The Party by Michael King

As a child my mother would make a two tiered angel food cake for my birthday. That was all I had ever known about birthday parties. Later when my children were growing up they got to have the dessert of their choice. It wasn’t until my oldest daughter’s eighteenth birthday that friends and guests were invited and fortunately by the time they arrived I had returned from the emergency room. As a finishing touch I had been blowing up balloons when one burst and sliced the front of my eye. It did heal and my vision was actually better afterwards.

Of course there are many kinds of parties and most that I went to was later in my life, however there had been a few while I was in the military. But the most memorable was a surprise birthday party on my 35th birthday.

I had never experienced a birthday with friends to celebrate it with. So I was totally surprised when people started showing up with gifts and cards. . We lived in Hawaii and had a nice house where we could entertain quite a few people, and did so occasionally. We had been somewhere and when we got home there was a long stemmed red rose and a birthday card from a friend of ours. Inside the card was a hundred dollar bill. I was practically in a state of shock, and had no idea what was to come. I just felt overwhelmed and laid on the bed clutching the rose and fell asleep.

When I woke up someone was at the door, then more and more. In all about 60 people arrived and never before having received a birthday present, I now received about 60. One of my daughters told me my face was going to crack from the big smile I had.

After that I valued birthday parties, entertaining and became quite the party giver. My realtor was so impressed when I gave a house colding party when I sold a condo, that they sold their large home with acreage, which was high maintenance and primarily for giving parties, and bought a townhouse. She figured that if I could give a nice party for 50 in a one bedroom condo, she could do it in a townhouse.

I used to love to entertain, have parties and numerous weddings at our house; however we had the space to do so. Now Merlyn and I seldom entertain more than one or two people, but we do go to events and parties fairly often.

About the Author

I go by the drag name, Queen Anne Tique. My real name is Michael King. I am a gay activist who finally came out of the closet at age 70. I live with my lover, Merlyn, in downtown Denver, Colorado. I was married twice, have 3 daughters, 5 grandchildren and a great grandson. Besides volunteering at the GLBT Center and doing the SAGE activities,” Telling your Story”,” Men’s Coffee” and the “Open Art Studio”. I am active in Prime Timers and Front Rangers. I now get to do many of the activities that I had hoped to do when I retired; traveling, writing, painting, doing sculpture, cooking and drag.

The Facts by Merlyn

Americans live in a world where the facts don’t mean anything.

I have finally realized that people don’t want to know the facts about what is really happening in the world and choose to believe the lies they see on FOX and CNN.

When Iran, Germany, China, Russia, Asia times and Australian web sites all have the same story and that story isn’t even mentioned on American TV or web sites, I tend to believe the foreign news.

I’m not going to say anything about what is going on today in the real world because I don’t think anyone really wants to know about things that they can’t do anything about.
I used to spend hours every day looking for the FACTs.

For the last two years I have stopped looking at American TV news. I’m down to about 15 minutes a day reading the headlines on the foreign web sites.

About the Author

I’m a retired gay man now living in Denver Colorado with my partner Michael. I grew up in the Detroit area. Through the various kinds of work I have done I have seen most of the United States. I have been involved in technical and mechanical areas my whole life, all kinds of motors and computer systems. I like travel, searching for the unusual and enjoying life each day.

Porn Scorn by Gillian

To be honest, I don’t scorn porn.

To do that I’d have to think about it, and I don’t.
I never have.
I barely, no joke intended, know what it is.

I have a vague vision of assorted people in assorted numbers and assorted combinations doing assorted things of which I can have no concept as my imagination begins to falter somewhere in, I suspect, the early stages of so-called ‘Soft Porn.’
The reason I don’t think about it is not that it freaks me out or sickens me, except for child porn, which is a different thing all together, I’m talking about consenting adult stuff here, but simply that it does not affect my life.

At least, as far as I know.
Perhaps in a general societal way it does, but for every study that shows it’s negative effects there’s a corresponding one demonstrating the opposite.

So, I simply don’t know.

What, I asked myself, if it affected me personally?
What if Betsy was in fact playing the lead in some geriatric triple X movie?

Or what if I discovered that she was off with a whole group of dirty old wrinklies watching dirty old movies when I thought she was at the Senior Center doing Yoga stretch?
Sorry, but really! Can you imagine this group?
What did he say?
I don’t think he said anything. It was kinda grunting.
What’s he doing now? Could you do that?
With my arthritis?
Did you ever do that?
If I did I don’t remember.

The fact is, that unless you want to fly away on attitudes and prejudices formed by others, it is realistically impossible to hold an informed opinion about a subject on which you are completely ignorant.

Every argument has an opposing one and statistics on pornography I imagine to be about as accurate as 1950 statistics on homosexuality.

As to fiscal concerns the guesstimate seems to be an average spending per capita of less than $50 per year, so nothing to break the family bank. And, by the way, I couldn’t help myself and I had to get something to compare that figure with, and found that in 2007, just as an example, the Iraq war budget equaled an annual per capita expense of $121 thousand, and hey, I don’t have to contribute via taxes to support porn watchers so…..no worries there either.

Perhaps in the end my lack of opinion and concern is simply a result of my naivety, and if I really knew what porn was, I would have definite opinions.
But at my age I doubt that I’m going to find out.

