Master of the Rant, by Pat Gourley

Dear fellow Queer
writers:
Comments from Larry
Kramer on discrimination from the straight world he adamantly believes exists
towards gay writers.
© 23 Oct 2015
About
the Author 
I was born in La Porte Indiana in 1949, raised on a farm and schooled
by Holy Cross nuns. The bulk of my adult life, some 40 plus years, was spent in
Denver, Colorado as a nurse, gardener and gay/AIDS activist. I have currently returned to Denver after an
extended sabbatical in San Francisco, California.

I Hate My Hair, by Nicholas

          The famous
essayist Nora Ephron once wrote a piece in which she denounced her neck. She
said simply that she did not like her neck. It was scrawny and too long and had
to be hidden with scarves and turtleneck sweaters. That’s how I feel about
hair. I don’t like my hair and I never have. It’s fine, soft, and thin and
getting thinner. It never was a color I liked—and gray did not improve over the
former brown. It never grew out into any shape or style that was appealing. It
grew long but not curly. It grew longer still but never full. It just sort of hung
there.
          The standard
for beautiful hair, for me, is Danielle Grant, the woman who does the weather
on Channel 9. I watch the weather just to watch her hair. Her rich brown tresses
hang long over her shoulders in a lustrous waterfall of hair. Her hair shines
with a deep luster. I don’t care if it rains or snows or turns sunny, her hair
is a beauty to behold.
          Hair has many
functions, none of them really all that important. It can be a thing of natural
beauty, a fashion statement, a political statement, a symbol and, of course, it
was even a musical. In the 1960s, we let our hair grow long and shaggy to show
our disdain for an oppressive establishment and our attachment to a new culture
of freedom that did not include barbershops. We let our “freak flag” fly, as
one song put it.
          In the 1970s,
we returned to those few barbershops that survived the ‘60s, and got it cut
short—gay short—because we didn’t want to be seen as some kind of hippie longhair
redneck. Hair styles came full circle, I guess. What was once a protest of the
establishment, became the establishment. Long hair meant you were a right wing
crazy conservative. Short hair was the rebellion.
          Of course, we
didn’t just go to barbershops. We went to stylists and had our hair styled. And
paid a lot more for that styling. When I was first coming out I even had my
hair permed once. I wanted curls and decided to torture my hair into curls even
if I had to wear a toxic waste dump on my head. It didn’t work. I got curls,
alright, but I looked like I had a nice dust mop on top of my head. I looked
like Woody Allen on a bad day. I realized that my hair just was not made for
fashion.
          Now I just get
it mowed now and then, about once a month. It’s like the lawn. Doesn’t really
do anything or contribute anything but looks better if it’s kept under control.
The problem is that there is too much of it where I don’t need it, like ears
and nose, and not enough where I do want it. I go to the cheapest barber I know
and for $10 get whatever excess is there clipped to a reasonable shortness. I
like my hair best when I don’t have to think about it.
          It would be
nice to keep up with fashion, but I’ve given up. I would love to die it blue or
purple, colors I really like in other people’s hair. But on me, it would just
look silly. Beyond the basic requirement of workable hair, I don’t have that
fashion persona to pull it off. You know how some people can walk down a street
like they’re walking across a stage. I’m just trying to get a bus home before
somebody stops and says, “God, what did you do to your hair?”
© 15 Jan
2015
 
About the Author 
Nicholas grew up in Cleveland,
then grew up in San Francisco, and is now growing up in Denver. He retired from
work with non-profits in 2009 and now bicycles, gardens, cooks, does yoga,
writes stories, and loves to go out for coffee.

