June 11, 2007

Not Bad for White Guy

Designer_Influence

A few days ago I saw the above image while trolling through magazines in the Art Library. I thought, "Finally! We designers are going to have a meaningful discussion about privilege, gaze and subjectivity in our work and how to be more transparent and embrace diversity structurally in our hiring practices instead of artificially through sensitivity training and focus group testing.

But no. It was just an article about a famous designer. And just by virtue of the fact that he is a famous designer I bet you know already what he looks like, how wealthy he is and what his politics are like. He is the kind of wealthy creative class dude that other wealthy people say is really 'neat.' He looks back on his career with a sense of pride, knowing he helped build some of the strongest brands in the world. Once a month he has an intern spend a couple hours doing a probono project about AIDS in Africa or breast cancer for him. This makes him feel he has contributed even more to the world. Then he goes to lunch with a Nike exec and meets a Walmart exec for drinks. When you ask him if he has made the world a better place through his work, he never thinks to ask, "better for whom?" He answers with a dull confidence, "yes."

This folks, the guy everyone likes, is the enemy, though most people will probably tell you that he's not bad for a white guy.

June 10, 2007

Polkaphobia

This post is about an important issue. It is not about bold dots. It is about boldly embracing your ethnic identity in the face of the crushing swirl of the melting pot's ladle.

Across the country thousands of young Slovacs, Croats, Czechs and other Eastern Europeans are falling victim to POLKAPHOBIA. I never would have known about this terrible epidemic had it not been for the amazing coverage the Walt Bodine Show gave to what can only be described as a Polka pride event, the Sugar Creek Slavic Festival.

After a long Trikke ride around the KCI airport my friend, the Greeting Card Company Thinktanker (Thinktank for short) and I took highway 24 east to Sugar Creek. We weren't sure what to expect, what to wear or how to arm ourselves but the Slavic Fest's website warned us to "Be Brave" and we decided we in fact would.

After parking on a dirt road we trekked down a hill and boarded a big yellow bus teaming with serious-looking, round-faced, blond couples which we quickly dotted with our dark hair and stifled laughter. The mood in the bus was ominous. People were sweating. I started to worry that bravery was going to be harder than we had thought. Thinktank and I spoke in whispers and the bus took off.

The grounds of the Slavic Fest are nestled into the base of two hills and are obscured by perfect-seeming suburban homes. They are just the right size and color. The lawns are manicured and the cars hidden in attached garages. The neighborhood is the ideal front for the squeezebox-laden debauchery hidden in that dark valley.

To get into the Slavic Fest one must pass between two long tables of onlooking Slavs, elders, wearing the secret hand-made garments of an underground culture. We knew we looked out of place, myself an awkwardly queer New Yorker and the Thinktanker an unusual blend of Japanese, Brazilian and rural Kansan. We approached the gate keeper and passed him $3 each while wondering if he would let us pass.

To our delight he smiled and ushered us into the festival.

Past the gate lie a parking lot with steep grassy inclines on either side. Against one hill a temporary stage had been built and 20 women in white dresses that were hand embroidered with an arcane language of flowers and swirls sang an ancient song in the old language from the other side of the world.

On the other hill sat gobs on onlookers, more Slavs than one could have imagined. Families of Slavs. Extended families of Slavs eating Polish Sausage, cabbage and walnut bread. The Thinktanker and I made our way past stands selling hand painted eggs, nut roll cookies and tshirts that read, "You know you want my sausage" and "Overcome your Polkaphobia." And there is was. The 1,000 pound Elephant in the room, er parking lot: Polkaphobia.

As the evening wore on people shyly overcame their own internalized polkaphobia, two by two, first the oldest couples, the ones who remembered a time when the polka was performed out in the open, then the youngest to the area just before the stage and they let their inner polka pride out.

I learned some startling information about the Polka. Particularly the horrible way in which the Polka has been appropriated and demeaned by mainstream culture. Did you know that the so-called chicken dance is a 1960's bastardization of traditional polka melodies for the amusement of culturally indifferent roller-rink kids and drunken wedding reception attendees? The original artists must be attributed for their contributions!

In the community center at the top of the hill I inspected an exhibit of traditional cultural dress in Slavic regions. Such variation! Such nuance! From the hoity-toity dark capes and flowing skirts of some of the southern provinces to the thick coats and worsted wool pants in the north. Oh to think just minutes before I had seen every embroidered smock as the same, and yet here before me was the proof of the varied costumes of a land with a rich history and a mix of subtle and overt local flavors.

I walked out into the open air as the main event of the evening was warming up, America's premier contemporary polka band, Grammy Award winner Brave Combo. My queer heart did a back flip, a stomp and threw an open hand in the air as women locked arms and formed a complicated frolicking circle and men in what can only be describe as skorts jumped over each other's swinging phallus-like sticks.

Eventually formality gave way and a new generation of polka loving lovers in matching pointy cowboy boots and muscle shirts took the floor swinging each other around in androgynous bliss.

I felt shame as I thought back to my sister and I's habit of listening to the Polka Polka! show on our hometown's public university student run radio station while putting on wildly mis-informed car dances for the amusement of the passengers of vehicles stopped at all the traffic lights between our school and our home. I wondered what my one Slovakian friend from junior high would have thought had she seen us. The friend whose grandmother painstakingly cooked us fresh pirogies of the like I have only had once since at a restaurant a dangered a Montreal blizzard to visit. Shame and pride, because despite our ignorance we had caught onto the key essence of polka: ridiculous, wreck-loose, unabashed fun.

For those of you who missed the Polka Fest this year, mark your calendars for next and warm-up your dancing shoes. The Slavic Fest is a leaping, bounding hit.

May 25, 2007

Song of Babel

Verse One:
I have heard the blind voices beseech me in the night when the mob comes to their door and the dark figure visits them, "Are you at all troubled by the idea that seems eerily familiar."

Chorus:
But fear not, brave pilgrims, be content to sit idly by and pretend our disappeared friends had it coming. One more dead Indian is just one more dead Indian. He is an ungodly individual, not a class, not a metaphor. We didn't want to kill every Sunni or Hutu or Jew, this one just had it coming. That one, oh, and these ones too. Martin Luther King Jr. should have known better than to parade his black ass across that motel walkway. And Mathew Shepard should have known better than to sachet his gay ass across the prairie.

Refrain:
When the planes come to carry us away we will suddenly know the difference between an act of violence and a movement bent on extermination. Then we will look around, finally, for support and there will be no one left to defend us.

Verse Two:
I have driven the desolate miles of the Wyoming highway. Each paper bag caught in a fence, each piece of fabric escaped from a laundry line and snared on a barb explodes against the unchanging landscape like a bomb. Every inch of fenced line byway screams to me "I die alone. I die alone. I die alone." And I am not the only one.

Refrain:
When the planes come to carry us away we will suddenly know the difference between an act of violence and a movement bent on extermination. Then we will look around, finally, for support and there will be no one left to defend us.

April 20, 2007

No words to say

Today I took a break from languages. I walked out into my mother's brown New York garden. Snow trodden early bloomers were recouping in the sudden sun. This small world she had eked out for herself latent with all the wonders she anticipated each year from memory. She can see things that aren't yet there and she talks about them as if they are always in bloom.

But I was still with computers and the events of the previous day. Then a squirrel stood before me. His one blind eye, bulging and blue. Half of his sight was seeing and half believing he could see. His blind eye twice the size of his real eye. His blind eye knew I was there as much from memory as from fact.

He scattered up the false cherry tree that blooms twice each year and sat eating scraps from the birds pretending he was watching me.

My mother can't use her right arm, now. The movement is coming back, but it will be a long recovery. Someday she will lock me up in one of those great hugs I struggled against as a boy. I stood in the yard where three generations of my family has lived and peered towards the river. Thousands of years of humans and squirrels have lived in this spot and left arrowheads, gardens and seed shells to prove it.

Between me and the river stood a grove of trees and the house of Mrs. Saki, the widow of Mr. Saki the lone Japanese man on our street. His ghost looms over me sometimes in the memory of my grandfather's warnings. He told me that Mrs. Saki was a life-long friend and that when she married a Jap after the war he was the only one to go to their house for dinner. I could see them in my mind eating alone each night and it made me shy to say hello when she would waddle out with stale cookies and mild and clasp her hand and tell me what a beautiful young lady I was. He said to be careful who you marry because people can't trust a Jap, not after Pearl Harbor and the war. He said you lose friends over a thing like that and friends are the most important thing in the world.

I imagine Mrs. Saki, who fell in love with a Japanese man when she was just barely an adult, who changed her name and her allegiances in so doing, sitting on her sun porch, nearly ninety, the memory of this street, as I know she does to spend her days after her stroke last year, watching me watch a half blind squirrel and realizing my mother must be hurt bad for me to come home from Kansas to spend a week with her and care after her garden and groceries.

I imagine how her life changed after my grandfather died. He first knew he was sick when he to her house to install a smoke detector because her husband was dead and she was too old even back then to climb a ladder. He stopped halfway up the stairs to catch his breath and died a half of a year later.

I wonder if when she looks at me she sees my death, like so many other deaths that have come and left gleefully. The way I see the death of this half-blind squirrel oblivious to a hungry hawk, exuberant to find such an easy prey.

I called my uncle today for the first time in so many years I am embarrassed to say. My uncle the devout Catholic, the Eucharistic Minister a product of the 50's, called to tell him how much I admire him and how I adore the things he said to me as a child that have taken hold in my imagination and given me a new life to grow into.

He listened from the other end of the phone and told me about the projects he is working on, teaching children to learn in new ways. A genius in his own right, but like my mom a terrible reader, the kind of person who loves words from behind a barrier, the way a cripple loves an athlete because of a body that can say the things his heart feels.