And this quotation from Erica Jong would scare me off.
I’d be afraid of staying too long.

She says,
“My reaction to porno films is as follows: After the first ten minutes, I want to go home and screw. After the first twenty minutes, I never want to screw again as long as I live.”

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 now been with my wonderful partner Betsy for 25 years.

House Cleaning by Donny Kaye

Housecleaning, thoroughness, reward and perception were all interconnected in my early years of formation with my mother. By the ages of seven, eight and nine I was responsible for the weekly cleaning of our modest home in Athmar Park. My father was a laborer at the nearby rubber factory and consequently our resources were few. This meant that what belongings we did have were cared for in the most particular of ways to extend their life as much as possible. My parent’s European heritage as well as having survived the Great Depression resulted in the lived experience of the old adage, cleanliness is next to godliness.

Weekly, the house cleaning tasks were evident and it was my job to complete those tasks, thoroughly by noon on Saturdays. If the tasks were completed to my mother’s satisfaction, “The Best Little Boy” was rewarded with a trip to JC Penny on Broadway. There I would get to pick out new underwear, or socks, possibly a new striped t-shirt as my reward. The essentials hardly seemed a reward but if I didn’t meet the cleanliness requirements, I went without! Children of today might regard this as abusive!

I learned that each cleaning task in each room of our unassuming home was essential and non-negotiable if I was to receive my reward. Cleaning meant the whole house, in its entirety, not just the front rooms of the house or any type of weekly rotation of cleaning; it meant all of the rooms from the back door and out the front. “Spic and Span”, early on became my motto!

Being “The Best Little Boy” also meant distinguishing early on, the best cleaners for different tasks such as vinegar water, baking soda, bon-ami, as well as the skillful operation of the Hoover and manipulation of the ringer in the rag-mop bucket.

I trained early-on in life and developed some useful life skills when it comes to housecleaning. I also realized as a child that house cleaning served to cover up some of the unique character of our meager belongings. I don’t know that it was a direct teaching but I certainly learned that if it was clean and orderly, there was less likely a question to be raised about quality or fundamental characteristics. It certainly taught me that some things were best kept in the closet, even if the closet in the back of the house existed like the legendary “Fibber McGee and Molly’s” closet.

Some of what I learned as a seven-year-old has transferred into essential skills and learning for life. Especially these past 10 years I have come to realize the whole house does not have to be done immediately and that it’s possible to approach it one room at a time starting with the most essential of the living spaces. If that space that is the most lived in is attended to in a good way, the other spaces of the interior can hold and be dealt with as necessary. And when the main interior space is cleared, the need to cover up what is fundamental diminishes into nonexistence. Since that day in the quiet and isolation of the bathroom when I first acknowledged my homosexuality, the cleansing that was necessary for me to begin this journey into wholeness began. One day at a time; one revelation to the next. First, my former wife, a few close friends, and then my children, extending into coming out clearings with 39 others, the cobwebs of a lifetime resulting from a closet not opened. Recently someone asked me about my coming out. Specifically, they were curious to know how my parents and siblings had taken the news.

“I waited until they all had passed!” I responded.

All had passed except for my nieces, whom I have come out to and one remaining brother-in-law, whom who has known me since I was two. And whom I haven’t been ready to face, much like that closet in the back of the house filled with the messy keepings of a lifetime. Last Wednesday I made that call and scheduled a face-to-face visit with my brother-in-law whom I’ve been avoiding for nearly 2 years. After dusting off some of the space between us with light conversation, I came clean and revealed that I was divorced and finally acknowledged to him what I have always known, that I am a man of a certain sexual persuasion. He moved toward me, close in. With eyes soft and moist, he responded by acknowledging having known me since I was two, that he and my sister realized long ago, when I was a child, that I was different. At eighty-six he even used the words, “coming out” with me as he assured me that my orientation made no difference in his love for me.

A true cleansing had occurred, a housecleaning of sorts. The skills I have learned over a lifetime applied to that final space within. I had come clean, no longer needing to hide the orientation within me that I presumed objectionable to those who have become the fabric of my life. The experience of confiding in him and experiencing his love was about acceptance, both mine and his. We parted with a long embrace, him whispering to me his love for me and his acknowledgment of how courageous it was for me to have come and sat with him. I walked from his front door with a spring in my step. Whew! A sigh of relief! This house is finally clear, it might even be called clean. I know this won’t be the last house cleaning I will have to do regarding this room of my house. Many more conversations will occur allowing me to come clean about the essence of me, just as the housecleaning that is always there as a result of living and the passage of time. But for this moment, like Saturdays when I was 7, 8 &9, the house is clean! What’s my reward? Clean underwear, so to speak. And maybe, just maybe the satisfaction that comes with recognition of a job well done! I think I’m going out and play!!

About the Author

Donny Kaye-Is a native born Denverite. He has lived his life posing as a hetero-sexual male, while always knowing that his sexual orientation was that of a gay male. In recent years he has confronted the pressures of society that forced him into deep denial regarding his sexuality and an experience of living somewhat of a disintegrated life. “I never forgot for a minute that I was what my childhood friends mocked, what I thought my parents would reject and what my loving God supposedly condemned to limitless suffering.” StoryTime at The Center has been essential to assisting him with not only telling the stories of his childhood, adolescence and adulthood but also to merely recall the stories of his past that were covered with lies and repressed in to the deepest corners of his memory. Within the past two years he has “come out” not only to himself but to his wife of four decades, his three children, their partners and countless extended family and friends. Donny is divorced and yet remains closely connected with his family. He lives in the Capitol Hill Community of Denver, in integrity with himself and in a way that has resulted in an experience of more fully realizing integration within his life experiences. He participates in many functions of the GLBTQ community.