Time, by Lewis

Is there any cliché about
time that has yet gone unwritten or unspoken? 
I don’t feel comfortable making generalizations about the subject of
time.  I can only speak my own truths
about time, if I can figure out what they are.
People spend a lot of
money trying to mitigate the effects of time on their bodies.  They are usually rich, perhaps even as rich
as their plastic surgeons.  I don’t know
what a facelift costs.  I’m sure that it
depends upon a number of factors—the number of wrinkles per square inch of skin,
the number of square inches of skin per linear inch of one’s face, the elapsed
time since the previous facelift, the degree of satisfaction from the previous
facelift, the amount of time spent in the sun showing off one’s facelift, and
the percentage of body fat.
Also, I’m sure that, once
one has had a facelift, there is tremendous pressure to make some adjustments
to the birth date that appears on various personal documents.  It must be extremely embarrassing to be pulled
over for a traffic violation only to have the officer look at you, then your
driver’s license, and ask you step out of the car, put your hands on the roof,
and receive a pat down on suspicion of having a stolen ID.
What must a facelift do
to one’s relationship with a twin who cannot afford to follow suit?  Would they then introduce him or her as a
parent or much older sibling?  And what
of the spouse who now must endure the clucks and chuckles from those who assume
that he or she has “robbed the cradle”?  Upon death—still, I’m afraid an
inevitability—would it not feel unnatural to gaze upon the 90-year-old corpse
with skin stretched drum-tight across its chops and exclaim, “Oh, how natural
he/she looks?”  And, of course, the worst
message such shenanigans sends is that all the rest of us, the ones who choose
to age naturally, are growing uglier by the day. 
But I’m not buying
it.  I think of aging skin as a beauty
mark.  Nobody who’s into classic cars
would think of putting 2013 parts on a 1957 Chevrolet.  Sure, we might hammer out the dents,
straighten out the frame, fix the rust, replace the worn-out springs, and spray
a new coat of paint on her, but we would never try to make her look like this
year’s model.  I’m a 1946 model of a
white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant gay male who prefers to nuzzle the bumpers of
others like me and who doesn’t give a fig for brand-new sporty SUV’s with
programmable liftgates, reverse-view cameras, and touch screens.  I’ve been around the block with beloved
partners of both sexes, fathered two children, had a 30-year career that
provided a comfortable life, and I want to look the part.  I don’t want to pose for “before” and “after”
pictures where the “before” photo looks like an old picture of me after being
sucker punched in the mouth.  George
Bernard Shaw is quoted as saying, “Youth is wasted on the young.”  Yeah, and today youthfulness is wasted on the
old.
But the bitter old men of
Congress have found a way to exact their revenge.  They have saddled our youth with endless wars
that ravage their bodies in horrible ways but mollify themselves by providing
medical care that allows them to survive to live a full life in a condition
that no octogenarian would envy.  We load
the young up with student loan debt that makes the home loan of my generation
seem like chump change.  We trap them in
$9 an hour jobs with no hope of advancement so that they are actually making
less money at 35 than they were at 25. 
And, worst of all, we are handing off to them a world who atmosphere has
been poisoned to the point that their children almost surely will face a
lifetime of struggle for ever-dwindling resources.  We have made sure that, for them, growing old
is the most coveted luxury of all.
For those of us who have
lived free of ecological and demographic constraints on how we live our
lives—how many children we have; how big a house we build or live in; how many
vacation trips we take to how distant a destination; how we get to work, to
church, or the store; how we feel entitled to anything we can afford—it is time
to reimagine our lives in a new way. 
What truly makes us happy?  Where
does happiness happen?  What kind of
happiness do we want for those who come after? 
What is true?  How much time is
left before it’s too late?  We are threatened
not by growing old but by growing apart from what we know in our hearts is true
and that time is not on the side of the young and we are responsible.
© 19 May 2013 
About
the Author
 
  
I came to the beautiful state
of Colorado out of my native Kansas by way of Michigan, the state where I
married and I came to the beautiful state of Colorado out of my native Kansas
by way of Michigan, the state where I married and had two children while working
as an engineer for the Ford Motor Company. I was married to a wonderful woman
for 26 happy years and suddenly realized that life was passing me by. I figured
that I should make a change, as our offspring were basically on their own and I
wasn’t getting any younger. Luckily, a very attractive and personable man just
happened to be crossing my path at that time, so the change-over was both
fortuitous and smooth.
Soon after, I retired and we
moved to Denver, my husband’s home town. He passed away after 13 blissful years
together in October of 2012. I am left to find a new path to fulfillment. One
possibility is through writing. Thank goodness, the SAGE Creative Writing Group
was there to light the way.