I have trouble with words. They come out of my throat like a broken vase. A gift one must apologize for. It is the thought that counts, but the prize that speaks for itself.

I told my mom today I have trouble sharing my feelings and I would like to keep it that way. If I could just tell her how I felt I might stop feeling it so passionately. Then when my undying love for her came swelling out in the middle of a snow storm, uneven, unexpected, too early or too late it wouldn't be because it had to, and she might not realize it is always there, the hug her lame arm will always feel, like the crocus her mother planted before she died from a heart attack that one Christmas day in a snow storm worrying that my mother wouldn't find her back from taking pictures with her new camera. She doesn't have to tell me she takes pictures to show to her dead mother. I know this silently, blindly. That crocus we stopped to look at and admire as it was pushing its way up between cracks in the walk, reaching for its short stint in the sun, sheltered by a sea of concrete from the storm that will take us all.

Then I lamented that there is no place for me in this town that holds my heart hostage and my mind at bay.

April 17, 2007

Mr Perfect

The chatters
BILLY - played by me, the coach, who (as her girlfriend and several ticket-writing officers can attest to) does not have a flirtatious bone in her body. She identifies as gender queer.

INLOVEWITHMRPERFECT - a former player of Billy's who attempts to chat with her constantly even though I she is no longer the girl's coach. Billy has blocked her numerous screen names time and time again. She is age 13 and identifies as female.

The setting
This scene takes place in cyberspace, a chat room. Your bodacious blogger buddy, me, Billy, hereafter referred to as Billy, is peacefully telecommuting while back in her home town in Binghamton, New York. This also happens to be the home town of Rod Serling, creator of . . .

The Twilight Zone

. . . She is helping her mother recover from spinal surgery. She is sitting in on the living room couch of the house she lived in while coaching division one soccer for Binghamton University and, simultaneously, coaching the most successful girls youth team in over a decade from New York West. Her former player, Inlovewithmrperfect, is at an unknown location. She was on that very successful youth team that was invited to join one of the most prestigious leagues in the country thanks, in part, to the coaching of yours truly. There is a snow storm. 1,000s of homes across the North East US are without power. It is mid April . . .

11:14 AM Today
inlovewithmrperfect: Hello?
Billy: yes?
inlovewithmrperfect: Do you remeber me?
Billy: depends on who this is
inlovewithmrperfect: This is [Kid's Name] from [Kid's Hometown], New York, You coached the [Kid's Team] ... I was on it!
Billy: yup i remember
inlovewithmrperfect: What happened to you?
Billy: long story, bud
inlovewithmrperfect: Why don't you coach us anymore?
Billy: you'll have to talk to your parents and jeff (club director)about that
inlovewithmrperfect: Were you fired?
Billy: nope
inlovewithmrperfect: Did you quit?
Billy: not exactly
inlovewithmrperfect: Oh, okay I wont ask anymore questions about that!
Billy: no prob, i just don't know where the discussion is at
inlovewithmrperfect: Do you still live in Binghamton?


11:20 AM
Billy: nope, i live in kansas city, but i am in binghamton sometimes to see my mom
inlovewithmrperfect: Why'd you move back?
Billy: because i needed a job and my old boss offered me a promotion
inlovewithmrperfect: Oh, cool
Billy: yup, it is a really neat job, actually
Billy: i design all kinds of neat stuff, virtual reality tours, television commercials, etc for [my place of employment]
Billy: anyhow, i have some lunch ready, hope school and soccer are going well
Billy: hope you are still writing
inlovewithmrperfect: Were not in Upstate Premier anymore
inlovewithmrperfect: Were in Region One. We are doing alright
Billy: nice job
inlovewithmrperfect: Yea
inlovewithmrperfect: One quick question
inlovewithmrperfect: Not to offend you or anything but why didnt you ever tell us?
Billy: tell you?

11:25 AM
Billy: that i was leaving?
inlovewithmrperfect: No. I dont want to be offencive to you
inlovewithmrperfect: So I dont know how to explain it
Billy: tell you what then?
inlovewithmrperfect: Dont take this offencivily
inlovewithmrperfect: Why didnt you tell us you were interested in the same sex?
Billy: i thought we talked about saying "no offense too much"
Billy: well i dont think who i date has anything to do with soccer, do you?
Billy: if you all asked jeff about who he dates, i am sure he would say it is none of your business
Billy: its not because he doesnt like you guys, it just is personal
inlovewithmrperfect: No, but I do think thats why most of the girls were shy towards you. If you would've come out and said listen ladies I am not hitting on you or trying to scare you but I have an interest in the same sex
Billy: same thing with danielle
inlovewithmrperfect: Danielle would talk about her boyfriend all the time (PS this is patently untrue, She made it up)
inlovewithmrperfect: We had a connection with her and she trusted us.
Billy: well, i think that expecting one person to act different because they date different people is unfair
inlovewithmrperfect: NOOO
Billy: and the reason most coaches dont talk about their relationships is because it has nothing to do with practice
inlovewithmrperfect: I am not saying that we were to act differently toward you but we would've felt more comfertable

11:30 AM
Billy: and especially for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer people - they can be discrimminated against if they do say things about their personal lives
Billy: especially to young people
inlovewithmrperfect: We were all afarid to talk to you or get near you becase we had all come up with the asumption that you did like the same sex and we were all SCARED, because you didnt talk to us about it.
inlovewithmrperfect: Remeber the night in the Hotel you had asked for a meeting in your room with no parents allowed? We were all afarid to come in without a parent.
Billy: because?
Billy: because you thought i was gay you were scared to be alone with me?
inlovewithmrperfect: Yes.
Billy: why?
inlovewithmrperfect: I dont know. We were just scared because we did not feel comfertable with you because you had never told us the truth.
Billy: well, kell, i guess my point is that it didn't matter to me who you guys dated, what religion you followed, whether you liked blue better than red, you were my team and i cared about you

11:35 AM
Billy: you are going to have a lot of coaches who are different from you and your parents, that doesnt mean they arent good coaches
Billy: and you can learn a lot by knowing them
inlovewithmrperfect: We cared about you too its just we could never get close to you or interact with you because none of us felt comfertable around you
Billy: but that wasn't my fault, that was just your own ideas and fears
Billy: unfortunately you have to work those things out for yourselves
inlovewithmrperfect: Wait a minute, I am not saying your a bad person. NOT AT ALL am I saying that its just that we would have felt more comfertable with knowing that our coach was interested in the same sex
Billy: do you know whether jeff likes girls or boys

11:40 AM
Billy: i have a feeling, what made things hard you guys is that the parents were talking about it and maybe even that someone might have told you guys some untrue things at one time or another, like that gay people like to date kids, which is a horrible lie, and that you weren't sure what to think. there are some parents who told me point blank that they didnt approve of my lifestyle. there are some parents who would have pulled their players from that team if I had said one word about being gay. and that would have hurt everyone. and i didnt want to make your season about me. but i will tell you that there are a lot of gay players and a lot of gay coaches and i am willing to bet that it is okay to be close to all of them, no one is trying to hurt you or convince you to think or feel anything that isnt right for you as a person.
Billy: does that help?

11:45 AM
inlovewithmrperfect: Not really
Billy: hehe, it is a tricky thing
inlovewithmrperfect: No but why couldnt you have said that to us durring the season?
Billy: i wasnt allowed to, buddy
Billy: i also wasnt allowed to have a team meeting with you after the season
Billy: and i have been coaching soccer for over 10 years, it was never an issue before
Billy: most of the parents I coached in Kansas had no issue with it
Billy: they had no issue with my haircut
inlovewithmrperfect: And the whole new strech thing where you grabbed Jill and told her to lay on her back and give you her leg and you started rubbing it, that was deffinatly creepy to most of the girls, and none of the parents had an effect on what you didnt feel comfertable saying to us. Why didnt you say it? It seems like you felt uncomfertable being that was as we were as uncomfertable of knowing that you were that way.

11:50 AM
Billy: hun, it was a stretch
Billy: it isnt a gay stetch
Billy: it is a real stretch all kinds of people do
inlovewithmrperfect: It was one of the things that made us come up with the conclusion we did
Billy: if i said "im gay and i want you to do this stretch, do you think it would make it any different"
Billy: well, you know, you could have just asked, if you really wanted to know
inlovewithmrperfect: We didnt want to offend you. But we sorta did. Did you feel that we were talking about you behind your back about you being gay?
Billy: well i remember being 13 and 14 and not really understanding gay stuff and feeling very confused and awkward, and I knew it was something you guys were struggling with, but I didnt want to tell you what to think or how to feel

11:55 AM
inlovewithmrperfect: Well we did do alot of talking behind your back and I feel bad for it but we couldnt just talk about our coach being gay out loud
Billy: sure you could
Billy: there is nothing wrong with talking about gay stuff
inlovewithmrperfect: But there is if your not gay
Billy: why?
Billy: hetero people talk about gay stuff all the time, gay people talk about hetero stuff, it is okay to talk about, it is better to talk about it then to worry about it
Billy: that is why i strongly suggested you talk to your parents
Billy: because they will be able to give you good information
Billy: and they wont assume that you are gay just because you ask
inlovewithmrperfect: Well no offence but I am a VERY big homaphobe and I have nothing against what you believe in or what you do just leave me out of it. Thats how I feel