From the Pulpit by Colin Dale

As a child and young adult I was spoken to from two pulpits. The one was a Roman Catholic pulpit. The other was an Episcopal pulpit. My father was a Roman Catholic. My mother an Episcopalian. My father Bill hadn’t realized when he asked my mother Anna to marry him that as far as his Roman Catholic church was concerned the only proper marriage was between one Roman Catholic and one Roman Catholic. In other words, a same faith marriage. Nevertheless, the pastor of my father’s Roman Catholic church, Saint Monica’s in Manhattan, consented to marry Bill and Anna–but not before humiliating my Anna in exacting from her a promise to raise her children as Roman Catholics, in effect invalidating her faith. Compounding his sin, the pastor at Saint Monica’s informed Bill and Anna the marriage would have to be held quietly, privately, not in the church sanctuary but in what I must assume was the less holy ground of rectory house next-door, in effect telling Anna she was a touch less worthy. Perhaps even a dangerous. Anna, my mother, a supremely gentle woman, never forgave Saint Monica’s pastor for the insults. Nor have I.

Now this may sound like a real downer, this story I’ve started to tell, the beginning of a relentlessly bitter memoir that might be titled How Faith Fucked Me Up. But there were deeply rewarding ups along with the downs in the years of my growing up in my relationship not only with my father’s Catholic pulpit but also with my mother’s Episcopal pulpit. It’s the rewarding ups I want to tell you about. To do so, though, I need to talk about these pulpits as metaphor but as people–about the men who commanded these two pulpits and who came to represent in my mind contrasting theologies not as hard-ass doctrine but as three-dimensional human beings. And as much as to this day I scorn the pastor of Saint Monica’s, I’m pleased to say in the years of my growing up I eventually found in the two pulpits–the Catholic and the Episcopal–men of every stripe: the compassionate and the cold, virtuosos and sad-sacks, comics and grouches, altruists and narcissists, scholars and fools. The variety alone bolstered my faith, if not in god, then certainly in humanity. It amused me too to see that these men of every stripe sorted themselves pretty much equally between the two pulpits, informing me neither faith was in full possession of the virtuosos and scholars. Nor, for that matter, of the narcissists and fools.

I’m the younger of two boys born to Bill and Anna, and there’s a 14-year spread between my brother and me. Good by her word, my mother permitted my brother and me to be raised as Catholics. When I was born, the family was no longer living in Manhattan–no longer in Saint Monica’s parish. Home when I was born was The Bronx–Pelham Bay–the rabidly Catholic Italian, Irish, and–in my case–dissonant Welsh–northeast corner of The Bronx. My father, my brother and I attended what was for its time a mega-church, populous–a hefty congregation needing six full masses on Sunday mornings–a church with respectable affluence for what was a working-class neighborhood. The church was Our Lady of the Assumption–which, as a kid, I thought was strange. Our Lady of the Assumption? I thought that was like saying Our Lady of Your Guess is as Good as Mine.

In any event, OLA (as it was called) was too big for me to ever get to know any of the priests as people. The Catholic priests I’d meet and learn to admire–to even regard as friends–came along later. While I was a kid going to OLA the priests were all two-dimensional, known to me only by the attributes neighbors would gossip about–such as OLA’s pastor, Monsignor Francis Randolf, the Tippler, sometimes called Randolf the Red-Nosed Pastor, whose rambling Latin on Sundays was sloppy and slurred; and Father Mario Giordano, for whom English must not have been even his third, fifth, or tenth language, the best bet for Saturday confession, we kids knew, because in Father Giordano’s confessional even a confession of genocide would draw as penance only three Hail Marys, one Our Father, and a promise to go forth and do genocide no more.

All the while, my mother was attending Saint Peter’s Episcopal Church, a founded in 1693, a handsome Gothic Revival structure with a piercing copper-plate spire and picture-postcard cemetery, still in use back when I was a kid, but with scores of wafer-thin, leaning Revolutionary War headstones.

Whereas my father and I would shuffle off Sundays to OLA–my brother, a capable right-fielder, had already exchange Sunday morning worship for city-league baseball–while my father and I would shuffle off half-heartedly to OLA, my mother would be worshipping with comparative sincerity at Saint Peter’s. My mother, unlike my father, really believed. I didn’t know back then if there was such a thing as real faith, but if there was, my mother had it in spades. She never proselytized; hers was a quiet faith. And the depth of this faith led my mother into all sort of available involvements at Saint Peter’s–the choir, the altar society, the food bank. I can still see her at the Smith Corona typing up mimeograph stencils for the Sunday bulletin.

These volunteer activities in turn led to her making a great friend of Saint Peter’s rector, Father Jeremy Brown. Father Brown was my mother’s idea of a priest–warm, kindly, charismatic–the sort if you’d ask Central Casting to send over a lovable priest, they send Jeremy Brown. Brown would have dinner with us. In Brown, I met my first fully human cleric. It was Father Brown who told me, to satisfy my curiosity, it would be safe for me to go along with my mother to an Episcopal service–which I did, nervously, fearful the next time I stepped into Our Lady of the Assumption I would explode in flame.

