. The litany is endless. Of course, it is also completely unfounded and irrational. Unfortunately, a teenage-mind doesn’t always make the distinction. I am fine today with the self-awareness that I am gay because that was the way I was born (whether he had anything to do with it or not).

I think a recent discussion about Father’s Day triggered all of these memories and thoughts. Now I can wryly smile at the absurdity entwined in my formative years. Yet, I do think they did all have one effect on me. They are pieces of my past that made me who I am today–my own man. A man who is responsible for his own mistakes. I do not use my father as a role model or an excuse for who I am today. If nothing else, my childhood and teen years spurred a desire in me to be accessible and open with a younger generation of boys and girls who are grappling with their identities–sexual or otherwise. One of the most rewarding things I do is volunteer my time and effort toward causes that help struggling and newly-out youth. I figure if I can help one person not feel the way I did, then maybe I will have done something good with the wreckage of my past.

I realize I may have left one or two thoughts hanging in this entry. I honestly had no intention of going in this direction when I sat down to write. Some of you may even be uncomfortable with my over-sharing. But, I only hope someone out there can see a part of their own story in mine. More than anything, take away the fact that we may not have had a say in where we came from or how we got here, but the path in front of you is one of your own architecture. Navigate with heart. Navigate freely. If for some unexplained reason you stray from the path you want, know that the power to correct your latitude and longitude rests inside of you.

The Eye Of The Beholder

like the colors in Macke’s Lady in a Green Jacket
like the blood red flares of the Semper Augustus
like the reaching branches in Braque’s Terrace of Hotel Mistral
you bring beauty

like the mounting clouds in van Ruisdael’s Waterfall in Norway
like the insanity of Fuseli’s crazed Lady Macbeth
like the uneasiness of de Kooning’s Whose Name Was Writ in Water
you sideswipe me

like demons tormenting Schongauer’s Saint Anthony
like the blowback of the ocean’s mist on my face
like Torvill and Dean’s exquisite Bolero
you take my breath
—arg, 06.28.05

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A Falafel & A Side-Order Of Baba Ghanouj


I have a long-brewing secret crush on Parker Posey (Damn you! Billy Crudup). I also have an irrational love of the indie film ‘Party Girl’. It certainly is not the best film ever made. It’s not the most well-written film. But, it is a true guilty pleasure. Parker Posey’s party girl/library clerk Mary has such an unbridled joie de vivre, it’s hard not to fall for her exploits hook, line and sinker. Sure, there are some sub-plots that basically go nowhere. But at its heart, ‘Party Girl’ has spunk and pure joy. It brings a smile to my face every time I watch it (as I did this weekend). It also invariably makes me want to dance. The soundtrack is killer, the characters are all larger than life and don’t even get me started on Mustafah.

He-He-Hello!

LOVE’S A BITCH

I also re-watched Alejandro González Iñárritu’s masterpiece ‘Amores Perros’. Each time I watch this movie I see and feel something new. It’s almost impossible to even describe the plot without giving away too much information for a first-time viewer. Suffice to say that it a movie about love (in its many forms) and the crazy things it makes us do to one another. Filled with betrayals, consequences, and some of the most haunting metaphors on film, ‘Amores Perros’ is a must-see film. With knock-out performances from the three main characters–Emilio Echavarría, Gael García Bernal and Goya Toledo–this one will stay with you long after it’s over. Guillermo Arriaga’s script is a thing of beauty. I should warn you that a running visual metaphor through the movie involves the vicious ’sport’ of dog fighting. Some of these scenes are incredibly disturbing–and yet serve the plot in numerous ways.

NOTES FROM A WEEKEND
01. This weekend I stayed in the air conditioned darkness as much as possible. It was a definite movie/video game weekend. I’m convinced that if you spend longer than five minutes in the hot sun outdoors, your hair will spontaneously combust.

02. As per rule #A756, subsection 21a of the ‘Homosexual Code of Conduct’, I ordered my Director’s Cut of Michael Lucas’ ‘Dangerous Liaisons’. Somehow, I think Choderlos de Laclos would be amused (and with Gus Mattox, I certainly will be).

03. Chicago’s Hearty Boys triumph in Food Network’s ‘The Next Food Network Star’. Congratulations to real-life and professional partners Dan Smith & Steve McDonagh who won the audience vote on last night’s series finale. I was hoping the strapping Hans Rueffert would make the final two slots, but the Hearty Boys ended up facing-off with Deborah Fewell in dueling pilot shots.

04. Everyone should stop over at Twenty-something and wish Patrick a Happy Birthday. (While you’re there, check out his terrific writing.)

05. After finally slogging through the entire Pride Issue of The Advocate (believe me it took several attempts), I’m seriously considering canceling my subscription. The cover story profile made me throw-up in my mouth a little.

06. Answer: Andrew Sullivan and Tom Cruise; Question: Who are gay men that have lost their minds?