12:00 PM
Billy: well, that much has been obvious for most of this conversation, bud
inlovewithmrperfect: Now that we have Rich as a coach we talk about how stupid the I believe in you thing was and we dont do it we believe in each other and we show it by trusting in ones ability to handle the ball
inlovewithmrperfect: Sorry
Billy: and I tried very hard to keep it from being an issue, but you really wanted to know, and changed your screen name in order to ask, so now you know
Billy: well, you dont have to like everything a coach asks you to do, the important thing is to try it
Billy: some people did like it, and needed to hear it
inlovewithmrperfect: No I changed my screen name because I found this guy that I love with all my heart and he loves me too so thats what my screen name says. In Love W/ Mr.Perfect!!
Billy: well, rich is a good coach, i'm sure you'll do great with him
inlovewithmrperfect: Hes AWESOME and we all love him hes like another father to us all

12:05 PM
Billy: kell, what i want to know is why, if you are suck a homophobe, it was important to talk to me about coming out to the team? i am way older than you guys, i never flirted with any of you, i am really disgusted by the idea that you think i enjoyed touching someone's legs . . . why are you writing to me? have you asked yourself?
inlovewithmrperfect: if you are suck a homophobe???
Billy: such
Billy: typo
Billy: like, do you hate gay people that much that you just have to know what everyone you meet is doing when they arent at soccer
Billy: because that is just sad
inlovewithmrperfect: I have. I am really disgusted that you wouldnt tell us the truth.
Billy: i feel bad for you
Billy: do you know that 1/10 people are gay?
Billy: that means some of your teachers are gay
inlovewithmrperfect: I am also disgusted that you think that I am trying to target you and be mean to you. I dont have any bad thought about you. I understand that it was your choice
Billy: someone in your family is probably gay
inlovewithmrperfect: NONE of my teachers are gay you can tell if someones gay.
Billy: 1/10 people you pass on the street are gay
Billy: no, you cant
inlovewithmrperfect: Yes you can.
Billy: you can tell that i am gender-nonconforming, that is different from gay
Billy: many famous women's soccer players are gay
inlovewithmrperfect: i am gender-nonconforming?? You are??
Billy: including abby waumbach, one of the premier athletes in the world
Billy: well i have a shaved head

12:10 PM
inlovewithmrperfect: You can tell your gay just by the way you acted towards us. By the way you took it when Laura told you this BULLSHIT story that I called her gay.
Billy: listen, you just told me you are a homophobe, that you think it is disgusting, but you arent being mean to me, you have repeated every silly stereotype out there about gay people, you really need to talk to a teacher or your parents because, truthfully a lot of the things you just said are sexist
inlovewithmrperfect: I would NEVER disriminate a gay, lesbian, by-sexual, etc thats wrong and I was raised better its just sad that you dont realize that not everyones out to get you. Not everyone thinks gays a bad and they should all die. I am one of the few that dont think you should die because everyone has a reason to live no matter what they do differently
inlovewithmrperfect: What did I say thats sexist?

12:15 PM
inlovewithmrperfect: Thats sad that you think that everyones out to get you and that I am being more mature than you about this situation
Billy: kelli, i sat in an office with jeff and paul and listened to them say that they were thinking of dismissing me because your parents had issues with the fact that i identify as a gender-noncomforming (which, btw is illegal and i have reported this to their bosses), i get stopped by security guards when i walk out of women's bathrooms, people dont let their kids play with me, people say horrible things to me as i walk down the street, i hear people make fun of 'fags, homos, queers" etc all day long, some of my friends have been beat up, many many people have been killed in this country, this year for being gay, people dont hire me because i dont look like a sexy girl
Billy: i challenge you to go through a day with a note book and write down how many times you hear people say bad things about gays or how many times they use the word gay to mean something bad
inlovewithmrperfect: I do EVERYDAY. But that mam is not directed towards you at all
Billy: well, kell, it is
Billy: it is directed at straight people too

12:20 PM
Billy: it is a warning that you better fit in, or else
Billy: and it is wrong
Billy: it is just like when white people use the n-word
inlovewithmrperfect: You better sit there and listen to this miss.
inlovewithmrperfect: I dont give a damn about what people think about me. It makes me very angry when people think I do care.
inlovewithmrperfect: I DONT
Billy: that is fine, and trust me i know that not everyone is out to get me, that doesnt mean that the things you said werent sexist, and it also doesnt mean that it is untrue when I say some people are out to get me
inlovewithmrperfect: If you care what people think your screwed up because you know what, there just thought and no one is perfect everyone has flaws your gay I cant read well my boyfriend cant say his L's my uncle has a lisp some of my friends have mental issues and cut. THATS WHO THEY ARE. Dont change something thats not broken.
inlovewithmrperfect: NO wait please tell me some of the things I have said that are sexist?
Billy: i have to care what people think about me, kelli, i need a job, i like to coach soccer, which means parents have to trust me, etc
Billy: ex: i didnt want to get close to you because i thought you were gay, we didnt want to be in your hotel room, etc
inlovewithmrperfect: If they dont like you screw them, you need to accecpt the fact that you are who you are and, no one should change you.
Billy: no duh, kiddo
Billy: i have totally done that
inlovewithmrperfect: Thats not being sexist its being scared because you dont have the courage to come out and say that you are infact a lesbian

12:25 PM
Billy: first, i am not a lesbian
Billy: second, i have all the courage in the world, i am a gay activist for chrissakes
inlovewithmrperfect: someotherchatter: lol yeah there are way to many queers and lesbos here (thats someones view)
inlovewithmrperfect: you cant change how people think
Billy: that means my name and my face are in the gay world
Billy: i know that, and all i was trying to do was coach soccer
Billy: i wasnt trying to change what you guys thought
inlovewithmrperfect: If you have courage then why didnt you tell us? Did you not have pride in what you are?
Billy: again, i wasnt trying to change what you guys thought
Billy: i was just trying to coach soccer
Billy: i only talked to you about gay stuff when things were out of line or you asked me a direct question
Billy: and honestly, my personal life is none of your business
Billy: it shouldnt matter who i date
inlovewithmrperfect: Coach soccer in the closet? No pun intended
Billy: i was never in the closet, it isnt my job to tell you what to think
inlovewithmrperfect: It doesnt but it did have a great effect on the girls you coach...
Billy: why? does it matter to you who rich sleeps with?
inlovewithmrperfect: He has a WIFE

12:30 PM
Billy: i think it bothered you guys that i didnt look like a girl, or your idea of what a girl should look like
Billy: how do you know i dont have a wife
inlovewithmrperfect: You prolly do...
Billy: so, what is the real issue
inlovewithmrperfect: no one cares tho, thats your lifestyle and no one is asking you to change your lifestyle
inlovewithmrperfect: Do you?
Billy: it obviously matters to you, it affects the way you think about me, which affects the way you felt about me being your coach, which is why i do have to care what people think
Billy: it is none of your business
Billy: and it has nothing to do with how well i coach
inlovewithmrperfect: You did flirt with us.. sorry to state the facts but it is true (Patently untrue as well)
Billy: no, i didnt flirt with you
inlovewithmrperfect: Not with ME, but some girls on the team
Billy: no, i didnt flirt with any of the girls on the team
inlovewithmrperfect: Yes
Billy: see, this is what i mean by sexist, kiddo

12:35 PM
inlovewithmrperfect: I may be but the question I ask you is WHY? Why didnt you tell us?
Billy: I already told you that. Some day you might understand. Save this conversation and reread it. But, we're done, I don't need to repeat myself constantly. You obviously just want to say inflammatory things, good luck to you, i hope the team does well, but i don't ever want to talk to you again
inlovewithmrperfect: Are you serious?
inlovewithmrperfect: How much more immature could you get? Your how old 33 and you act 3 (she was way off on my age, btw)
Billy: Well, game knows game, grandpa.
inlovewithmrperfect: Well Billy I didnt mean to say offending things but remeber you told me Billy: i thought we talked about saying "no offense too much"

---------

Key Questions for parents or educators:

Q:What do you think the player's motives are for asking questions? Is it possible she, herself, is worried she is gay?

Q:What are some of the indicators that the player was not alone and was fielding questions from others?

Q:Has this player's parents done a good job in talking to her about gender and sexuality?

Q:Does the coach ever reveal her own sexual preferences? Practices? Beliefs?

Q:At what point does the coach get to stop following the general rules of thumb about coaching and start stating her beliefs?

Q:How would you handle the immediate phone call, as a parent, that went to this player's mom after the chat session?

Q:At what point would you have blocked this player for the tenth or so time?

April 10, 2007

After Life

I awoke this morning and stole silently out of the house. I left no note or kisses on the cheeks of dogs or you, lover. I left no warm coffee congealing in pot's bottom, no cup with dark ring in the clean sink. TV wasn't set to favorite channel, computer was empty of tabbed windows. Public radio was off. There is no tooth brush spittle on mirror. Towels are perfectly folded and dry. And sleeping dogs still lie.

I worried as I left that you might think I didn't love you, that I was ghost-like, ether-bound, a figment of your imagination - a Sabrina.

I wanted you to awake to a world that was fully your own with no opinionated weight pushing you to do this or do that. For that I burdened you with the feeding of the dogs and the making of dirty dishes.

I sped off to the hum drum half life I have created for my daytime self. The world is full of a sitting gray. It is a small window showing-off over cast skies under a flickering yellow hum and a bleating electric whine. Everyone answers their ringing, blinking boxes the same way, settling into the day seat.

I said I chose this daytime life, but that was a half truth. I was broken into it. I once saw freedom in an open field, full of childhood and yelling, of girls running and spitting into the eye of the sun - of youth. That dream was dashed by two people, men by chance, real men who decided that I had no rights to youth because my face didn't match my vagina. For that offense I have been taught to fear children.

Never-mind that you have told me, repeatedly, that I was built to be a gay man.