When I was in my late teens my father lost the only job I’d ever known him to have, a foreman in a lower Manhattan factory. To help until my father could find another permanent job, Rector Brown invited my father to work in Saint Peter’s ancient cemetery. Although it paid modestly–for which my father was grateful–the work was tough, not just physically but emotionally–graves were still dug by hand at St. Peter’s, and, as my father learned, digging adjacent graves often made for disturbing discoveries.

When it became obvious this work was taking a damaging toll on my father, Rector Brown reached across the aisle–or I could say nave–to a Jesuit friend at Fordham University–Fordham University, a great concentration of Catholism. Brown secured for my mother a part-time typist’s job in Fordham’s philosophy department. Again my mother drilled down, volunteering, doing far more than what was expected of her, and in doing so, endeared herself to the Jesuit faculty. It was only a matter of time now before we had Jesuits at our dinner table. Jesuit philosophers no less–occasions which, for my mother with her finishing school certificate and my father, a high school drop-out, made for challenging suppertime conversation.

The youngest of the Jesuit philosophers was Jack Balog. Father Jack wasn’t much older than me, or so it seemed. He and I became great pal-around friends. At my age I would have to reach way up to hold my own in conversation with Father Jack, but fortunately, because his own Jesuit training was still fresh, Father Jack had only to reach a little ways down so as not to embarrass me. Father Jack and I did typical guy things–concerts, movies, bowling, always ending our evenings at the Steak & Brew near campus. A couple of beers and Jack was honest even about his concerns about celibacy. A couple of beers and I was undeterred in my dishonesty about my sexuality. Retired today, Jack lives on a university campus in Eastern Pennsylvania. I’m out now to Jack. We’re still friends.

But the fellow I want mostly to tell you about is Father George Maloney. Father Maloney–or Father George as we all called him–was the chair of the Philosophy Department. Father George was easily two decades older than me, so an uncle figure. He was also a man whose IQ dazzled but without a hint of pretention. Father George’s specialty was Eastern Orthodoxy, a subject on which he authored quite literally two or three dozen books (many of which I have, warmly inscribed, on my bookshelf today). Unlike my pal Father Jack, though, Father George, Father Jack’s boss at Fordham, was an austere man, in appearance as well as in character. A lifetime of extraordinary self-discipline, strict vegetarianism, and long, long-distance cycling had give Father George, from a distance, rail-thin and with a wild salt & pepper beard, a somewhat disquieting look. It was only when you got up close, across our dinner table for instance, you could see how his eyes said you’ve no reason to be keep away. Nonetheless, unlike Father Jack, I would never have called Father George a pal-around friend. Our relationship was and remained mentor and pupil.

I’ll close with a snapshot of Father George, one of many years later. Father George remained at Fordham as chair of the Philosophy Department. I went off to college, got my B.A. in ’66, then went into the Army (having screwed up and taken R.O.T.C.–another story for another Monday), got discharged in ’70, worked for a newspaper in New Jersey for a few months, quit, discovered Colorado and snagged my M.A. at Western State in Gunnison, went back to New York for a year to help pout as my father slowly disappeared into dementia. I then returned to Colorado–this time to Denver and D.U. It was at D.U. that I met Jim, the young man who would be my partner for a decade. To collapse the tale, after a year Jim and I lost interest in D.U. We settled into an apartment in Capitol Hill and tried to keep it together working as waiters in a number of disappointing restaurants around Denver. Discouraged, I suggested we try our luck in my hometown, New York. Arriving, already nervous about the visibility of a love that dare not speak its name, Jim and I found it too, too uncomfortable living with my mother. Father George, though, over for dinner, spotted our distress and asked if we would like to come live at no cost, albeit temporarily until we could a place of our own, with the Jesuits on the Fordham campus. All of a sudden Jim and I were thinking this love that dare not speak its name–if we were to move into a Jesuit dorm–this love might just start hollering in the hallways. Anyway, Jim and I met with Father George. “I know what your concerned about,” Father George said. “Don’t be. The way I see it, God loves all love.”

And so Jim and I moved in with the Jesuits. We found ourselves in a four-story dorm full of Jesuits, mostly philosophers, many from Eastern Europe and the Orient with absolutely no English. Ours was an incredible experience, living in the Jesuit dorm–but that brings me to the threshold of another story, another story for another Monday.

Father George Maloney lived a good, long life, retiring not all that many years ago to a monastery in Southern California. I would phone every three, four months and we would chat. I never did get out there to see Father George, although I had the best of intentions. Then, last year, I phoned to learn that Father George, at 96, had died.

I grew up with two pulpits. Today I have none. I’m not sure if I’m any the worse off for that. I am sure, however, I’m grateful for the two pulpits–the Catholic and the Eposcopal–I had in my childhood and young adult years, not for pulpits themselves but for the lifelong friends they released into my company.

