The Men in My Life, by Gillian

Many
men have influenced my life; most positively, some not.
Until
I went off to college, the only males I had formed any attachment for were my
father and maternal grandfather and a teacher. The boys in school all seemed
too immature for words and essentially I ignored them, preferring the company
of girls; especially one, with whom I remained secretly in love through all my
schooldays, but I won’t digress as this is supposed to be about men.
My
dad I have written about many times, I will simply say that I loved him, he
loved me, and in a strangely silent way we became increasingly close over his
lifetime. And, yes, even since his death. My mother’s dad died when I was
pretty young so I don’t remember very much about him, except that I was always
happy just to sit with him while the carved beautifully ornate headstones out
of the local marble. Only slightly more garrulous than my father, he sometimes
sat in silence for what seemed like hours, but I was a little kid so maybe it
wasn’t really so long. I do know I never got restless or tried to make him
chat. I loved just being there, watching his clever hands create such intricate
beauty. Occasionally he shocked me with a sudden swift launch into
story-telling – spellbinding and supposedly true although looking back, even if
I cannot recall the details of any, I doubt their veracity. But despite these
rare jaunts off into the world of monologue, words were few. So the first two
men in my life, both of whom I loved greatly, folded me into a strong, silent
world; a world where deeds spoke much louder than words. A world of true, if
silent, love. They actually had a lot in common, Dad and Granddad, although not
related by blood. (Not so very surprising, I guess, as girls supposedly tend to
marry a man like their father.) They are also connected, in my child’s memory,
by birds; more specifically, robins. The English robin, quite unlike the
American version, is a small brown bird with a scarlet breast, known for it’s
inquisitive nature. One it seemed was always around, watching my grandfather
chisel and hammer just as I did. The little bird’s head bobbed from one side to
the other as he seemed to evaluate Granddad’s every move with his sharp, shiny,
little black eyes. My father had his faithful robin, too, who followed him
around on his chores; waiting, I’m sure, for tasty morsel to be offered up in
the process.
The
other strong male influence in my youth was my high school geology teacher. He
was one of the natural teachers of this world, and carried with him an aura of
boundless energy and enthusiasm which was very contagious. At weekends he and
his little band of devoted followers would slog up and down wet Welsh
mountains, returning home exhausted with pockets and bags groaning under the
weight of rocks and minerals and fossils. He blessed my life with a fascination
with geology which has remained with me throughout. And, no, I didn’t have that
schoolgirl crush on him which tends to accompany teenage admiration, and which
I’m sure some of the girls succumbed to. I was immune. My passions were spent,
as are all good lesbian youthful crushes, on my female gym teacher!
In
college I was never romantically involved with any men, being passionately but
secretly, even for the most part hidden from myself, devoted to a female
classmate. But I learned a lot from men in my life who were completely unlike
any of the boys I knew at school. Inevitably so; they came from different
worlds. My professor at The University of Sheffield had been a prisoner of the
Japanese in World War Two. They had cut out his tongue. Consequently, his
lectures were very difficult to follow until you became tuned in. I was
incredibly impressed by his courage and tenacity in returning after the war to
a position made difficult and, I would suppose, embarrassing, by his
affliction. I also learned forgiveness from this man. I never once heard him
say anything negative, either in class or in private gatherings, about the
Japanese or their country. The attitude he maintained made it very clear that
he held no grudges; no animosity. This was 1959, so he had had fifteen years to
get there, and how long it took or what efforts it cost him, I don’t know. But
ever since, upon finding myself harboring resentment over some petty words or
deeds, I have tried to remind myself of a wonderful man who managed to forgive
completely a truly terrible wound.
Also
at Sheffield University in the late 1950’s and early ’60’s were several young
men who had managed to escape Hungary after the invasion by the U.S.S.R in
1956. I had seen, on the tiny old black-and-white T.V., the street fighting in
Budapest where these men, or others just like them, faced up to tanks with
nothing but a handful of rocks. We found them strange, these dark brooding
silent men who emitted such an unmistakable air of rage. They never bragged, or
even mentioned, anything they had done in defense of their homeland.  If they talked at all it was of nothing but
their hatred of the Soviets and their endless innumerable plans to free Hungary
and return home. They hated England, and refused to offer any sliver of
gratitude for the free college education they were taking advantage of at that
very moment. We didn’t like them. They were unfriendly. They were no fun. They
were freeloaders. Then I slowly formed a friendship with one of them, and was
forced to dig deeper and learn. Domonkos needed a lot of help
understanding our mutilated professor’s lectures, and I somehow fell into
spending time going over every class with him. Usually this was in a coffee
shop or pub, and slowly his entire story came out. He himself had not been one
of those tossing stones at tanks. He had tried to protect his mother and
sisters but instead was made to watch while they were raped and then shot. His
father had died in Auschwitz in 1945. His mother and sisters and he, had for
some reason been taken to Mauthausen, from which they were liberated at the end
of the war; only for the women to die at the hands of the Soviets in 1956. Was
all this true? I had no way of knowing, but I had no reason to doubt it. It
didn’t seem to matter. This young man had clearly suffered from terrible
traumas, no matter the details.