I am sure these unappointed arbiters of social graces could think of nothing worse than you fucking me in the ass. Though perhaps had they known that I would have been allowed to keep teaching girls how to kick a ball with their shoelaces instead of their toes. At this my heart leaps and sinks like when I watch the men at the gym pinch their own mass into efficacy as if rolling the world into a ball.

Then again, I have heard people say, accusingly, that gay women have more rights than gay men, I have heard straight men complain that gay women have more rights than them, I have heard gay women complain transgender women have more right than them as if we had stolen something from each other.

And here we all meet at the gym, sculpting ourselves into each other's fantasies.

And I think: They must not know that I have listened to parents say, indignantly, that I am not to talk to their daughters, though having passed background check after tedious background check, though having passed test after test, after proven myself in practice and winning ribbon and trophy after ribbon and trophy. I have listened to men and women in power list reasons, baseless and banal, why the way I look disqualifies me from working with youth, the public, the media, the right, the left, the middle, the happy, the disturbed, the impressionable, the hard-headed. And it has at times made me greedy for the indisputable proof of worth I can never possess. I grew up listening to nuns who claimed to be the wives of Jesus Christ tell me for 14 years that I have no right to love or to be loved in the only way I can. I have sat and listen to lesbians tell me that they are normal and fighting for a natural love, not like those drag queen freaks. I have listened to gay men violently attack women's bodies with their words, I have heard transgender folks call for the expulsion of undocumented workers because they had no natural right to these lands, that they feel they own, unquestionably as second class citizens who have to sell their bodies or their souls to put food on the table. I have heard a whole host of people, bound together by the same injustices rip one another a part like rabid dogs for the pleasure of their masters.

Then again, I have sat with people, gay and straight, of all colors and creeds and enjoyed a meal or a drink and felt alive, though I can count those times on the tips of my pleading fingers - let us give thanks and make it through this meal without destroying each other.

Perhaps, they thought I might agree, all of them, that a master's intoxicating approval is the only meaning in life. Perhaps they thought I would feel some sort of resounding shame, or resentment and find myself reborn, straighter, blonder, tanner, thinner, straighter, happier, straighter, better.

Never-mind what I have told you. It was of a nightmare rooted in traumas I am not allowed to speak of, after-all the two of us have learned decorum demands victimhood be silent to be palatable and I don't think we are the only ones.

Never-mind that you cried last night. Your beautiful face leaking into my bed. Go and forget this half life of fluorescent fear: seeing your dream and then seeing it taken away, trading dreams for Johns for cubicles, a modern revolution.

We feel the unending need to find lines in the shifting sand to stand behind, until we are boxed in, alone, standing on enough cracks to break all our fore-mother's backs.

Go and be freer than I am, please. Know that I love you, all of you, every bit.

March 21, 2007

The Squeaky Wheel

My sister was a squeaky wheel, literally. She had a growth on her voice box that made her voice higher pitched than normal. She would ask for the most outlandish things and get them.

The best thing she ever asked, though, in her squeaky little voice was this:

We were laying in our bunk beds in our low rent apartment. We were Catholic School kids, and though, presumably, we hadn't worn our uniforms to bed, our world was full of grey wool plaid. I remember a year when a thread-thin vertical green and horizontal 0yellow stripe made their way into the standard-issued jumpers and I thought, consciously, what a fine thing color was.

Our teachers, the nuns, spouted the gospel of Jesus, or as it is known in school, the gospel of hope/love and forced us to give them awkward hugs as we entered and left each day as a begining and an end to the day's degredation:

(Me)
"Divorce is a sin, you're mother is going to hell."
"All the girls where jumpers. Take off those pants."
"What makes you think you're so special?"
"You will never go to college with a mouth like that."
"How will you ever get married in a church if you don't act more like a lady"

(My Sister)
"Take off that lip gloss, you look like a whore."
"Do you know what happens to girls who try to get the boys to notice them?"
"Oh, you, you don't need to worry about college. Find a nice husband."

Our favorite time of the day was when my mom would sit with us at night. Because my sister was younger she had the bottom bunk and my mom would lay with her and read or tell us stories. I would lay there looking up at the ceiling, listening, trying to imagine the pictures in the book.

I was in one such daze, when my sister's squeaky, miniature voice called up to me, "Beth . . . are you awake?"

(Beth was my childhood nickname.)

"Yes?"
"(Timidly) Do you . . . love me?"

This is probably the seminal moment in my life, the moment I understood what it meant to have another living person's feeling in your hands.

"Yes. I do."
"I love you, too."

So, in a way, I understand why my sister got a lot. She was the baby, and a baby with a growth in her throat who said great things at the most unexpected moments.

March 20, 2007

The Price of Sneakers

It was a dreary day. I had left work in a haze of boredom and headed out to the wall of strip malls to feed my capitalistic glut, if you have nothing to do then go shopping.

I ended up at the shoe store in search of some brown work shoes, or so I told myself. But I spent the bulk of my time in the casual section trying on converse colors.

A boy of 12 or 13 walked by with a man in tow. He looked past every pair to the price tag. He did not want to see the shoe until he knew what it would cost him, or more accurately, his father.

Father: Do you see any you like?
Boy: They are all so expensive.
Father: Well, son, sneakers are expensive.

The boy looked disheartened.

Boy: They don't have any track shoes.
Father: I know, son, these will be for practice and for gym.

The boy looked sick and the father pulled his long fists from the pocket of his soiled jeans which hugged his hips below a pot belly that was covered by a second-hand muscle shirt and a raggedy, unbuttoned flannel. The father put his arm around his son. The two of them were completely out of place in something as swanky as a new shoe store where the other sons were jocularly negotiating to goad their parents into buying the most expensive shoes possible, like it was a sport. Daughters made a show over a pump or a Puma, buckling in the knees, promising bored parents they would be happy, finally, if they just had this one last thing.

This family looked as if they hadn't had anything new in their lives.

Father: Don't worry, son, we will find a way to get you track shoes, but for now you need a pair of nice sneakers.

And the boy timidly began trying on the least expensive pairs he could find.

I flashed back to a day in the early 90s. It was the week of my first soccer game. My single mother sat gaping at the price of cleats. Already she had a basketful of socks and shin guards - one pair each for my sister and I.

Mom: I didn't know cleats were so expensive.
Salesman: Oh yes, mam, these are the top of the line. Imagine how many goals your son, er, daughter could score in these.

He looked me up and down, then saw my sister.

Salesman: We have some pretty ladies cleats.
Mom: Well, girls, pick out the ones you like.

The cleats were on a wall. The kids cleats were a little lower than the adult ones. I picked up every pair and turned it over and pretended to be looking at them. But, really, I was trying to see inside to the price to find the pair that was the most affordable. The last pair I picked up was a pair of black Mitres, $15. They were all the wrong shape for scoring goals. And ugly, sinfully ugly. I knew the other kids were going to tease me.

Me: These ones, I want to try on these ones.
Mom: Hold on, put on these socks and shin guards first so we know they will fit.

I squeezed my foot into the shoe. It rubbed on my heel. It pinched my toes, it was hard to balance.

Me: They are perfect!

They were, if fact, bad enough to stunt my development as a player, but still, I scored my first goal in those shoes. I played my first half as a goalkeeper in those shoes. I fell in love with the sport I went on to play in college in those shoes. And they are still hanging on a hook in my mom's garage, waiting for me to come home to them.

March 2, 2007

She Should Have Been Mine

I took my name from my grandfather. Most of what I remember about my grandfather happened in a hospital, but then again much of my childhood happened in a hospital. In fact, even in high school, if you asked me what my favorite food was it probably came from the hospital’s cafeteria; hours old burgers, rested to perfection in tinfoil bags, mounds of curly fries, rehydrogenated broccoli soup. My sister and I once laughed for a good 30 minutes when we discovered a curly fry in the shape of an embryo. We loved curly fries and we loved embryos, but the combination wasn't so hot. And we debated after all the other fries were gone whether we should eat the embryo fry, or save it to show to our mother, the midwife. The mixed feeling of dread and exhilaration I had when I bit the head off the embryo has stayed with me all this time.

My single mother was the head nurse of three women's health units in the largest hospital in our city. My sister and I would sit in the family waiting room or in her pea-sized office with a fine hair of a window listening to the radio that was turned down to near zero, doing homework, or inventing games that didn’t require space or noise.

We were ever aware of the suffering of others and the hardship our exuberance could bring to bear upon their suffering. Even in my mom’s office, which was located in the happiest unit in the hospital, labor and delivery, we were aware that while many families were celebrating a joyous occasion, some families were lamenting a great loss, and still other families were having children that they did not or could not care for.

The room next to my mom’s office was a circumcision room. A closet, really, with a tray much like a gurney, with straps on it. We could hear, over our math problems and the barely audible college radio programming, the screams of young boys, inconsolable screaming, as they were submitted to an ancient and unnecessary surgery with no anesthetic and no mother to hold them.

More than once I walked out of the office to a nurse attending to the smallest human being imaginable, red faced, jaw unhinged, suffering and bleeding and screaming. The doctor would leave while his young body was still tied down and bloody. The nurse would methodically clean, medicate and wrap the baby’s wound. She would talk to him with the confidence and indifference of one who has seen a tragedy play out a million times over. She knew how to get through this with professionalism. More than once I hid my face in a school-issued textbook and cried from the look of absolute horror in those babes' faces.

It was, at times, stifling, but it made us both love the outdoors and we were avid athletes, like my grandfather.

When my grandfather got ill the world changed. My mother, naturally, was the one to take care of him. I found her one night on the toilet, crying. I immediately assumed she was sick, very sick, and hadn’t told us. I ran to her. I began to cry. I pulled her head into my little teenage breast. We stood there like that for some time. And she looked up at me, her blue, crystal clear eyes covered in tears and in a voice I had never heard before, the voice of a 5-year-old, she said, “I am going to be an orphan, now, I will never have a parent, again.”