About the Author

Colin Dale couldn’t be happier to be involved again at the Center. Nearly three decades ago, Colin was both a volunteer and board member with the old Gay and Lesbian Community Center. Then and since he has been an actor and director in Colorado regional theatre. Old enough to report his many stage roles as “countless,” Colin lists among his favorite Sir Bonington in The Doctor’s Dilemma at Germinal Stage, George in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Colonel Kincaid in The Oldest Living Graduate, both at RiverTree Theatre, Ralph Nickleby in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby with Compass Theatre, and most recently, Grandfather in Ragtime at the Arvada Center. For the past 17 years, Colin worked as an actor and administrator with Boulder’s Colorado Shakespeare Festival. Largely retired from acting, Colin has shifted his creative energies to writing–plays, travel, and memoir.

Lottery by Betsy

If it is the Colorado Lottery we are referring to here, then it is highly unlikely that I will ever win, since I do not play. I gave up playing that lottery after giving away about one hundred dollars in five dollar increments with zero return and asked myself the profound question: “Why am I doing this?” There are better investments for even one hundred dollars which do not require that I give away ALL my capital.

Don’t get me wrong. I do benefit everyday from the Colorado Lottery. We all do. I especially enjoy the bicycle paths and parks and other amenities immensely.

Of the $2.3 billion utilized by the state since the start of the lottery in 1983, 50% has gone to the Great Outdoors Trust Fund, 40% to the Conservation Trust Fund, and 10% to the Colorado Division of Parks and Wildlife.

Here are a few winners which we all benefit from due to the Colorado Lottery.

Close to 1000 miles of hiking and biking trails built and maintained all over the state.

Open space and land acquisition. Development and maintenance for city, county, and state parks and recreation facilities.

Funding for school health and safety issues.

If we are talking about other lotteries in life–or the lottery of life, truth be told, I have won many times indeed. I had the winning ticket when I was born to the parents that I had. I won when I married Bill instead of Jim or Al. I had a winning ticket when I got my daughter back. I won when I chose to come out. I could go on and on describing the lucky things that have happened to me over my lifetime. Yes, some involved making a good choice. Like, the winningest lottery ticket of my entire life: when I cashed in and got Gill. But face it. Much of life is a crap-shoot. This was very clear to me recently when I chose to have my spine go under the knife.
“There is a 20% chance you will be worse off after surgery. There is a 1% chance of severe damage to nerves, paralysis, or even death,” I was told. True, the odds were on my side but the chance for disaster is always there.

If I win the lottery? If it’s the Colorado Lottery–I won’t. The Life Lottery–I have won, and I do win–most of the time–and I hope to continue my run of good luck.

About the Author

Betsy has been active in the GLBT community including PFLAG, the Denver women’s chorus, OLOC (Old Lesbians Organizing for Change). She has been retired from the Human Services field for about 15 years. Since her retirement, her major activities include tennis, camping, traveling, teaching skiing as a volunteer instructor with National Sports Center for the Disabled, and learning. Betsy came out as a lesbian after 25 years of marriage. She has a close relationship with her three children and enjoys spending time with her four grandchildren. Betsy says her greatest and most meaningful enjoyment comes from sharing her life with her partner of 25 years, Gillian Edwards.

Quirky Domestic Tidbits by Will Stanton

Nothing particularly quirky goes on around my household. As a matter of fact, not much goes on at all. I don’t live with a quirky partner who has quirky habits. I don’t have dogs or other pets that do quirky things. If I have any quirky habits, there is no one living here to observe them. And, I am probably too close to the subject to be aware of anything out of the ordinary. So, I guess that I’ll relate a few quirky things that I or close friends have observed elsewhere.

I once knew a couple of guys who lived in an apartment not far from here. They invited me and a few others over for dinner. The self-designated head-chef had decided to make cheese fondue his main course. He never had prepared fondue before. I am told that no host should experiment with his guests. Apparently, he did not know that fondue, or heated cheese dishes of any kind, needs to be prepared over slow, low heat. Otherwise, the cook will “vulcanize” the cheese, turning it into a tough, hard lump – – which is exactly what he did. We guests in the living room began to hear increasingly loud exclamations emanating from the kitchen, and we went to investigate as to the cause of the chef’s frustration. We arrived just in time to witness the angry chef ramming the hardened glob of cheese down the garbage disposal. Our quick advice not to do so obviously was not quick enough, for the chef flipped the switch. The garbage disposal started up, made a loud groaning noise, and then self-destructed, thoroughly plugging up the drain. We enjoyed the dinner out at the restaurant despite the occasional grumbles from the disgruntled, would-be chef.

A friend of mine once lived in Houston, a city that does have some cultural advantages such as their opera. He, being the handsome, charming, erudite gentleman that he was, hobnobbed with financial-social elite. Frequently, a wealthy couple of gentlemen would invite selected friends to their elegant home for an après-opera dinner. All the gentlemen, dressed in their fine suits would stand about with their cocktails, chatting amiably with each other until dinner was served. Apparently, one of the hosts had a habit of imbibing regularly in the kitchen, where he insisted upon preparing by himself one of his specialties.