He
told me similar stories of his fellow Hungarians students, until I was numb to
the horror of his tales. Numb in a sense, yes, but he also forced me to wake
up. I and my friends found these men boring? They were no fun?
How much fun would we be, under such circumstances? In all honesty, I could not
warm to them as a group, nor even to Domonkos himself. But through them I
learned to look below the surface; to see perhaps why people act as they do. To
care for them, to empathize, despite no real affection or liking. To try to be
quicker to understand and slower to judge.
Then
came adulthood and, at the age of 26, marriage. My husband was not a silent man
like my father, nor was he terribly loud and verbose. He did not have my
teacher’s energy and passion, but he worked and played hard enough. He
certainly was not Hungarian-style hating and morose. He was really a pretty
average guy doing his best, but with my homosexuality lurking around, rising ever
closer to the surface, the marriage was doomed from the beginning. It was the
final chapter of my book of learning that if you are not true to yourself you
simply cannot bring happiness to others. My poor husband inadvertently taught
me that.
Not
long after we married, his four children unexpectedly came to live with us.
Once over the shock, I coped pretty well, and step-motherhood became a positive
experience for me and for the children, three of whom were boys. Over the
years, they became new men in my life. I know parents cannot have favorites,
but I say that’s one of the advantages of the step- relationship.
I
truly think I didn’t show it, but my oldest step-son was my favorite. I loved
all four kids, and they loved me, but I adored Dale. As did many many people.
He could charm anyone; girls, boys, men, women, neighbors and friends, teachers
and police. What defenses could a helpless step-mother employ? Sadly, this very
charm turned on him and did him evil rather than good. He was born to trouble,
it seemed, and he almost invariably charmed his way out of its consequences,
and so led him deeper down the wrong path. The real trouble, which no-one can
talk themselves a way out of, was serious unrepenting un-recovering alcoholism.
This became manifest in his early teens and lasted all his life, which
predictably was short. He died a few years ago at the age of fifty. I was
heartbroken, although he had not been in touch with any of his family for a
long time so the hole he had dug in my heart was nothing new. It had been there
for many years.
After
my divorce, I still worked mainly with men so I did not register an absence of
men in my life even after my social life morphed to consist mainly of lesbians
and straight female friends. Post-divorce, I tried to keep up some male
friendships but straight men all know that a divorcee is looking for only one
thing. It was hopeless. After I was out to the world, I foolishly imagined this
might change, but straight men all know what it takes to cure a lesbian. It was
hopeless.
When
Betsy and I moved in together we found both of us equally missed the rumble of
men’s voices in the house; in our lives. We both like men. We looked around.
The answer stared us in the face; gay men. They had no interest in
whatever divorcees were after or what it took to cure lesbians. But hold your
horses! Not so easily done. Looked at objectively, where is the attraction? Gay
men and women are the ones not drawn to each other. So – you need a
catalyst; something to attract both, other than each other. Betsy joined a gay
tennis group where we did make a few male friends, but as she was the only
woman who ever belonged, it slowly fizzled out.
The
Center was, of course, our salvation, and especially this group. We now are
grateful to have many men in our lives with whom to share laughter and tears,
anger and celebration, memorials and hospital visits and parties.
I
love the men in my life.
I
always have.
© 28 Mar 2016 
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.

From God to Santa Claus by Gillian

If you grew up when most of
us here did, in the nineteen-thirties or ‘forties, practically every figure of
influence and power, from God to Santa Claus, was male. Oh sure there was Mom,
and maybe some other female family members; even possibly a teacher, nurse, or
some kind of social worker in the traditionally female nurturing/caring roles.
But the police, firemen, ministers, lawyers, doctors, drivers, sports figures,
business owners, politicians, bankers, musicians and artists, etc etc, were
almost exclusively male, with one or two rare exceptions.
When today’s topic of The
Women in My Life came up, I expected to bore you all some more with ravings
about My Beautiful Betsy – and not that she is not deserving of it – but a
couple of weeks ago the topic Sports brought me to a different approach. Many
women talked about the bond they had developed with their fathers over sports.
Or maybe it was the bond they had developed with sports through their fathers!
And not to denigrate father-daughter relationships, but I was struck by the
lack of mothers or even grandmothers. They simply did not figure. They were not
there. So I am going to talk about the leitmotif which seems to have followed
me – Women (not) in My Life.
I have written before about
my mother, but in case anyone has been woefully remiss and not memorized every
word I’ve ever written, I’ll repeat it briefly as she was the first woman who
was not in my life; not in the way I wanted and needed her to be, at least.
There was some unidentifiable something that came between us. It left a
gap; a space. She wasn’t with me. Children intuit things but cannot
possibly explain them, even to themselves. Much later in my life, a
psychiatrist interpreted this all for me and I think she had got it right. It feels
right to me.