Oh, how I wanted to tell her I would always take care of her, that I would be her parent, but I couldn’t speak. I knew what she meant, and I realized that no matter how old I got, I too would some day be an orphan and then I would be profoundly and fundamentally alone. (Years later I read the Illiad, "You are father to me and mother, and brother, and husband also. Have pity on me, and stay here upon the wall, lest you leave me a widow and your child an orphan." I sat stunned in class, reduced from college scholar to a babbling, blushing child.)

My sister and I set up shop in my grandfather’s basement. There was a pull-out bed and an old TV with a knob you could turn to get channels. Channel 1 on the dial was the playboy channel, which was scrambled, and when my sister fell asleep I would silently turn it on and watch between the lines of static for the brief moments when one could see naked men with surgically sculpted penises and women with surgically enhanced breasts touching each other.

My grandfather’s health deteriorated and we decided to move into my mother’s childhood home, which was directly across the street from grandpa's then current house. After school we would spend all of our time with my grandpa and my step grandma. We would watch Wheel of Fortune, then Jeopardy. They were impressed with the questions I knew the answers to. I was impressed with the questions they knew the answers to.

We began to tell stories.

My grandfather needed help getting up from his chair, then he needed help walking to the bathroom, and finally he needed help sitting down to pee. His penis had disappeared, as far as I could tell, and he seemed to me like an old woman, and I was embarrassed to have noticed and he was embarrassed to need my help with such things. One time I didn’t move fast enough to help him up. He had been so polite when he asked that I didn’t realize it was urgent. He peed himself and the chair. His chair. I got some soap and water and cleaned his leg and got him fresh pajama pants and then I cleaned the chair.

Later after he went to the hospital I would sit in the chair, it was leather and it smelled like his aftershave. I would touch the chording around the arms with my fingers the way he did when he was thinking and I would fall asleep.

I was a natural at the hospital. I knew where to go to be out of the way and I would sit and watch him while he slept.

He had the most amazing fingers. I would watch them all the time. They had large knuckles, they were tan, and large. The tips were flat as if he had been squeezing something for a great many years. He would pinch his bed sheets as though he was checking to be sure they were still there, then he would pat them smooth again, over and over. He must have done that a million times.

One night when they let him come back home to die, my mom found him crying. It was the first time she had ever seen him cry. He was curled up in his bed. He had had a nightmare. He kept saying, “He is coming, he is coming, don’t let him find me, mom. Don’t let him hurt me.” I knew that my great grandfather was not a nice man. He had gone to prison for raping a 13-year-old girl. But it hadn’t occurred to me that he might have assaulted my grandfather, or that my grandfather had ever been a helpless boy. He was so self-sufficient and he had power, not just because he was a white, male, business owner, but more over because he was good to people. And not just his friends and family, he was good to strangers and to people he didn’t like. It was hard for me to think that even the strongest, kindest man, was once a boy who was alternately loved and tortured. He begged my mom not to leave him, and she slept next to him every night afterwards until he died.

One night he asked me to read to him from a little prayer book his priest had brought him. I opened to a random page and began to read, I wanted to show him what a good reader I was, this was ridiculous, since I was 15 and an excellent reader at that point, but it seemed important, somehow. I read the first paragraph, began the second and stumbled, there in print were all the giant elephants in the room we had politely agreed for all of our lives to ignore.

“I will treat all people with the love of Christ and recognize they are equal in the eyes of the lord, including those who are different from me, men, women, children, people of all races, religions and nationalities, poor and rich . . . “

There was a time, before my grandfather got ill, that he took my sister and I to a Wendy’s for an after school treat. We were sitting at a booth near the windows, and an elderly black gentleman who was roughly the same age as my grandfather, though noticeably less mobile, walked by. He saw my grandfather sitting at the booth with us and he stopped and leaned a hand on the window and lifted an old wooden cane up with his other hand and tapped on the glass. He put his cane back down and tipped his hat, as if to say, “Hey, old-timer, we both made it, we are both still ticking.” My grandfather began fingering the edge of the table, nervously, he looked at us, watching him for a reaction, and he broke down and saluted his new friend, then under his breath he whispered, “You old black python.” The man on the other side of the window motioned towards my sister and me and mouthed the words, “Congratulations on your beautiful grandchildren.”

I stumbled again, trying to decide without him noticing which passages of the prayer were best to skip for this reading. He popped open an eye and took me in. I realized, suddenly, that he might have memorized this prayer by now and that he might know what I was doing and why. I jumped to the last paragraph and read it quickly then excused myself to the bathroom.

When I returned my grandfather was asleep. I brushed his hair and cleaned up the area around his bed. I read the cards on the flowers and the notes. “Thank you for helping me buy my house.” “Thank you for the money you lent me when my husband was ill.” They went on like that.

A nurse came in to empty the bin at the bottom of his bed. There was a tube that went into his chest to his lungs. A steady stream of blood and mucus ran from his lungs down into the bin. We are not sure how he got sick, or what exactly he suffered from. It appears to have been an unusual lung disease. There is a chance it was something he contracted a half a century before when he was in the war or that had developed over time from years of working with inks and paper fiber in his paper box factory. But, it didn’t matter. He was dying.

As I stood beside him I was aware of the greatest tragedies of my mother's life. Her mother had died when she was younger than me and my grandfather, in his bereavement abandoned his children and took refuge in the woman across the street, my step grandmother.

And yet he died with his entire family and all his friends around him. We each spent some time with him alone, a whole house full of people, then we gathered around his bed and locked arms and held each other and him, in silence. The next morning I went to school and my mom gave him the morphine that the hospice nurse had left for him. He went to sleep. She and her two sisters and her two brothers lifted his body and cleaned it and perfumed it. They dressed him in his best suit then called for an ambulance. It bothered me that I wasn’t allowed to be there when he passed, to see him simple and dead before he was embalmed, but I understand why they sent us to school there are some things that are hard enough to handle without questions.

I met so many people at his funeral. The church was packed. There were people waiting outside. A man walked into his wake, with the newspaper in hand, obituaries circled. I was standing at the entrance to the viewing room, too afraid to go inside. This old man walked up to me and said, “Is this old Billy-boy’s funeral?” I said it was and we introduced ourselves. He said, “I was a buddy of your grandfathers way back in his ball playing days. The best pitcher you ever saw. In fact, I was with him the day he met your grandmother, god rest her soul. We were two young and single bachelors and neither of us had a girlfriend. We got some pennies together and went through the phone book calling women’s names, waiting for a young voice. When it was my turn to call, I got your grandmother and I asked her to meet me on the bridge for a walk on Sunday after Mass. Well, your grandfather, that old scoundrel, got there before me, and I saw the two of them walking off together. She should have been mine.” And he went in the room.

I watched him make the rounds telling his stories about my grandfather, the closest thing to a dad I ever had, the nicest man I knew, and the most intolerant. I was overcome with a desire to have everyone know how much he meant to me and how much our relationship was frought with differing viewpoints. My grandfather never knew, for example, that the wife he stole from his buddy and his children were Natve American, he grew up in an era where the Irish were still treated like second-class citizens and given a mock holiday. My grandfather only ever met one of my friends. He liked her instantly, her name was Kim and we were co-captains of the basketball team. Kim was a very nice person, nice to a fault in high school terms. I remember my grandfather telling me after she had left that a person should hold on to a friend like her. Sage advice, that I unfortunately didn't heed. I would like to say I was bigger than this, but the girls on the team started to call us lesbians, despite the fact that Kim had a boyfriend, and, well, I I tried to distance myself from that perception mostly because I was so afraid it was true.

I saw Kim's mom a while back in the building I worked at for few months in my home town. I had returned home to regroup. My family is all pretty much gone from that place now. I drove up to the Catholic cemetary one day. I didn't have a key to the building with my grandfather's coffin is in. I looked in vain for my grandmother's grave, and my step grandmother's grave and my friends' graves and then, finally, I remembered that there were graves there, tiny graves, that belonged to the three brothers my mother had had that didn't make it past infancy. But I didn't find a one of them. In the car I was listening to a poem by Galway Kinnell:


In the Twentieth Century of my trespass on earth,
having exterminated one billion heathens,
heretics, Jews, Moslems, witches, mystical seekers,
black men, Asians, and Christian brothers,
every one of them for his own good,

a whole continent of red men for living in unnatural community
and at the same time having relations with the land,
one billion species of animals for being sub-human,
and ready to take on the bloodthirsty creatures from the other
planets,
I, Christian man, groan out this testament of my last will.

I give my blood fifty parts polystyrene,
twenty-five parts benzene, twenty-five parts good old gasoline,
to the last bomber pilot aloft, that there shall be one acre
in the dull world where the kissing flower may bloom,
which kisses you so long your bones explode under its lips.

My tongue goes to the Secretary of the Dead
to tell the corpses, "I'm sorry, fellows,
the killing was just one of those things
difficult to pre-visualize-like a cow,
say, getting hit by lightning."

My stomach, which has digested
four hundred treaties giving the Indians
eternal right to their land, I give to the Indians,
I throw in my lungs which have spent four hundred years
sucking in good faith on peace pipes.

My soul I leave to the bee
that he may sting it and die, my brain
to the fly, his back the hysterical green color of slime,
that he may suck on it and die, my flesh to the advertising man,
the anti-prostitute, who loathes human flesh for money.

I assign my crooked backbone
to the dice maker, to chop up into dice,
for casting lots as to who shall see his own blood
on his shirt front and who his brother's,
for the race isn't to the swift but to the crooked.

