Hunting, by Gillian

The
first game I remember playing in my life was ‘Hunt the Thimble’. My mother
introduced me to it when I was, I suppose, about three. The thimble had
originally belonged to my great-grandmother, and was made of silver worn almost
paper-thin by generations of use. To me it seemed the most wonderous,
brilliantly-shining object I had ever seen.
I
loved it, and was consequently brought to tears when Mum told me she had hidden
it and I had to find it. The glorious object was gone; the responsibility of
having to find it too great. No doubt puzzled at my reaction, she set about
joining me in the supposed search, and in no time we found it. We did it a
second time, together, after which I had grasped the concept. I willingly
covered my eyes for the third time of hiding, and said something like, No!
Me!
when my mother made to join me in the search. I was into it now. The
game was on.
We
played that game endlessly, until I was in fact much too old for it – 25 or 26.
No, no, just joking, more like 5 or 6, but still an age by which I probably
should have outgrown it. Looking back, I rather think I had but my mother had
not.
After
a couple of days of my being the lone seeker, she suggested I hide it
for her to find. Ooh, fun! Thereafter we alternated hider and seeker,
she being every bit as thrilled as I to hunt for and eventually find the
gleaming beauty.
She
loved either role, exhibiting as much excitement when I neared the hiding place
as if I was approaching the end of the rainbow with its proverbial pot of gold.
We both played our own games within the game. Sometimes, the hiding place was
too easy. Almost immediately I started the hunt, I caught the gleam of
highly-polished silver from behind Mom’s tea cup. I feigned blindness and faked
a continued search for some time, so as not to curtail my mother’s pleasure.
Once or twice, my search went on too long, the hiding place too clever, and I
became irritated. Then Mum would say she had forgotten where she put it and
would join me in the search, and it was fun again.
I
grew tired of ‘Hunt the Thimble’. We, just the two of us, had played it too
often for too long. But Mum so enjoyed it. How could I disappoint her? It was a
small price to pay. I continued to play; to fake the challenge of the hunt and
the thrill of discovery.
And
so, with this innocent toddler game, began two things. It was the start of the
strangely reversed role I had, for the rest of my life, with my mother. I took
care of her needs, rather than the reverse. Even as a child I read to her, I
let her win at card games, I made her tea, I tucked her up in bed. I was the
parent; she the child.
Another
pattern began with ‘Hunt the Thimble’. 
As I outgrew the game ahead of my mother, I began my acting career. I
pretended emotions I did not feel, desires I did not have, and continued to do
that extremely well for the next 40-odd years of my life. That innocent bit of
‘pretend’ in a childhood game grew into an ability to fake a completely
artificial heterosexual identity for decades. Such mighty oaks from tiny acorns
grow. The reversed roles shared by my mother and me were never to be corrected.
They were too deeply entrenched. But at least I eventually managed to retire
from acting to live, finally, happily, as the person I was born to be.
© September 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.

Hunting, by Betsy

I am a hunter. I’ve been hunting all my life, at least for that bit of my life that is within memory, I have been hunting for some answers to some very basic questions. I’ve had my sight set for different targets at different stages of my life. But the answers to the more profound questions almost always elude me. Just like the hunter and its prey. Sometimes I get a glimpse of an answer, only to have it disappear until the next time I seek it out, until one day I hit the target—an answer evolves which satisfies me.

Early in life I sought an answer to the question “Where do we come from?” Lately I’ve been asking “Where do we go when we die—where do I go when I die? Do we all go the same place? My current belief is that we go back to where we came from, which is—I don’t know where. Seems logical. So that question cannot be answered really, that is, we can’t know the answer to that question, hence the belief.

Early in life I asked “What is the purpose of my life?” Lately I ask “What is the purpose of any life? Still stalking an answer to that one.

Earlier I asked “What is my place in the universe?” Lately I ask “What is the place of our solar system in a seemingly infinite universe?” Then I ask “Is the universe infinite?” When I learn that the latest information tells us our universe—just as our galaxy—was born and is dying and does have an end, I realize I have no more questions on that subject. I guess a new universe will be born when this one dies—just like stars, galaxies, and solar systems.

Early in life I asked, “Who am I?” Lately I have come to realize the answer to that question changes daily—evolves with each passing day. I also realize that early in life I did not look inside for the answer to who am I, I looked totally to others for not just clues but for answers. Later in mid-life I started looking in a much better place—looking inside myself.

I don’t spend a lot of time searching out answers to these mysteries of life. Because I realize the answers for most people are held in beliefs. Most of these questions cannot be answered empirically. They are only answered by taking the leap of faith and holding a belief. Early in my life I did that. Lately I have not taken the leap. For some reason I don’t feel the need.

In the meantime, I will continue to fill my day with questions I do have answers for; such as,

“Shall I do the laundry today? Shall I water the garden? What shall I eat? What can I come up with on the topic of ‘HUNTING’ for our meeting today?”