Scars, by Gillian

We all have them. Don’t
try to tell me you don’t. Nobody gets to our age without them.
The first one I remember
acquiring came along when I was seven or eight. Mum and Dad and I were
wandering through the woods picking blackberries when a sharp, jagged, end of a
broken-off small branch scraped a gash in my thigh. These days I’m sure it
would be off to the ER for stitches, with perhaps a butterfly bandage to keep
it together on the way, but back then we were expected to suck it up and
soldier on; the result being a scar wider than necessary and very long-lasting.
I still have it.
Roughly forty years later
I needed a butterfly bandage again when I fell on sharp rock edges while
backpacking in the Shoshone Wilderness Area, miles from anywhere. But this time
I was carefully tended to by my beautiful Betsy, who had the foresight to carry
butterfly bandages in her pack.
Back again in the old
days, in college, I slipped at the top of some icy steps and fell, with my knee
doubled under me, onto the metal blade of a boot scraper. Now that one did
require stitches. But that was all it got. These days we’d be given all kinds
of physical therapy; exercises to help it heal as efficiently as possible, but
in 1959 I was on my own. It hurt like Hell to bend it, so a couple of days
later, on a bus, I stretched my leg out beneath the seat in front of me. The
bus got in an accident, the seat above my leg came down on it and hyperextended
my knee. That hurt like Hell. A week later, with my knee the size of a
football, I went off for a long-planned week’s hiking trip with a classmate.
Well, I was madly in unacknowledged love with the woman! What’s a girl to do?
Not surprisingly, I have had a lot of trouble with that knee over the years but
I’ve worked hard at keeping it in working condition, mainly through water
aerobics. It remains functional, and actually gives me less pain than it did
twenty years ago, though I’m not off on any more backpacking or even hiking
trips.
A few years back I broke
my ankle – just a simple break. It healed perfectly, leaving no scars. Then, as
some of you might recall, I broke my wrist a couple of years ago. That was a
compound fracture, requiring surgery, nuts and bolts, and a long scar which has
now basically disappeared. My ankle and wrist both healed quickly, fully
functioning in record time. That, of course, in addition to skillful surgeons,
is because I diligently did every therapeutic exercise I was given, painful
though they often were. I would like to think that I have become a little less dumb
in dealing with injuries, over the years, but much of that is because
healthcare professionals know so much more these days. Our job is just to
follow their excellent advice.
Which, it seems to me, is
much the same for our inner, psychological, scars as for our outer, physical,
injuries.
As a child, and even as a
student, I had no more idea how to deal with my inner than my outer pains.
Neither, come to that, did my parents. All of us colluded in some strange way
to pretend I had no injuries, inside or out. Just get on with life, denying the
pain. I’ve written often enough about my childhood angst so I’m not going to
repeat it, but I rode roughshod over it just as I did my mashed knee, making
both worse while denying there was a problem. Over the years, I have paid
heavily enough for that. But, as I gained knowledge and sought expert advise to
try to make my knee more functional and less painful, so I did with my inner
dysfunctions. Endless physical therapy, endless psychotherapy. Both mostly of
the self-help variety, but they worked. The trouble is, it’s so much harder to
go back; to try to fix those old inner and outer scars years later. Now, I try
to deal with both immediately. Keep exercising that wrist, don’t let that scar
tissue form or I’ll be sorry. Take those emotions out and look at them right
now. Work them over. I don’t want that psychological scar tissue building up,
either.
I don’t expect to stop
receiving wounds, and so the scars that mark them, either physical or
emotional. But as I age, perhaps becoming increasingly vulnerable to physical
scarring, I hope to balance it with a healthy decrease in psychological
scarring. Due largely to my attempts to follow the spiritual path, and in no
small part to this group where I find healing by writing out and sharing my
problems, my wounds are less deep, less painful, and heal more readily. Little
scar tissue has the chance to form. Even those big bad deep wounds don’t get
reopened as once they did. Those are the ones that are there because I’m a woman.
Because I am gay. I am happy about both, but being female or being GLB or T
leaves you constantly open to painful slashes of hate-filled sabers. Oh they
are not usually directed at me, personally, but I feel the stab of the knife of
every woman murdered because she wants an education, or refuses to hide away
her body, and of every gay man murdered in Uganda or left to die in Wyoming.
It’s certainly not that I find any of those horrors less painful, nor, alas,
less frequent. I simply, for the most part, recognize the pain sooner, deal
with it better, avoid reopening those old wounds.
Yet I am happy to have
scars. How can you live any kind of eventful, meaningful, life, and not have
them? We are battle-scarred warriors who, having fought the good fight, did not
come out unscathed. As Kahlil Gibran puts it,
“Out of
suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are
seared with scars.”
© 30 June 2015 
About the Author 

I
was born and raised in England. After graduation from college there, I moved to
the U.S. and, having discovered Colorado, never left. I have lived in the
Denver-Boulder area since 1965, working for 30 years at IBM. I married, raised
four stepchildren, then got divorced after finally, in my forties, accepting
myself as a lesbian. I have been with
my wonderful partner Betsy for thirty years. We have been married since 2013.