To the last man surviving on earth
I give my eyelids worn out by fear, to wear
in his long nights of radiation and silence,
so that his eyes can't close, for regret
is like tears seeping through closed eyelids.

I give the emptiness my hand: the pinkie picks no more noses,
slag clings to the black stick of the ring finger,
a bit of flame jets from the tip of the fuck-you finger,
the first finger accuses the heart, which has vanished,
on the thumb stump wisps of smoke ask a ride into the emptiness.

In the Twentieth Century of my nightmare
on earth, I swear on my chromium testicles
to this testament
and last will
of my iron will,
my fear of love, my itch for money, and my
madness.

And I drove home alone, happy my grandfather was equal parts scoundrel, bigot and philathropist, happy that love is as imperfect as we are, happy to be alive in all the complexities of living, and to have known a man, no better or worse than myself, but of a different time and place.

February 25, 2007

What does a lesbian* bring on the second date?

I am moving in with my girlfriend. It is incredibly soon. We have only been dating for four months. None of our friends - who mostly consist of barely-employed social justice workers, mega-conglomerate greeting card company lackeys, university administrivia and a handful of lingering students - can keep their eyebrows in the correct place when we tell them. They either scowl or go wide-eyed. It doesn't inspire confidence.

My family, shockingly, is happy about it. They met my girlfriend back in December and , more shocking news, they really like her. This has been a weird adjustment for me because it was the first time I felt like they made an effort to like something just because it was important to me. Not that they had to make the effort, The Activist is very likable.

Also, I think they have seen the toll the last few months of my life have had on me:

1. I left a person I was with for seven years and who I have since decided is a crazy psycho, but apparently only towards me. Recently, we tried 'being friends' which ended abruptly 2 hours after it started with her telling me to "get the fuck out of my car and out of my life." The word 'telling' is a nice way of saying that she screamed it so loud the diggery-do boys from the downstairs apartment came out to see what all the commotion was. What provoked her into yelling at me was the incredible sense of angry disdain that washed over her when I told her that I am happy . . . er, happier.

2. I was told I was inappropriate to work with children because of my sexual identity and gender expression (ie because I am a big faggy queer dyke role model) and I am now involved in the tricky and exhausting process of slowly getting more and more powerful people involved in a conversation about sensitivity and awareness that is really pissing off two former co-workers, heck two former friends, who thought I would just go away quietly, apparently, with the due amount of shame and fear an unnatural, immoral abortion like me should have. (I refuse to spend another day of my life internalizing other people's lack of understanding.)

3. My intermediary girlfriend asked me over to her apartment, flirtatiously. When I got there she was packing her stuff. "I am moving to Buffalo," she said, "to give it another go with my ex." When I got up to leave, she seemed shocked, "Well, we can still fool around." I said no thanks and let myself out the back door. They broke up what felt like two weeks after she left town. She called me a while later to say that her ex was extremely jealous of me (me?) and that, "She thinks I am going to pick up and leave Buffalo and move to Kansas just to be with you." Then came the awkward silence part where, I couldn't be sure, but I thought she was hoping I would say, "Oh, yes, pleeeease, come save me." (Fuck that.) I laughed, politely, "Doesn't she know I am dating someone else now."

4. I moved back to Lawrence, to do my old job again, the one I didn't find rewarding, but at least I wasn't actively persecuted. Now I am trying to recover financially and professionally from my woeful and apparently dangerous hormone-induced unprofessionalism.

5. I got an apartment in Lawrence (the only one, BTW, without mouse shit, unfinished drywall, exposed plumbing or missing floorboards) only to move in and find that the furnace wasn't up to code (this was in November, brrr) and that neither aquilla nor westar would connect my services. So, I had no heat, no hot water, no lights, no internet . . . need I say more than no internet?

6. An unnamed person in an unnamed position of power sorta offered me a sexy job and then took it off the table.

7. I was sick for two months. The cause appears to have been mold. I won't say where the mold was, for good reasons, but I was sick a lot between 9 am and 5 pm.

But none of this has really gotten to me since I started dating The Activist. She is just my buddy, my little secret source of acceptance and love. (Along with my circus dog.)

So, we are moving in together. After trolling backpage and craigslist and every other newspaper, student newspaper, etc around we found an amazing house for rent. I made that sound a lot easier than it was. In addition to all the usual hoopla surrounding renting a house, there are few awkward steps in every encounter I have with landlords. There is the moment on the phone when they ask my name and in the nicest, most innocent feminine voice possible I say, "Billy," and they say, "B-I-L-L-I-E," and I say, "No, with a Y." Then there is the moment when we actually meet and their eyes jump from the page with my name on it (with a Y) to my shaved head to my D-sized breasts to the slight bulge in my pants. And then finally there is the moment when I explain that I don't have rental references because I owned a house with my ex-partner, no my domestic ex-partner, but my name was never on the deed.

But, I made a vow to myself recently that I would never again take a place just because it came a long at the right time or because it wasn't awful or because someone I know used to live there. I wanted to be proactive. It paid off.

When we went to look at our new home I nearly giggled and skipped around like the school girl I never was. All hardwood floors - three stories of them, 2,200 square feet of them. All original, 1910s woodwork, unpainted. A courtyard. Primo location. A restaurant-style sink. A porch swing. Perfect. And half the price of the place I am renting now.

This means no more impromptu band practice beneath my feet (and ears) no more shitty neighbors period (with all their other passive-aggressive habits). No more living half the time at her house half the time at mine. No more worrying about keeping the shitty carpet in my current place immaculate. I am moving. Sianara, crappy duplex. Hello, hardwood megaplex.

Oh, wait, did I mention the catch, huhem, I mean the lease. I was following everything just fine until the last page, "House Rules." "Uh-oh," I thought. Rules are really not my forte. The first few rules were fine- no cumbistable material, yaddee yaddee, no drug use, yaddee yaddee. It was the opening sentence to the last paragraph that caught me off guard, "No illegal, vulgar, lewd or immoral activity.”

Uhm.

I sat there for a minute. I contemplated asking my new leasing office for the list of vulgar, lewd and/or immoral activities I should avoid. But, I swallowed that little part of my soul that was shouting out, "I AM TIRED OF WORRYING THAT EVERYTHING I DO IN BED IS GOING TO GET ME BEATEN UP, THROWN OUT, JUMPED, FIRED, HELD BACK, LAUGHED AT, THREATENED, HATED, LIED TO, PANDERED TO, TOKEN-IZED and BLEED DRY again."

And I signed the fucking lease. These are the breaks when you are trying to put a roof over your bed.

*Just as a point of clarification: I don't identify as a lesbian. I identify as genderqueer or, if you prefer, genderfucked. But, the joke seemed like a fitting intro into the story.

February 6, 2007

Twinged: The 2007 Gay Straight Youth Empowerment Summit

The drive to Kansas City is frustrating. It feels like losing to a farm. But that doesn't make the flash-frozen flats of nappy wheat dotted with old bare-black cotton wood trees any less beautiful. They are the forgotten surprises of loss.

My girlfriend and I had stayed up late, typing.

We drifted out of bed, early, making mandatory doggy concessions: puffs of white breath standing in the back yard. Then I cooed in a haze of hurried encouragement when the new puppy came side-trotting my way.

Then the drive. And silence. The news. A singer had died. Odd election time reparations. The low, blinding Eastern sun and smokestacks with clouds like icicles - frozen in place.

At the summit the breakfast hall was all color. Young people armed in periwinkle, robin's egg, fuscia, tangerine and sunshine mingled beneath UMKCs bending murals by Thomas Hart Benton. One young person sat stitching an ancient wintertime panacea: a rainbow scarf. He sheathed his knitting needle in his large natural hair to shake hands with a new friend then again to take a sip off his purple juice box.

The group, crazy-haired and gender-fucked moved to the next building. The first speaker was my friend Wick, who is 20 years old. When he was in high school his parents found a photograph of him kissing his boyfriend. They threw him out of his home. It was when he was living off the streets of his small hometown in Missouri at 16 with only a part-time job for money and a high school as a guarantee of shelter that he decided to brave death threats and form a Gay-Straight Alliance at his school.

"We love you," shouted a girl in a snap-pea green sweater and dark glasses. She is the leader of his fan club.

When I first met Wick he told me, laughing, that when he is walking home at night men stop their cars and call to him. They think he is a woman. More accurately, they think he is a female prostitute. And those of us who listened and know the danger in passing for the other sex shifted a little in our shoes.

"What do you do?" I finally asked.
"I keep walking." He said.

He has weighed the choices. It is safer to be a female prostitute and ignore a John than to be a gender-bending fag that has had the audacity to turn on a straight man.

After Wick's speech we broke into groups. Our mission: design the ideal high school and draw an icon of what we bring to the school to make it a better place. In my group one youth brought ears, to listen to others with, one brought arms, to hold people in, one brought a "really big fucking mouth," to speak up for the people who couldn't speak for themselves. Our school had a lot of windows and an atrium in the middle. The center-piece of the atrium was a fountain in the shape of a peace sign with a giant disco ball. We added a library organized by the LGBTqIQA (and XYZ) decimal system. We added a free expression art and music room, a theatre, a truth in history department, a free-trade coffee stand, a public bath house and a 24-hour safe house. We decided to let "old people" attend our school as well.

Our group presented first, then we sat. And group after group got up and showed their schools all resplendent in glorious peace signs, rainbows, theatre and art departments, outdoor class rooms and more peace signs. This is what the youth at the 2007 Gay Straight Youth Empowerment Summit wanted: peace, acceptance, truth and art in their educations. ("And sex," says The Activist, raising her eyebrows.)

If only we could give it to them.