Now, I know enough about alcohol not to find addiction or abuse in itself funny. I have to admit, however, that on occasion, circumstances can catch one as somewhat amusing, especially when remembered retrospectively or if pretended, as in the case of Foster Brooks or the Carol Burnett Show. I suppose that what occurred next was made more amusing by the fact that all these gentleman held themselves in high regard. At least, their expensive suits indicated that belief. After all as Mark Twain once said, “Clothes make the man.” A large apron or even a wet-suit might have been more appropriate for the co-host. Once everyone was seated and the several bowls of food were being passed around, the inebriated gentleman distinctly began to feel the effects from his time in the kitchen. He did manage to wait until the large bowl of mashed potatoes appeared right in front of him, whereupon he chose that moment to pitch forward, face-first, right into the mashed potatoes. His friend hurriedly assisted the host into an upright position. The guests momentarily were stunned observing the host’s potato-covered face, which had a remarkable resemblance to an ancient Greek theater mask. The embarrassed friend realized that, as the mashed potatoes began to slither down upon the host’s fine suit, that the host appeared to be incapable of removing the potatoes himself or preventing their further spread. Two of the guests, having recovered from their initial surprise, volunteered to help the friend carry the host into the bedroom where they removed the potatoes and the dinner jacket. Fortunately, the host eventually recovered; and the guests complemented him upon the delicious specialty that he had prepared, although none said anything about their having declined the mashed potatoes.

And last of all, here’s a quirky tale of a very different nature. How many of you have seen a big, old, Victorian mansion, an Adams-Family-style house. My roommate did when we were freshmen in college. He lived back East. His great aunt lived alone in just such an “Adams” house in Marietta, Ohio. She told him that, as long as he was passing by on his way to college, he could stop by to see her and spend the night. He agreed to.

After supper, they chatted for quite a while and eventually retired to their separate rooms. His bedroom was rather large and with a high ceiling. The bed was a big four-poster sitting on a wooden-plank floor. At the foot of the bed was a large seaman’s trunk. Late that night, he began to hear strange noises. Eventually, the sounds became so unsettling that he turned his light on several times to see what might be causing those peculiar sounds. He never saw anything that would explain the noises. When he was about to fall asleep, he suddenly heard a very loud, extended scraping noise. Terrified, he turned on his light and immediately saw that the seaman’s trunk now was on the complete opposite side of the room. That was absolutely enough for him. Without further thought, he immediately threw his clothes on, grabbed his bags, and without saying a word to his great-aunt, fled the house. He preferred driving throughout the night to the college rather staying a moment longer in that house. Now that is one quirky house!

© 03 February 2012




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.


Writing My Story by Ricky

I suppose that everyone else has some or most of the same impediments to writing their story as I do when writing mine.  Between all authors of course, there are the differences of skill, vocabulary, imagination, and life experiences from which to draw inspiration. I am referring to the hindrances brought about by the so-called “writers block” and “the muse isn’t musing” and a lack of “passion” for the topic.

Only rarely do inspiration and passion combine to motivate me to write on a topic earlier than five to eighteen hours in advance of its presentation to our Telling Your Story group. A procrastinator all my life, (influenced by all those before-the-sun-comes-up farm chores while living with my grandparents) I seem to be my best when faced with a rapidly approaching deadline. This writing is well within those time limits as I began to type it at 8:15 this morning after having it in my subconscious mind for over a week. Even after all that passage of time, no ideas on how to approach the topic for writing presented themselves until Sunday morning between 1:30 and 3:00 AM.

While looking for some photographs I could place into my stories on my blog site to jazz-it-up a bit, I found a box of photos labeled “John & Deborah.” As I perused the contents, I began to travel down the memories invoked by the images. Suddenly, the muse attacked and I knew what to write about this week.

Actually, the writing about part is really the same-old-thing; it’s about me. I am writing about my life’s story not just any story (as most of us do in this group). What makes the topic most difficult for me to write about, is my desire to include my dealings within in the context of how I interpret the meaning of the topic. I guess that is the “Drama King” or ego part of me wanting the story to be about me. But then again, that is the premise of this Telling Your Story group, so maybe I am not being a drama king or an egotist; just following the premise.

Now you might think that I am done with this topic as this is an easy place to stop but you would be wrong. This story is really about the effect the photographs have on me because the muse attacked me with that idea. Therefore, this is the rest of the story, as Paul Harvey would say.

There were several photographs of major interest to me. Especially enjoyable are the ones where either my spouse or I had written some information on the back. Then there were those where nothing is written but I knew all the people and the background indicated the place if not the exact year. Then there are the mysterious ones where again nothing is written on the back and I knew at least one person in the photo but the background does not provide any memory jogs to time or location.

I found three black & white photos of me as a little boy of at various ages. One shows me sitting on a new Schwinn bicycle in front of the Christmas tree. I was five or six-years old.

Another photo shows me standing at the curb waiting for the school bus for my first day of 1st grade at the Hawthorn Christian School.

There are two official school photos of first and second grades. I really cannot tell which is which. There are very slight changes in my facial structure and one slight difference in the school uniform I am wearing, but I am not sure which one shows the younger me although I made an “educated” guess.

1st Grade
2nd Grade

Yet another shows me at 5-years old crouching on the front porch of our home. The expression on my face made me think that I was looking at a photo of Leonardo DiCaprio at 5-years old. In contrast, Donald thinks I look like a young Buddy Ebsen, which I can’t see any resemblance.

I have seen a photo of my mother, stepfather, and my 3-year old brother and sister taken on Easter Sunday in 1962. I know I took that picture but always wondered why there wasn’t one of me. Well, I found my equivalent photo in the box with all the others through which I was rummaging.