Close, but No Cigar, by Gail Klock

Driving home from Pueblo, after my fifty-year reunion for
South High School I was feeling a little melancholy. I was pondering the source
of these feelings; was it the fact that 50 years had passed so quickly and only
a fraction of those years remain to be enjoyed, was it the fact I had lost
touch with so many people who had once been an enjoyable part of my K-12
experience, or was it the hotel room I had stayed in because my parents were no
longer alive? Certainly these were all a part of the melancholy, but not the
primary source. Throughout the events, hovering in the background was a growing
awareness of the different opportunities which the boys and girls had
experienced. All of these attributable differences were driven by gender, that
of the privilege of being male.
The area which was foremost in my mind was the provision of
athletics for the boys- football, basketball, wrestling, baseball, track, golf,
tennis, and cross country, and no sports for the girls… at the time it was
against state law for girls to compete against one another at the high school
level, a fact I became aware of when the principal called me into his office on
a Monday morning and threatened to expel me if I ever played in another
basketball game against girls from another school. The game he was referencing
was a pick-up game against girls from the local Catholic high school in which
there were not even any officials.
I first started thinking about the male/female high school
opportunities when the introduction of former teachers was made. Out of the
eleven who were in attendance four of them were coaches, definitely a disproportional
number to the 59 teachers whom had been on the faculty.  I hypothesize this disproportionate number was
due to the fact coaches work more closely with athletes than teachers do
students, thus forming a stronger and longer lasting bond. This was quite
evident as Tom Mauro, my former classmate, carried out the introductions. His
continuing respect and connection with his former coaches was quite evident and
the introductory comments regarding the other teachers did not reflect this
same elevated note of respect. Before any one jumps to any erroneous
conclusions I must quickly interject that Tom was not a “dumb jock” whom of
course would have been closer to his coaches- Tom graduated from Colorado
School of Mines and was very successful in his career. In addition, he is a
very accomplished pianist.
As I continued to process my observations and feelings as the
reunion continued it occurred to me as I watched my former classmates interact
that sports had provided more than just the opportunity for fitness. The boys
had deep bonds with one another that crossed the boundaries of cliques;
placement in college prep classes, business classes, or technical and trade
classes. The girls didn’t have this avenue which provided for the intersecting
of lives with other girls. Popularity, or the lack there of, was the main
determiner of how friendships were established. I realized as I talked to my
classmates that our high school years would have been different for the girls
if there had been sports for us in which to compete. We had a very athletic
group of girls- girls from all the different education tracks and cliques. A
couple of girls “stories” supported my feelings about the missed opportunity of
competing in sports. Linda a friend from elementary school was an incredible
runner. She could beat all of us, boys and girls alike in both running and long
jumping. I never knew until I talked to her at the reunion that she would have
loved to have been an athlete. As I shared my memories of her abilities and the
grace and skill with which she ran tears came to her eyes and she remarked that
I had just made her day. I never would have guessed this desire of hers, she
was a very bright and pretty girl whom had been part of the popular crowd.  I also didn’t know she had always hidden a
vision problem she had inherited which was so bad she was given a scholarship
her final year of college from the National Federation of the Blind. She could
only play ball sports which used a large ball like the one used in kickball,
but man oh man she would have been a star on a track team had there been one
and her self-described greatest embarrassment through all her young years would
have been eased. Arlene, our head cheerleader stated in response to “What would
you have done differently in high school?’ 
I would have participated on sports teams instead of cheerleading and
would have sought out friends from a variety of groups.
In addition, two of my close friends, whom were both great
athletes, did not come to the reunion. The first Rosalyn told the organizing
committee she hadn’t enjoyed high school so why would she come to a reunion.
Most of my classmates were stunned by this statement as Rosalyn had been a
member of student counsel, dated one of the football players, and gone on to
graduate from Colorado School of Mines- one of seven girls in attendance there
at the time. I had known Rosie throughout school and played with her many times
in pickup basketball and football games with other girls (the boys used to come
watch us play football as they couldn’t believe we would play tackle without
any pads or helmets, which we did because we loved the activity and we had no equipment
available to us). My other friend Vickie, whom I was able to have lunch with,
told me she didn’t want to go because she had always struggled with school and
had not been popular. She added there had only been about six kids she had
trusted in high school. I know in the depths of my heart both of these friends
would have felt more connected with their high school experiences and enjoyed
it more if they had had the opportunity to compete in sports.
When I thanked my former classmate Mike for supporting me as
an athlete while in high school, a unique position for my male classmates, he
replied, “Heck you could have kicked any of our butts, I really admired your
ability.” It was nice to hear this compliment.  I along with many of my female friends would
have benefited greatly had we heard fans cheering for us as we had cheered for
our male counterparts.
Beyond the camaraderie, fitness, and support from classmates
and parents some of the boys were able to attend college on athletic
scholarships. Of course during the time I was in college no similar
scholarships were available for girls, but I am thankful I did get to experience
the other benefits which sports can offer. However, I still need to have a
conversation with the folks up at Colorado State University who still don’t recognize
the contribution women athletes made to the college from the time women were
allowed to compete against other colleges until the inception of Title IX –
approximately a 15-year period of time. Had it not been for Title IX which in
part said, “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be
excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance”,
women athletes, (not the intended primary recipients of this federal mandate)
would still be treated unfairly by institutions of higher learning and high
schools. One only look at the current lawsuit brought by a University of Denver
female law school professor to see the evidence of continued discrimination
based on gender.  We are getting closer
to closing the gender gap- but at this point it is still status quo- close, but
no cigar.
© 28 Sep 2015 
About the Author 
 I grew up in Pueblo, CO with my two brothers and parents.
Upon completion of high school I attended Colorado State University majoring in
Physical Education. My first teaching job was at a high school in Madison,
Wisconsin. After three years of teaching I moved to North Carolina to attend
graduate school at UNC-Greensboro. After obtaining my MSPE I coached
basketball, volleyball, and softball at the college level starting with Wake
Forest University and moving on to Springfield College, Brown University, and
Colorado School of Mines.
While coaching at Mines my long term partner and I had two
daughters through artificial insemination. Due to the time away from home
required by coaching I resigned from this position and got my elementary education
certification. I taught in the gifted/talented program in Jefferson County
Schools for ten years. As a retiree I enjoy helping take care of my
granddaughter, playing senior basketball, writing/listening to stories in the
storytelling group, gardening, reading, and attending OLOC and other GLBT
organizations.
As a retiree I enjoy helping take care of my granddaughter,
playing senior basketball, writing/listening to stories in the storytelling
group, gardening, reading, and attending OLOC and other GLBT organizations.