January 29, 2007

Crazies in Law

-{ Just a snippet of a phone call between The Activist and her mother }-

“MOM. You got hit by your OWN car! Daddy’s insurance is going to go up if you file a claim for that. MY insurance is going to go up. Are you in the bedroom. Is there going to be an insurance claim in the bedroom. I KNOW he hit you mom, but you two are taking this to a new level. You need to take a warm bath. If you still feel icky about it tomorrow go to the doctor. We have health insurance now. Oh Hell no. For someone who doesn’t drive and doesn’t use public transportation you can’t have a doctor across town. Why you want an old doctor who is about to die. Find a nice young doctor to take care of you. You like Jewish doctors? What does that mean? Jewish and Chinese doctors? Why? Jewish doctors really care about you? What does that mean? You like to call your doctor lieutenant? Why? Because she’s tough? Was she in the military? Oh, so you think she is lesbian. What do you mean you are okay with that? Lieutenant at the free clinic. Wow. That is kind of hot. What is her name? So, she wears her military uniform while she is giving you an exam? And you say she is a black lesbian. Wow. I found my doctor. Is she cute? Mom, is she cute? I am asking you a question. She’s tough. What’s a boogabear? She wears her hair short, short as in how – is it a fade or a tiny weenie afro? A precision cut? What does that mean? Mmhmm. Okay. Did you go to the estate sale? Uhm, that’s what your husband is for. Mmhmm. That van has so many problems. I am sick of hearing about that damn van, running people over breaking down . . . I don’t want to buy a mattress over ebay. Look, ebay is not the solution to all of your problems okay. Every time I ask you about something your answer is ebay. I don’t know what my rating is. What did you get? Your happy hooker book. Okay, mom. I keep meaning to like buy A Fiddler on the Roof, seven dollars. Your shopping at the wrong places for DVDs. Actually, best buy has some good deals. I buy used DVDs. I don’t order them online. Huh. Right. The whole DVD thing is scarring me. Do you have what? Beauty and the Beast on DVD. You got the hook-up? For Beauty and the Beast? Who is this Kathy person in Chicago and why is she sending you Christmas flowers? Who is this lady? Why is she sending you all these gifts? SHE is a LESBIAN. Who is this group? Who are these people? How do you not see the difference between that and your son having online friends? He is thirteen he can make friends too. You can’t see your friends either. I don’t think you can discount his online friendships. He has their pictures and addresses too. That scares you? How do you go from that to Target has furniture for %15 off? Let’s go back to the other thing. Her daughter’s name is Izzy or the cat’s name is Izzy? Oh, the cat’s name is Zoe. You don’t even have a picture of me why do you have a picture of someone else’s daughter? I am going to send them a picture of me. They don’t know your black? You don’t want them to know that your black? It’s against the law? How can that be against the law. Mom, do you think that it matters to them that you are black? What do you mean that is like telling your sexual orientation? What website are you chatting at that you can’t tell your race or your sexual orientation? Mom, they won’t care that you are black. You’re in an online clique. (Whispered: I’m terrified.) MMM. Or your race or your sexual orientation. Okay, well, uhm, I’ll . . . Oh they said derogatory things about black people . . . what did they say? Ugly black men. Hmm. You’re weeding them out. That’s a smart rule. Never reply to a post if you don’t know what you are talking about. Yeah, I know, India has a lot of call centers. I’m not saying that you’re wrong mom. There is a lot of, you know, out sourcing right now. No mom. Go buy you a queen-sized mattress. I don’t know what to tell you but to go buy a cheapo mattress from Nebraska. And buy me a platform bed frame. Yeah, I’d like a pillow top mattress too. Well, if you see it really cheap let me know, because I could sell mine really fast since it’s the first week of school. I tried to buy a used one, they all just smelled really funny. I was like I want one that smells good. Or they live in a studio and cook a lot of curry. I don’t want a curry mattress. I don’t want people’s cheap ugly mattresses. I want my own mattress. Day beds are only twin sized. Trust me I know or I would have a day bed already. Oh, its cherry. I can’t FIT on a twin sized-bed. Have daddy take you to the estate sale. Have daddy take you. Daddy will have the money I wont. Just go. Just go. Just go. I gotta go. Because I am naked. Mom, she has seen me naked before. No my titties are covered up. Mom, you have known that my titties are pierced for a while. No, you are not going to pull them out. You want your butt pierced? Oh your belly button. You’re an inny? Yeah, most people ARE innies, mom. You have boy’s hips? What does that mean? Ew. You should have that checked out. Have you been checked for osteoporosis. Mom, you don’t have to be white and short to have osteoporosis. Get it checked out. You have been loosing your butt. So have I. What’s up with that? How do you get a bigger butt? I’m just like you, I’m a fighter, a rebel and I intend to stay that way. I’m a bitch, a good bitch."

January 22, 2007

Diggery-Don't

I have lived with a lot of different folks over the years. For a while when I was in college in South Carolina my roommates and I referred to ourselves as the four D's: The Debutant, The Dwarf, The Dirty Whore and The Dyke (that's me). We were all self-described D's except for The Debutant, who preferred "high society" or "classy" or the worst, "normal."

My second roommate ever was named Laureli and she had a 1.0 GPA, wore her ROTC fatigues 24/7 and once attacked me in her sleep while I was crawling into the upper bunk of our bed. Her boyfriend was an engineering nerd and had programmed every electronic device in the room to be operated by my graphing calculator. He did this without telling me.

I have lived with all kinds of other queer folk, drug users, exhibitionists, radicals, conservatives, lovers, partners, men, women and everything in between. But no one has ever pissed me off quite like my new downstairs neighbors.

My current troubles started one morning when I was home from work. I heard a few thuds and the crash of symbols. A tinny beat started up and bam-ta-tin-tinned it's way up to my coffee mug. Then came the electronic whom-whom-whomp of an amped bass guitar. I had been living in the apartment for about two weeks and this was the first time I had heard my downstairs neighbors jam. I was thankful that they had been mindful enough to practice during the day while I was at work because, to be blunt, the music is really bad. It is worse than modern jazz.

Do you know the scene in the first Starwars trilogy where Hans, Luke and Obi-one go down into the nightclub and some funny-looking aliens are playing weird music? Yeah, it is just like that.

I was content to let bygones be bygones, I mean I don’t want to begrudge anyone their right to artistic expression. But, eventually, they stopped limiting themselves to playing while I was at work. It is not unusual now for me to come home, make dinner, sit down to eat and then loose my appetite when I hear the drummer warm up with a few high-hats.

I HATE THIS MUSIC.

The two of them know and play ONE song together. It is a horrible song. It should be stricken from the face of the earth. Additionally, one of them owns a ukulele. Yes, a ukulele. When they have finished their little impromptu set, which always sounds just as bad as the set before, one of them picks up the damn ukulele and plays the exact same song, every time. ERRR.

After one week of being serenaded by the two of them every other evening at increasingly later hours of the night I finally resorted to something I had never imagined myself doing: pounding on the floor. After I stomped my feet hard in a ridiculous frustration dance akin to the rapid feet flurries my mom did to her Jane Fonda video when I was a kid the music fuddered, faded and paused for about 2 beats. Then without listening for a second thumping the drummer did a little stick-stick-stick to re-establish the beat and on again they fucking went. I thudded again but there was no more pausing.

Two Wednesday's ago at 11:30 PM I finally called the landlord. I had been home sick all day and had to work the next morning. They were throwing a party and playing shitty music. After talking to the landlord they turned it down, but not off.

The last straw: last Saturday I was lounging in bed in the early afternoon when I heard a low ddddddrrrrr sound. I thought to myself, "Ah, someone is running a power tool somewhere." And I envisioned my neighborhood alive with weekend home repair projects. It made me think of families and how I might have my have house and family some day.

But the ddddrrrrrr-ddddddrrrrr-dddddddddddddrrrrr-dr-dr-dr kept on. Then it got louder and more confident.

I thought to myself, "Man, that sounds like a diggery-do." Then a few notes later, "Fuck, that IS a diggery-do." Finally, outloud, "Those fuckers bought a goddamn, motherfucking diggery-do.”

While I laid in bed and listened to the diggery-do I was overcome with the urge to cut a hole in the floor of my apartment and take a shit down into their apartment. I fantasized my poop-bomb landing on their bong, or smashing into a high-hat and dripping down the side of the amp. I thought of how fun it would be to shit on their stuff every time they left the house, then close the little hole back up so that no one would really know where the shit had come from.

This maybe the grossest thing I have ever fantasized doing to someone. But, I figure, they have claimed their right to shit music so, I am claiming my right to shit fantasies.

January 21, 2007

Our Second Snow

My one arm flung off the bed. She kissed it gently, doe-eyed, ears back, almost apologetic asking me gently to wake up. I cocked one eye loaded with blur and shot her a look of dazed compassion.

This morning we awoke to a warm blanket of snow. After rolling over to find proof in the form of flake-laden branches just inches from my new bedroom window. Can I tell you I have always been overcome by the contrast of dark branches and white snow? I jettisoned years of reason and felt myself laying in my childhood bed in the north country where it is winter half the year long, fall for three glorious weeks and mud and mosquitoes the rest of the time. I made tunnels in that snow that sometimes came up to my chest. I n my sleepy pubescent joy I wrapped my arms around my puppy’s neck and stepped into my shoes while wiping sleep from my eyes and cooing “outside, outside, oh Pippa, wait until you see what is outside.”

On the other side of my front door the world was brighter and quieter. I watched her confused frame navigate feet sinking into snow, snow, snow. Running, kicking, biting snow. I stood and watched her until it was clear it didn’t matter that I was there, then I headed back upstairs to make a warm drink.