In my teens my aunt told me
my parents had had two children who died before I was born. At ages I think two
and three, they died of meningitis in 1940. My mother, the therapist
postulated, could not bare the prospect of a repeat of such pain, so she didn’t
allow herself to be as close to me as she doubtless would have been otherwise.
That explained so much. I loved my mother and she loved me. I was never in
doubt of that, but nevertheless she was, in some sense, not in my life.
As far back as I can
remember, decades before I came out even to myself, I have always been in love
with some female figure in my life. Only one at a time. Even in my fantasy
world I was seriously, if serially, monogamous. They were wonderful friends but
were never in my life the way I wished they were; needed them to be. Of
course I only recognized this at some deeply buried subliminal level, so I
didn’t even give them the chance to be what I only dreamed of. Those with whom
I am still in contact were, when I told them of my long-ago love, flattered
rather than horrified. I seem to have chosen wisely, these women who were not
in my life!
I don’t think I have ever
met a lesbian who was not at some stage in love with her gym teacher. I am no
exception. But I was a pudgy un-athletic child who did not impress her at all.
I played on the high school
field hockey and tennis teams only because it was a very small school requiring
all hands to the wheel. I enjoyed both, probably mostly due to my infatuation,
lapping up her gentle criticism as I would have praise from my other teachers.
When she married the geography teacher I was broken hearted, but then she never
was really in my life.
Growing up in England, I had
certain female role models absent in the U.S. When I was nine, the king died
and Queen Elizabeth ascended the throne. She’s been there ever since and seems,
as I’m sure it must to Prince Charles, destined to live forever. Previous
queens, Elizabeth the First and Victoria, lived long and reigned well. Women in
power were nothing new. But they had been born to it. That’s the only way you
get there! You don’t think, as a “commoner” in Britain, maybe I
should work towards being queen when I grow up!
Maggie Thatcher, of  course, did spring from common stock. I could
admire the position she had; the power she had taken. But her politics were not
mine. The family I had still remaining in Britain despised her. She was a role
model in some sense, perhaps, but she was not in my life: nor would I want her
to be.
Even the musicians and
artists of the day were overwhelmingly male. Come on, I know you can rattle off
half a dozen world-famous male landscape or portrait painters. How many women
can you name?
Ah, but the times they are
a-changing!
In 1970 only 10% of doctors
in the U.S. were women. Now the number is over 30%, with women making up half
of the students in Medical School. The percentage of women in the legal
profession these days is much the same. After the recent mid-term election,
there will be more women in Congress than ever before. (One of the few good
things to come from that election, sadly) There is no longer any shortage of
women athletes. When I grew up, we would have considered it a joke if anyone
had prophesied that within our lifetimes we would watch women’s teams competing
in soccer, and all the way up to the Olympics. Coaching is rather a different
story. Many women, in teams or in individual sports, employ male rather than
female coaches, something I find hard to understand. Many in individual sports
are coached by their fathers, but only occasionally by mothers. And as for
women coaching men, well……. But there are a few examples even of that, one
very notable. Brit. tennis champion Andy Murray, winner of Wimbledon and an
Olympic gold medal, was originally coached by his mother and is currently
coached by Amelie Mauresmo, an openly lesbian French tennis champion. Some
changes are slow in coming. Women currently hold only 5% of Fortune 500
companies’ CEO positions. But it will come. Hard as the Republicans might try
to push women’s rights back into the Dark Ages, I cannot believe they will
succeed. We have come too far and fought too long to go back now.
I feel the loss of the many
women (not) in my life, but they are in fact still with me, if in some cases only
in memory, and the relationship I have with them now is genuine, real, in a way
it never could be before. One of the women I was madly in love with for years,
remains my closest friend as she has been for almost fifty years. We love each
other like sisters and there are no longer all those confused emotions on my
part to complicate our love. My mother is still with me. She always will be. I
hear her chuckle at some silliness – she had a great sense of humor. And now at
least I have a little understanding of the flaw in our relationship, and the
reason for it, I accept that it was not about me, so I am free of the
many negative, confused, emotions it once visited upon me.
My latest loss of a female
is that of Brunhilda! She, as most of you know, was our VW camper van which we
drove over 100,000 miles around this country. She, Betsy, and I, had a little menage
a trois
for 15 years. Sadly the old girl got battered and worn out and way
too expensive to maintain so it was time to say goodbye. But the story ends
happily. She went to live with a man who restores these beasts. So after a
while, with new hips and knees and a heart transplant, she’ll be in better
shape than any of us. And perhaps, as she remains with us only in memory, we
will learn in fact to love her more. Because in real time there were more than
a few occasions when I came close to wishing she was one of those women (not)
join my life. It was something of a stormy relationship, to say the least! Now
we can just gaze fondly at our photographs and see her through those
rose-colored glasses we all tend to favor as the years go by. And all those
women once (not) in my life slide quietly into their correct, comfortable, and
comforting, places, whether in my life or only in my memory.
© 27 November 2014
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.