My First Gay Experience, by Carol White

When I was in the 7th grade I fell in love with Winifred
Watkins.  Her parents were the choir
director and organist at our First Methodist Church.  I’m not sure what it was about her, but my
love lasted for three years.  I did not
really understand it, and I never did anything about it, like hold her hand or
kiss her or tell her how I felt.  But I
thought about her all the time and was with her every time I got the chance and
sang in all the choirs at church just to be close to her and maybe touch her accidentally
on purpose.
Starting in the 10th grade I fell in love with Roberta
Bromley, better known as “Bert.”  Bert
became my best friend.  She was
beautiful, and she could play the piano and sing like an angel.  Once again, I never told her how I felt.  I simply followed her around like a puppy and
did anything I could to be in the same room with her or sit by her at an
assembly.  She loved boys and we double
dated several times.  I remember pining
away at night at home wanting to touch her and kiss her and hold her.  Alas, it was not to happen.  But I had the distinct knowledge that if one
girl could marry another girl, I would marry Bert in a minute.  I never DREAMED of a future Supreme Court
decision.  In fact, Bert and I went off
to separate colleges.  She married her
boyfriend within a couple of years, had a couple of children, and died of
cancer all within a relatively short period of time.  I did not even go to her funeral.
At SMU I had several crushes on a few women, and yet again, I
did not dare let anyone know.  I felt as
though I could not share my feelings with anyone, especially since I was
majoring in Sacred Music and wanted to work in a church as a Minister of
Music.  By this time I had heard the
words homosexual and queer, but I was still in denial about my own orientation
and continued dating boys without much fun or interest. 
Finally, during my second year of graduate school, I was
living in an apartment with three other students, and one of my sorority
sisters spent the night with me at our apartment when my roommate was out of
town.  Her name was JoNell Bryant, and we
called her “Jo.”  That night, when
everyone was in bed getting ready to go to sleep, Jo came over to my single bed
and got in it with me.  Ten years after
my first desire, when I was 22, Jo kissed me and I kissed her back. 
Fireworks went off.  It
was absolutely everything I had hoped and dreamed of for ten years.  We were together all night in that little
bed, and we had to hide it from everyone the next morning and pretend that it
didn’t happen.  We parted that day and
went to our separate classes and I was scared to death of these feelings,
thinking that I should be horrified of my actions, but I walked on air all day
and all I wanted was more.  It was
unbelievable to me. 
As it turned out, Jo wanted more too.  She lived with her parents in a little town
outside of Dallas, and for that whole school year, I would often go out to her
house and spend the night with her as often as possible, maybe once a
week.  We would sleep in the same bed in
her room and we kept all of our feelings of love and attraction from her
parents and everyone else.
As soon as I finished graduate school I went on a trip to
Mexico with three other friends.  In the
middle of the trip, I received word from Jo that she was leaving in two days to
go to Hawaii and marry a man that she had been engaged to who was stationed
there in the Navy.  So I left my other
friends behind in Mexico City and flew back to Dallas and had one more night
with Jo before she left for Hawaii. 
That summer I was totally heartbroken.  I remember sitting at home with my parents in
Louisiana and playing a record over and over again and crying a lot.  Jo and I exchanged love letters, and her
mother found my letters and decreed that she could never write to me or see me
again. 
My father actually took me to Houston to apply for a church
job, and after I got the job I started seeing a therapist to try to be cured of
my homosexuality.  He was wonderful and
helped me to accept myself for who I am. 
I went through a terrible time when I lost that job after four years
because of my homosexuality, but I got through it, and as they say, “The rest
is history.” 
© 20 July 2015 
About
the Author
 

I was born in Louisiana in
1939, went to Southern Methodist University in Dallas from 1957 through 1963,
with majors in sacred music and choral conducting, was a minister of music for
a large Methodist church in Houston for four years, and was fired for being gay
in 1967.  After five years of searching,
I settled in Denver and spent 30 years here as a freelance court reporter.  From 1980 forward I have been involved with
PFLAG Denver, and started and conducted four GLBT choruses:  the PFLAG Festival Chorus, the Denver Women’s
Chorus, the Celebration ’90 Festival Chorus for the Gay Games in Vancouver, and
Harmony.  I am enjoying my 11-year
retirement with my life partner of 32 years, Judith Nelson, riding our bikes, going
to concerts, and writing stories for the great SAGE group.

Life Is Like Green Chili, Spicy but Delicious, by Carlos

La Vida Es Como El Chile Verde, Picante
Pero Sabroso
Life
is Like Green Chili, Spicy but Delicious