From the window I watched her pounce and claw and circle and skid. Everything is new to her. Everything is exciting. I longed suddenly for a family and a child, then three children.

Life is fleeting. It is a fleeting collection of more fleeting moments. It is a miracle to share them. There is no greater meaning than this: to stand at the back window with your lover, caretaker, partner watching the creatures you care for experience the world as if it was all brand new, as if it had always been here.

I dreamed up a massive pile of fluffy waffles with hot drizzling fruit and powdered sugar. My family and I could be eating big Belgium waffles while sipping hot cocoa and planning our sledding exploits and smiling, laughing and touching before throwing on thick layers to protect us from the cold, wet nature of fun.

But no, I stood at the window alone. I turned the coffee off and made plans for the day as I watched my puppy play. Buy a shovel. Shovel driveway. Go to gym. Lift weights. Go to store. Buy blender. Make a protein fruit shake. Take shower. Work. Return movies. Feed dog. Wash car. Scrub tub. Read book. Text message girlfriend. Fall asleep watching new movie rentals. Wake up, repeat.

January 20, 2007

my little BIG TIME

Hey y'll,

My little blog has been discovered thanks to a real nice gal in Lawrence who recomended it to the folks who run Lawrence.com.

I am now publishing there under the blog title "my punk heart."

Check it out.

The Luckiest Fag on the Face of the Earth

I rented the Electric Edwardians from Liberty Hall last night. It is fabulous. The DVD is a series of moving images recorded by Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon of normal folks in Edwardian England going about their Edwardian lives.

I was so excited that I sent a message off to The Activist (my girlfriend).

Me: You have got to see this movie.
Her: Sounds cool.
Me: Edwardians are amazing.
Her: Yes, they have amazing corsetry.
Me: I can imagine based on the petticoats.
Her: Yeah, I have been thinking of getting back into corsetry. Just need to find the time.

It was then that I realized that I might possibly be the luckiest fag on the face of the earth. I mean, really, who is into Edwardian Corsetry? It is so great it makes my toes tingle. I love her.

January 12, 2007

Checking Out

On my bi-weekly excursion to the local discount grocery wharehouse I overheard the following exchange while sacking my own food:

Her: So then she said to him, "YOU can cook?!"
Him: Wow.
Her: Yeah, like, hello. Squirrel, he can cook squirrel. That didn't matter, just that he can cook.

I couldn't help but look up from my bagging. They were a new couple both in their late forties or early fifties. They handn't worked out the little couple things like who pays for the groceries, who bags, who pushes the cart, who carries the sacks to the car. They were both wearing blue jeans and they smiled at each other a whole lot.

I realized they were at that place in a young romance when ridiculous stories about your lover's family are still fun because, well, it isn't YOUR family, yet. It is incredibly liberating, actually, to see your squirrel-cooking uncle through the stranger in your bedroom's smile.

As I left the store behind them they argued over the sack and finally settled on carrying it together, each grabbing a side, the way two people will walk with their child and swing him forwards off his feet.

January 7, 2007

Funny Little Whore


Sonja (1928) by Christian Schad


There are statistics. They tell us things about . . . the numbers of casualties in war, the amount of time the average person spends standing in front of the average painting in the average museum, the number of slaves that fit on a triangular trade ship. Statistics. They provide some type of comfort. But they tell us nothing about the way any of these things feel or what they mean. We invent that part or intuit it because we are rarely told.

I am not an expert in the subject area I am about to embark upon. It is weird that I am not an expert because I have been hearing about it my entire life. I don't feel as though I know many of the facts. It would be comfortable to frame my suppositions in numbers and rely on mathmatics as if 'math' was the same thing as 'truth,' but I am going to do something much more radical than that. I am going to tell a story about the world through art and direct observation.

Before I get started I need to provide some context to the reader. I am a United States citizen writing in the year 2007. I am 27 years of age. I am queer.

Recently my lover and I went to a show at the Metropolitain Museum of Art entitled "Glitter and Doom: German Portraits From the 1920s." The show features t ten Weimar German artists doing portrait work between the world wars. I had studied the artist that recieved the bulk of the focus at the show, Otto Dix, in school. Without digging out my notebooks for specifics, I remember feeling indifferent towards his work and, if forced to choose, I guess I would say I had felt more positively than negatively about it.

I had a professor in art school who tried to make the argument once that Diane Arbus' photographs were "funny." I found it infuriating that he read her work as humorous. My teacher said she was, "allowing us to laugh at all the freaks of nature." I felt very differently. I think Diane Arbus purposely sought out the biggest freaks she could find, the most stereotypically marginalized individuals to show us their humanity: the old, overweight drag queen with a bored little dog nestled in the crook of her elbow, the porn star overwhelmed by the graphic prints in her ultra-modern apartment, the beautiful woman in a bikini top with the marks from her outdoor chair pressed into the flesh of her back.

At any rate, I think my teacher was much more accurately describing the work of Otto Dix. His work is all bored contempt, disgust, bigotry and hatred. The paintings are described as veristic, but really they go beyond verism into chariacature. And they are mean chariacatures. As we walked from room to room I became more and more disgusted with Otto Dix. Maxine Gerber was shown as an old snobbish ghost, black jazz musician were painted with pure black pigment and their features were distorted until they looked subhuman.

Finally my girlfriend, The Activist, and I stopped in front of a recently rediscovered Dix painting, Woman with a Mink (1920).


Woman with Mink (1920) by Otto Dix


I grunted. The Activist grunted back. She said, "I am really sick of this Dix shit." I said, "Me too. His work lacks all compassion."

Just then I heard a squeal over my shoulder, "OOOOhhh, I LIKE that one." A thirty-something, well-to-do former sorrority sister came breezing by us, smelling like *rich people and dripping in well weighted, yet understated fabrics (supple leather, natural hemp, linen, etc). "Just look at the funny little whore. Hahaha. This makes me laugh."

In shock I reached for my notebook.

The picture shows, cruelly, a woman who has been ravaged by poverty, hunger, brutality and unsafe sex. It is mean. It is accusatory. It is savage. I was struck by how incredibly dumb this woman was and how it was quite likely that she offended people all day long, taxi drivers, door men, checkout clerks. It was hard to stand there and have a person with money, power and good looks laugh cooly at an image of a person who had nothing but a vagina to get her through the world.

I have a number of friends who have been involved in the sex industry to one degree or another. Most of them are women. Most of them did sex work because they were poor. None of them were professional prostitutes. But for all of them, it seems like it started as the most casual of things. One friend was dating a drug dealer, she would give him head in exchange for coke. One friend would blow her ex for rent and grocery money. To me these relationships don't seem any different than marriage with the exception that the bartering is much more open and honest and each person has the option of looking elsewhere.

I could tell, though, that the woman with the fabric didn't know too many "whores." She probably thinks all the sex she had with frat boys in college was concesual. She probably doesn't think that her sexual prowess or lack there of was a bartering point in her marrying rich. She may even feel a little trampy, now, when she has sex without the express purpose of having children. And that little kinkiness, sex for sex sake, really turns her into a wild woman. She sometimes wears red silk underwear and waits for her husband at the door in a little black robe. When he arives she pushes the leather briefcase from his hand and puts her arms inside of his full-length double-breasted winter coat. He smells the $300 perfume he bought her. He looks at her $10,000 face, bought from the best plastics man on Manhatten. He touches her $400 haircut. She grabs him by his strong, round back muscles bought by a $1000 gym membership and 400 hours of hard labor. He loosens his $250 necktie. She scratches him with her $150 manicure and presses her $8000 breasts against his manly pink designer $200 shirt. They move to the bedroom, she is wild with excitement. Her eyes flash. He unzips his gold-plated fly and unleashes his priceless cock. She get on all fours on their $200 sheets. She is moaning and clutching the Egyptian sateen. He pushes into her, "You like that, whore? You want me to give it to you?" She squeezes her eyes shut in anticipation, "Oh, yes, daddy, give it to me hard."

Okay, maybe there is some truth in the numbers.

We were tired when we left the museum. It was New Years Eve. We had walked there 25 blocks from our hotel because no trains were running uptown on the East side of Manhatten. We walked to the nearest downtown train and stuffed ourselves, literally into the car with all the folks looking for a wild time.

As we sat and listened to some opinionated prick go on about all the different express/local train combinations that might be better or faster than tthe one we were on I started to think about Weimar Germany. I wonder if Hitler, too, had been disgusted by Otto Dix. I had heard he was a self-proclaimed artist and that he wanted to paint the world with beautiful people. I wondered if it might have been German Verism that threw him over the edge.

Later, in our hotel room The Activist and I had a bitch-slap fight. It was the kind of fight you have with your siblings when you are home alone. I think she won, as evidenced by the fact that I went for the face first and by the large bruise I had for a week in the place on my left leg where she managed to land 4 or 5 blows in a row because I was giggling too hard to pdefend myself. Afterwards we snuggled.

I would never call her a whore. Not even in play. I just like her too much. It doesn't turn me on to degrade her. Don't get me wrong, I will tie her up and paddle her, or tickle her with feathers on a waterbed or do whatever she asks me to do, but I don't want to hurt her. I don't want to hurt anyone.

Anyway, there was an artist in the show that I liked a lot. His name is Christian Schad. His paintings were of quiet, pained and ghostly people. They were feminist in their emotional quality. They showed women who were liberated not so much through will as necessity. Afterall, we all simply need freedom. We need justice. They aren't ideals, they simply are.

* My sister bought me an expensive face cream for the holidays. When she went to cash out it was quite a bit more expensive than she realized, but she felt pressured into buying it. I actually love it a lot. It smells divine, or as I have taken to saying, "It smells like rich people."