Me and my dog, PeeWee.

That photo and another one taken at high school graduation made me re-evaluate my life-long self-image.

HS Graduation

 Even though it will make me appear to be vain and egocentric if not an egomaniac, I must say that depending upon age I have always been very cute or rather handsome. (Perhaps not vain or an egomaniac as this is supposed to be a story about me.) This next part might be though. I was good looking enough that every pedophile within 50-miles of me should have had me on their most wanted list. Why they did not I will never know. Perhaps I was not all that attractive in reality.

So now, you know what struggles I have with writing my story and what goes through my brain as I do it. I hope it is not an ugly or frightful sight. 

©
16 July 2012

About the Author

Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe, CA

Ricky was born in 1948 in downtown Los Angeles.  Just prior to turning 8 years old, he was sent to live with his grand-parents on their farm in Isanti County, Minnesota for two years while (unknown to him) his parents obtained a divorce. 

When reunited with his mother and new stepfather, he lived one summer at Emerald Bay and then at South Lake Tahoe, graduating from South Tahoe High School in 1966.  After three tours of duty with the Air Force, he moved to Denver, Colorado where he lived with his wife of 27 years and their four children.  His wife passed away from complications of breast cancer four days after 9-11.

He came out as a gay man in the summer of 2010.  He says, “I find writing these memories to be very therapeutic.”

Ricky’s story blog is “TheTahoeBoy.blogspot.com”.

Goofy Tales by Ray S

Ten A.M. and it is getting hot already. Today is a holiday and the Eda M. Fisher Junior High School is closed. I am home alone at our one bedroom studio apartment. Mom and Sylvia are at work even though it is Washington’s Birthday holiday.

I am trying to figure out what I can do with the day besides make up my studio couch bed, clean up the kitchen, and squeeze some fresh Florida orange juice.

Too early to go to the movies at that big theater on Collins Avenue with the funny name, CINIMA, and I am so new to that school I do not know anyone to pal around with.

Instead of getting dressed for school, I just put on my bathing trunks, and with that, the idea surfaced that it could be interesting to investigate the roof top deck of this modest two-story apartment. I could check out the hot water solar heat apparatus; see what the place is like where I’d heard people went to sun bathe.

The more I thought about this adventure the more possibilities crept into my imagination. What if I decided to take a sunbath and if no one was around why not risk being discovered doing so nude? What a wickedly wonderful thought for a lonely 14-year-old boy whose thoughts were now soaring into unknown territory. I couldn’t understand why the idea of being discovered by another like-minded but older man came into my head.

Up the stairs, beach towel in hand, and on to the threshold of the unknown. The rooftop was divided into an area of solar heat water pipes and then a space with a privacy fence and benches all around for socializing and sun bathing. Quite nice and a degree of privacy.

Anticipation, being the dominant emotion, the thrill of doing something forbidden, the possibility of discovery and whatever would or could follow, seemed to move me magically into some other world.

Beach towel in place on the deck in a seemingly remote corner, I dared to slip out of my trunks and exposed myself to dear old sol and whatever might transpire. I became aware that all of this activity was causing a pleasant feeling of arousal, and as I lay there with my eyes closed basking in the warmth of the sun, my hand helped with this newfound feeling of well-being. The day was off to a good start.

“Hey, Kid! What are you doing?” The jarring voice of a would be teen Venus standing over me in the altogether called. When I came to my senses I was confronted with, “that’s what girls looked like without clothes.” It certainly wasn’t anything like the showers at boys gym class.

If in retrospect I had any knowledge of a Botticelli nude–female, that is–this specter looming over my prone body would have fit the bill. She knelt down beside me and whispered, “Here, let me show you what we can do with that.”

Perhaps 15 minutes later Venus was joined by a boyfriend. I imagined his name was David. They spread their towels on the deck, he slipped out of his bathing suit and suddenly the spirit of Eros overcame me again.

It was at this moment I realized that I could and would wait for my David to come and carry me away to somewhere where the gods know how to play anyway they want to, and Venus, lovely as she is, could climb back into her clam shell.

© 23 February 2013




About the Author








Communications by Phillip Hoyle

Communications involve much more than words, a fact that to me seems especially true of communications made in the context of love, sex, and romance. In those contexts I feel uncertain what anyone is communicating to me. Why? Perhaps because I live too much in my own world. Perhaps I don’t hear anything except the words. Perhaps I just don’t get the emotional content of things said. Perhaps I didn’t get to practice love talk as a teen because I didn’t feel impelled toward girls and assumed boys were not interested. Perhaps I just cut off any expectation of falling in love so as to keep from getting hurt. Perhaps I married too young. I really cannot settle on any of these possibilities. 

A psychiatrist challenged my over use of ‘perhaps’ and ‘maybe.’ He would say, “There you go again, waffling. Just tell me. Make up your mind.” That’s a problem. In my own defense I could have appealed to my scores on the Myers-Briggs inventory with its use of Jung’s conscious ego states (I was a strong perceiver and weak judge), but then maybe the psychiatrist wasn’t interested in Jung! Setting that aside, I will try to make a synthesis of these ideas—all my perhapses—and that synthesis begins with a story.