Me puede decir a que hora abren an
santuario?
I direct the question to an old man, wrinkles etched onto his
affable face. He sits in the church courtyard quietly taking in the rays of the
New Mexico summer morning like a raven perusing the world from afar. He looks
up at me and replies, but I do not completely understand because the Spanish he
uses resides in labyrinthine causeways of the past. I realize that though we are
both conversing in the same mother tongue, the dynamics of phraseology,
tonality and rhythm are traversed by centuries of experiences, of history,
making communication between us difficult. My Spanish is the language of
central Mexico, where the vowels lose strength while consonants are fully
pronounced and the sing-song tonality of indigenous peoples is deemphasized. His
is the language of our ancestors, forced upon the natives by well-intentioned
but often brutal Old World friars; it is a marriage of Castilian conquistadores and Nahuatl poets, sequestered but nurtured over the centuries behind
adobe walls and under Southwestern skies. I thank him for his kind, albeit
incomprehensible, response, concluding that I am a time traveler caught up in
the paradox of a fourth-dimensional arena. Rather than fleeing, as is my nature
whenever disoriented by exotic, extrinsic ways, I prepare to drink from the
chalice blessing me with an opportunity for new sensory delight. Little do I
realize that as I prepare to unhinge myself from my bungee-cord concept of
reality, I will be catapulted toward dormant realities. I continue on the high
road from Santa Fe to Taos, a road that unlike the modern fast-paced interstate
of the low road, is fraught with footsteps, wailings, ghosts of the past. Picaresque
images materialize, worlds where straw is gold, where faith is genuine, where
life and death are part of the bargain. And unlike mirages in the summer sun,
these images remain as substantial as Paleolithic hand stencils.
Over
the decades, my faith in organized religiosity has been shaken by the doxology
of paint-by-the-numbers philosophies. I weep for conflicted gay folk who
ultimately succeed in sacrificing themselves because of on-going wars between
ingrained beliefs and self. I cringe at endemic violence and bigotry
perpetrated in the name of God, at the narcissism of religious orthodoxy. Within
the silent adobe walls of northern New Mexico, I am surrounded by hand-hewn
cottonwood santos arrayed in
home-spun cloth and weathered retablos graced in straw to imitate unattainable
gold. The beatific looks on their faces look down at me with healing hope.
Faith weaves its tendrils within me like morning glory vines awakened in the
first glow of dawn. I may not understand the ways of people whose cultures have
slumbered in a time cocoon, but I want to understand the faith that inspires
them to recognize the voice of eternity in the rustling of the wind against the
red willow branches. I want to understand what drives them to walk through the moonscapes
of their deserts to reach their altars, what healing potions they drink from a curandera’s micaceous cup, what secret memories
they subdue when in the midst of an outsider.
Continuing
on the high road to Taos, a joyful whirlwind of warm air hovers unobtrusively
around me. It hums melodiously as I stand in quiet meditation next to the mud-plastered
exterior walls of village churches and ancient acequias. It reverently glides through the mishmash of grave
markers at the village camposantos, crosses
whose sun-bleached and splintered wood return to the secret occulted realm like
the brooding bones enshrined beneath the earth. The light plays tricks upon me
as I weave through the canyons and fingers of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. The landscape seems sublimely remote as
though the ancestors watch and spiritual energy smiles. A light vertigo sensation
arises within me as I walk among the fragrant chamiso, larches and piñones.
I find myself humbled when I come across a procession of mourners. On their
shoulders they hoist a simple pine box that serves as the eternal bedchamber
for the deceased. They are dressed in the black weeds of grief, the women’s faces
hidden by black rebozos and wisps of
hair billowing in the breeze. It is so simple, so refined, so real. I want to
stop and root myself into the depths of the sandy soil, yet I hesitate, for I
find it eerily wondrous to walk in canyons breathing out the names of all that
is immortal. Driving further, I note the super highway of the low road snaking
through the desert below, I realize it is time to move on. Prior to my
returning back to my world, I utter a silent prayer of gratitude. The journey on
the high road from Santa Fe to Taos connected me not only to a part of history
that is drying up like an uncorked inkwell in a ghost town schoolhouse, it
connected me to myself.
Being
gay has not always prepared me to embrace the diversity of life within my own community.
I am aware of fortifications that isolate. Derision, rejection, and worst of
all, reciprocating invisibility result in a segmented community. My journey
into a world I thought existed only in shadows taught me to appreciate the diversity
within my own family. I learned that though I and my brothers/sisters may fail
to recognize each other, bridges constructed but abandoned long ago are still
traversable. In a dream of unrestrained idealism, I invite all members of my
community to break bread and drink wine with me, and if we are not too drunk by
the end of our festivities, to dance like celebrants in unison even as the
ticket taker validates our tickets. I’ve learned to rejoice that I am the son
of a woman whose many breasts have nurtured legions of children. Through my
brief foray into a peripheral world, I learn that life is a kitchen preparation
in which ingredients, bitter chocolate, savory peanuts and sesame seeds, spicy mulatto, pasilla and ancho chilies,
and pregnant raisins marry upon a volcanic stone altar, creating a mole ancient
and wise, yet young and vibrant.  Whereas
the end result is a sacred dance, the process of preparation is the victory. A 38-year-old
Spanish poet, Federico Garcia Lorca, was murdered during the Spanish Civil War by
the Fascist militia for his being gay. In one of his writings, he reached back
to a friend who had taught him to smack his lips even as the sauce dribbled
down his chin. Garcia Lorca wrote, “Not for a moment, beautiful aged Walt
Whitman, have I failed to see your beard full of butterflies.  All we have are our hands and a hole in God’s
earth”—Federico Garcia Lorca

© 28 Dec 2015  

About
the Author  

Cervantes wrote, “I know who I am and who I may choose to be.” In spite of my constant quest to live up to this proposition, I often falter. I am a man who has been defined as sensitive, intuitive, and altruistic, but I have also been defined as being too shy, too retrospective, too pragmatic. Something I know to be true. I am a survivor, a contradictory balance of a realist and a dreamer, and on occasions, quite charming. Nevertheless, I often ask Spirit to keep His arms around my shoulder and His hand over my mouth. My heroes range from Henry David Thoreau to Sheldon Cooper, and I always have time to watch Big Bang Theory or Under the Tuscan Sun. I am a pragmatic romantic and a consummate lover of ideas and words, nature and time. My beloved husband and our three rambunctious cocker spaniels are the souls that populate my heart. I could spend the rest of my life restoring our Victorian home, planting tomatoes, and lying under coconut palms on tropical sands. I believe in Spirit, and have zero tolerance for irresponsibility, victim’s mentalities, political and religious orthodoxy, and intentional cruelty. I am always on the look-out for friends, people who find that life just doesn’t get any better than breaking bread together and finding humor in the world around us.

Pushing the Buttons, by Betsy

One thing that pushes my buttons is deception
and dishonesty.
This is about pushing MY buttons when I am
pushing the buttons of my computer.
There is some excellent honest reporting and
investigative work done in the media. But all too often the words deception and
dishonesty bring to mind certain media sources and motives behind publishing
certain bits of information.
The internet is such a great source of instant
information.  Put in a search word and in
a nano-second you have more information than you ever needed.  Often more information than you know what to
do with. Sifting through it can be daunting. 
Can you trust that the information is true?  To separate the reliable from the suspicious,
I apply this criterion: what or who is the source and are they trying to sell
me something or promote a product or service. 
If the answer is “yes” I toss it out as untrustworthy.   The motive for putting the information out
there is to get me to buy something, not to disseminate information that could
be helpful or to help get to the truth, or to advance someone’s knowledge.
To report and promote the truth simply for the
sake of truth itself is a noble cause. 
Most people, organizations, and corporations have ulterior motives for
promoting their “truth.”   If this is the
case when I am searching the internet I cannot trust the information I am
reading.
We are all familiar with some of the books
promoting certain diets–often promoted as cure-alls for whatever ails
you.  For example, the vegan diet will
keep your heart healthy well into old-age. 
It can actually reverse heart disease and diabetes claim its
authors.  The Paleo diet of meat and
vegetables, no grains, no starch will keep you from ever getting any disease at
all.  I truly believe the authors of these
books are sincere and I know they are scientific in their research and
presentations of the facts they have determined to be true.  But I also know they cannot all be touting
the truth. The research they have done and they will continue to do is going to
be exclusively designed to support their truth, not destroy it.
I cannot say enough on the subject of the media
and its lack of trustworthiness.  Many
mainstream TV programs claim to be reporting the news.  But some are actually making political comments
at the expense of the truth.  The truth
all too often never gets out until it is too late.  Even if the true story is reported, we still
must be very suspicious as to whether it is accurate.
Consider the now known fact that the Iraq war
was based on a lie.  The people and the
news media were told that Saddam Hussein had WMD’s.  We had proof. 
Our government reported this information unequivocally knowing that it
was not true and the media passed it on. 
Yes, the media did report the lie accurately.  And then later reported accurately that it
all was a lie, but some Watergate-type investigative reporting might have been
very useful at that time.
So how do we know what to believe or not
believe.  People often select one belief
over another because they WANT to believe it. 
This turns out to be simply a case of self-deception.  Try changing the mind of a person who has
deceived himself into believing what he wants to believe.  I personally know very few people who behave
this way.  I suppose that’s because I
prefer to hang with people who value the truth and the ability to think, and
choose to use that ability when searching for the truth.
So when it comes to pushing the buttons on my
lap-top or getting my buttons pushed I try to evaluate as I am reading or
listening, I avoid Fox so-called news, and pick and choose the reporters I read
or listen to.
© 23 Jun 2014 
About the Author 
Betsy has been active in the GLBT
community including PFLAG, the Denver Women’s Chorus, OLOC (Old Lesbians
Organizing for Change), and the GLBT Community Center. She has been retired
from the human services field for 20 years. Since her retirement, her major
activities have included tennis, camping, traveling, teaching skiing as a
volunteer instructor with the National Sports Center for the Disabled, reading,
writing, and learning. Betsy came out as a lesbian after 25 years of marriage.
She has a close relationship with her three children and four grandchildren.
Betsy says her greatest and most meaningful enjoyment comes from sharing her
life with her partner of 30 years, Gillian Edwards.

Rickyisms, by Will Stanton

To ease understanding of the
term “Rickyisms,” some people may equate these brief, humorous quips as
“puns.”  That term comes close; however,
“Rickyisms” are not so generalized as common puns, and they reflect more
precisely the personality of the originator, Ricky.  To begin with, anyone inflicted with “Rickyisms”
should be aware that the originator claims to have a personality of a
twelve-year-old boy; and his little bon mots usually are on that
level.  He has provided us with ample
opportunity to reach that conclusion.
Joking boy

Occasionally, however, his
little quips, written or oral, garner special attention; and, in my
imagination, I assign them special awards. 
One that comes to mind (and I’m sure Ricky will not mind my quoting it)
was, As for poor Yorick, the slain court jester, I
believe Shakespeare killed him — in the library — with the quill.  Yorick probably told Will a ‘Rickyism‘ and was stabbed in the heart for his trouble.  I found that quadruple Rickyism particularly
enjoyable.
I have encountered some people
who do not appreciate puns.  They may
prefer something supposedly more sophisticated and witty.  In addition, I also have noticed other people
who don’t even understand puns, or truly good humor in general.  These are the ones who rely primarily upon
the reptilian part of their brains, which also appears to correspond with how
they think and vote.  It also is
reflected in their love and admiration for racial or political jokes that lack
all valid meaning and wit.  Often, our
discomfort with their attempts at humor is fully justified, for their attempts
at humor are extraordinarily and unnecessarily obscene, or they  may be cruelly denigrating or politically and
maliciously motivated.  An essential part
of successful humor, unrealized by such people, is that there must be some
element of truth in it.  Otherwise, the
attempt is meaningless and unfunny.  I
frequently have noticed that deficiency in many so-called jokes from mindless
Right-Wingers in their attempts to attack and denigrate people whom they
hate.  And, they proudly think they are
being so witty.
 