When I was in my mid-forties living in Albuquerque, Teresa, a pastoral counselor, attended the same interdenominational clergy support group I did even though she was not clergy. I liked that for I had always thought the clergy/lay distinction rather meaningless given my background. It seemed good to have present in the group the experience and perspective of someone not trained so thoroughly in theology and congregational life. Pastoral counseling is a category of psychotherapy alongside, for instance, family-systems counseling and other specialties. In addition to psychotherapeutic techniques used in other approaches, Pastoral counseling employs spiritual and religious themes as they seem appropriate to the counselor and counselee. (I say this to be as precise as possible.) Pastoral counselors offer pastors and parishes a referral resource for cases that go beyond the training of local parish pastors.

I liked Teresa. She liked me. When my high-school age daughter needed support in a particularly tough time, I asked Teresa if she’d be her counselor for about two months. Teresa told me it was not her practice to work with children of colleagues, but she trusted me and agreed to talk with my daughter. They met on two or three occasions and helped pave the way for Desma’s decisions to be successful. Teresa told me how impressed she was with my daughter.

Some months later Teresa opened up to me about her frustrations with work. We developed a caring and trusting relationship in which our communications always interlaced mutual respect and humor. She asked me about how I dealt with the dynamics of being an associate minister. I saw she needed help thinking through how to deal with some kind of power inequity in her own work. We talked informally over several weeks as she met whatever was her current crisis. Then she told me, “Phillip, you’re the best defended man I’ve ever known.”

I really didn’t know what she was saying to me but decided to take it as a compliment. After all she had said ‘best,’ and mom had taught me to say ‘thank you’ to compliments, even those I thought I didn’t earn or didn’t quite understand. For years I mulled over Teresa’s evaluation. I knew she was an astute observer of human behavior. I knew she took a woman-oriented point of view. I knew she followed current trends in psychoanalytic perspective. I knew she was kind. So I accepted her comment as I tried to understand its insight in order to better understand the dynamics it could reveal both in my personality and in my work relationships.

My musings eventually went far beyond work and landed me back at the point in my teen years when I must have been feeling the juices of sexual yearning churning in my system. I had watched my older sisters fall in love with guys and get hurt over it. I reasoned if you didn’t fall in love, you wouldn’t get hurt. I have no memory that my homosexual proclivity entered into my reasoning. I simply wasn’t interested in being hurt. I liked both boys and girls. I got hard-ons over both girls and boys. I liked both a lot. I decided that was okay, of course, even quite enjoyable. I dated girls. I sometimes had sex with a boy. I kept busy with music, studies, art, reading, various church and school groups, and my part-time work at the grocery store. I took care of the lawn at home. I was a nice kid who fit in well. I lived into my life. I defended myself from love’s potential pain.

When from my old age perspective I look most searchingly at my young self, I realize that probably something homosexual was at play, but it was deeply submerged. I liked the same boy who broke my sister’s heart, but I didn’t want the hurt she experienced. I wasn’t able to picture a social price for being gay because I couldn’t imagine two guys living together into adulthood. I pushed down what I didn’t even know. I feel fortunate my parents had not taught me guilt feelings or self-loathing. Those would have been destructive. As a teenager trying to figure out life and desire, I took my practical approach and set aside the potential of same-sex love. My defenses were sure and served me well. I didn’t reject my interest in other guys, just watched it. I enjoyed the feelings but didn’t pursue them into any kind of institutional form.

When I was twenty-one, I married a fine woman. When I was thirty, I fell in love with a nice man. I saw what was happening and was thrilled to my toes with the feelings. Eventually an affair began. It was controlled by distance and the uneven needs of my buddy. Some fifteen years later, our on and off occasional contact was not sufficient for me. I wanted to simplify my life, to find something that seemed more natural. Teresa’s comment which was made at around that time may have helped facilitate my changes. I opened myself to more feelings and to acting on them with people who lived nearby. Of course, it was a costly decision that ripped apart the stability of my life. I found thrills, but some twenty years later, even with all my new experiences in love, I still don’t catch onto the emotional content of what may be pick-up lines. I really still need folk to speak to me in simple, straightforward English. I need a hand to reach out and touch me before I am ready to shed my defenses. My settlement these days stands in great contrast to what I did as a fifteen year old, or a thirty-five year old, or even a forty-five year old.

I am so glad this sixty-five year old man had all these experiences. I continue to shed my inhibitions but still don’t want to hurt anyone else with the shedding. I recall when at fifty-five years I was so thrilled over meeting Rafael. I really was. I told a friend about him and wondered aloud at my surprise and at my elation that anyone would be interested in me. My friend Tony laughed and said, “Phillip, you just aren’t paying attention.”

Now I listen more carefully but still am not sure what I am hearing. Does this mean my closet door could open even wider? Does it mean I could become even more gay? I’m listening for the deepest levels of communication in my effort to overcome my own residual defenses—you know that ‘best’ stuff in me—and in my effort I hope really to hear what others are trying to communicate to me.

Whew.

About the Author

Phillip Hoyle lives in Denver and spends his time writing, painting, giving massages, and socializing. His massage practice funds his other activities that keep him busy with groups of writers and artists, and folk with pains. Following thirty-two years in church work, he now focuses on creating beauty and ministering to the clients in his practice. He volunteers at The Center leading “Telling Your Story.”

Read more at Phillip’s blog:  artandmorebyphilhoyle.blogspot.com