Unfunny man

True wit requires valid
knowledge and practiced skill.  Far too
often, too many people come to the forum half-prepared.  If you were paying attention, you may have
caught all the puns in this piece.
Wink wink
©  26 November 2015 
About
the Author 
 I have had a life-long fascination with
people and their life stories.  I also
realize that, although my own life has not brought me particular fame or
fortune, I too have had some noteworthy experiences and, at times, unusual
ones.  Since I joined this Story Time
group, I have derived pleasure and satisfaction participating in the group.  I do put some thought and effort into my
stories, and I hope that you find them interesting.

Patriotism, by Ricky

Exactly
what is “patriotism”?  Who possesses
“patriotism”?  What does “patriotism”
look like to me?  What does “patriotism”
look like to others?
Today
is November 11th, Veterans’ Day, the holiday Americans set aside to
honor and remember our country’s military personnel, past and present, and the
resulting deaths and heroic deeds.  At
least that is what it was following the Korean “Police Action”.  The unpopular “non-declared-war conflict” in Vietnam
with the anti-war protests, primarily lead by the under 21 draftees and
draft-dodgers, tarnished this holiday for many decades.  During the years that followed, politicians
and corporate board of directors expanded the roll of “capitalist greed”
destroying American citizens’ confidence and trust in the concept of benevolent
authority.
I
am very cynical about businesses and corporate “chain” stores offering veterans
special discounts on this one day per year. 
Corporate business do these public relations gimmicks to attract money
from those people they can fool into believing the corporation actually cares
about our veterans both alive and dead. 
If they really cared, the corporations and business groups would send
their lobbyists to Congress to demand that the Veterans Administration be fully
funded and have the best facilities to serve our veterans.  But instead, they send lobbyists to ensure
laws are passed that favor their greed. 
As I said, I am very cynical.
When
I was a child, I spoke as a child; I understood as a child; I thought as a
child; I trusted as a child: but when I became a man, I eventually learned to
use my intelligence and actually think
and reason
.  This I can do fairly
well.  I only act childish.
        During the American Revolution, everyone was a patriot and a
traitor.  Colonists who were patriots for
England were traitors to the revolutionaries. 
Patriots to the revolution were traitors to King George.  Both groups believed they were “right”.
Lord
Baden Powell of England founded the Boy Scout movement.  It was an organization to teach British boys
the desired character traits, sense of honor, and moral values.  No boy would willingly join a character
building group, so the name became “Scouting for Boys” and was patterned after
Baden Powell’s experience in the British army, specifically his time as a
military scout.  The Scout Oath begins,
“On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country. …”  It is the duty to my country which is the
patriotic problem.
        Raising generations of children to believe without critical thought
that “duty to my country” means, “My country right or wrong” is a recipe for
disaster.  This is never more
historically apparent than during military activity.  For example, when the Redcoats retreated from
Concord and Lexington back to Boston, they marched in ordered columns,
shoulder-to-shoulder while those pesky and cowardly rebels shot them from
behind trees and rock fencing, and ran away without giving a fair fight.  Another example is the fighting at Gettysburg
during the Civil War; specifically Pickett’s Charge.  Thousands of brave men again stood
shoulder-to-shoulder and walked across a mile of open field into the point
blank firing of those damn Yankee soldiers and cannons all of whom were protected
by a rock wall.  Thousands of very
courageous Confederate soldiers died doing their duty to their country
as they believed it to be.  Nonetheless,
it was sheer stupidity.
        Back to the British: during WWI, the British army lost
approximately 60,000 men on July 1, 1916 (at the battle of Somme) by sending
them to cross an open field (the so called “no mans’ land”) into multiple
German machine gun emplacements.  Again,
sheer stupidity.  “Aye, but we showed the
buggers.”  At least by WWII, everyone
learned to make like Little Egypt and crawl on their bellies like a reptile
when crossing open fields under fire; except the Japanese whose “banzai”
charges into automatic weapons fire met with the exact same results obtained at
Gettysburg and the battle Somme in WWI.
        “My country, right or wrong” brings death and destruction to
soldiers and civilians alike.  This is
not a good definition for “Duty to my country”. 
I do believe that every citizen has responsibilities: voting, paying
taxes, engaging in dialog over public issues, serving on juries when selected,
and to use their God-given intelligence to think and reason and not to trust
blindly.  I do not believe that any
citizen need die overseas to keep Dick Chaney’s or Scrooge McDuck’s money-bin
full.
        I believe a true patriot: resists warmongers and bullies, speaks out for
truth, exposes government and corporate corruption, and when necessary or
unavoidable, makes the other guy die stupidly for his country.
© 11 November 2013 

About
the Author 

I was born in June of 1948 in Los Angeles, living first in Lawndale
and then in Redondo Beach.  Just prior to
turning 8 years old in 1956, I was sent to live with my grandparents on their
farm in Isanti County, Minnesota for two years during which time my parents
divorced.
When united with my mother and stepfather two years later
in 1958, I lived first at Emerald Bay and then at South Lake Tahoe, California,
graduating from South Tahoe High School in 1966.  After three tours of duty with the Air Force,
I moved to Denver, Colorado where I lived with my wife and four children until
her passing away from complications of breast cancer four days after the 9-11-2001
terrorist attack.
I came out as a gay man in the summer of 2010.   I find writing these memories to be
therapeutic.
My story blog is, TheTahoeBoy.Blogspot.com