Here’s a good question and I often spend a whole day hunting for the answer: “What can I do to bring some joy into the world today. What can I do to enhance my honey’s day?” These are two good everyday questions. Their answers are also worth a good hunt.

© 26 September 2016

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.

Hunting, by Ray S

Here is my
pathetic hunting story. I have told you all several stories before of my states
of extreme self pity. I was so very sure I must have been an unwanted adopted
child. This attitude became most evident when members of the family realized
that their social or vacation plans became complicated by the need to figure
out what to do with the Boy Child.
Everyone’s
Saturday night plans were such that the low man on the totem pole turned out to
be the Big Brother who had plans to spend the evening with a lady friend,
evidently deemed of great romantic potential. Could anything dampen one’s plans
better than having to take the Little Brother along on the date of a maybe
lifetime? But the parents had plans for that night too, and they took seniority
precedence.
After
arriving at the home of Brother’s amore, they settled the child in with
necessary coloring books (this story predates TV) and the funny papers, and
warned him to stay put while they stepped out for a brief journey to a local
ice cream parlor, or so they said.
As I
previously described to you the glorious degree of ‘poor me’ took command.
After obediently wearing out the box of Crayolas and memorizing the Tribune’s
comics, a decision was arrived at by His Nibs: “I will show them. I’ll run away
and they will find me never, never, never!” In this instance the open road
consisted of several neighborhood blocks dimly lit by an occasional street
lamp.
Eventually
the spirit of revolt lost some of its motivation and maybe it was time to
return to the frenzied desperate arms of the would-be guardians. Only then did
the forsaken one realize that after searching and hunting for Young Lady’s
house, His Nibs was lost.
Sitting on
the street curb, two fists rubbing away the tears from two sad and maybe
repentant eyes, he looked up to his side at a tall blue-uniformed man. The man
reached down for a little arm and softly said, “Come with me, I’ll take you
home.”
© 26 September 2016  
About the Author 

Hunting, by Pat Gourley

I lived on a farm in Northern Indiana until the age of
sixteen. Though we were as far as you could be from the toxic reality of
today’s factory farms there certainly were plenty of animals raised that met
their demise at the hands of various family and extended family members
directly or indirectly. By indirectly I mean we sold and loaded plenty of
animals into trucks that were headed for the local slaughterhouse.
I learned to kill chickens with an axe from my mother who
emphasized not letting the headless bird flop all around and spray all the
younger siblings and cousins lined up watching the slaughter with chicken blood.
I was quite good at it. This is something I cannot for the life of me imagine
myself doing today. Any backyard chickens that I might have in the future would
live to ripe old ages dying from chicken heart attacks or falling prey to a
local fox or coyote.
For whatever reason, there were no hunters in my immediate
family. There was one Uncle nearby who did some hunting but that was mostly for
rabbits and pheasants.  I can to this day
hear my aunt complaining about trying to get all the buckshot out of the poor
rabbit before cooking it. She also made a delicious rabbit gravy as I recall
and that was worth biting down on the occasional piece of buckshot missed in
the cleaning.
The closest I can remember my dad ever came to hunting was
one winter when he had hurt his back and was told, incorrectly in those days,
that bed-rest was required to heal the sprain. The bedroom had a window that
looked out over the backyard and onto a corncrib. This crib was made of fencing
that allowed the grain to thoroughly dry out and not get moldy but still exposed
the ears of corn. From that vantage point he could see rats scurrying about and
munching away on all his hard work. So, he took to shooting the varmints out
the bedroom window with a 12-gauge shotgun missing more often that not.
I myself had a very short period of attempting to hunt
rabbits around the age of 12 or 13 with a small caliber long gun I think that
was called a 410-shotgun. Despite hours of traipsing through the snow no
rabbits lost their lives at my hand.
Once we moved from Indiana to north of Chicago there was even
less hunting by folks on our neighboring farms than there had been in Indiana.
We were really only a mile or two from being Chicago suburbanites and random
gunshots not something the neighbors would have appreciated.
There was a woman name Margaret though in the farm next to
ours who I became fast friends with due in large part to our similar political
views. We loved talking politics for long hours denigrating everything
Republican. She did though have a very efficient way of killing chickens every
spring. She would tie them up and suspend them by their feet, about a dozen at a
time, from her clothesline. She would then quickly march down the line with a
sharp butcher knife severing heads cleanly and efficiently. I know this may
sound gross to you but do remember that the burger or chicken breast you enjoy
today did not get to your plate as a result of the animal committing suicide.
As I began to get in touch with my queer nature, especially
from age 16 on, anything to do with hunting or people who engaged in it really faded
from my life. I know absolutely no other queer person I am aware of today who
hunts. There is one straight man occasionally in my life who does hunt and that
is for sport not a need for food. 99.9% of the animal killing for food these
days is done in very inhumane slaughterhouses mostly by exploited immigrant
labor far from our eyes. It then appears magically in the meat sections of
grocery stores neat, tidy and wrapped in cellophane.
Harry Hay was a very adherent vegetarian for the entire 20
plus years I knew him and long before that. He was fond of saying, when asked
about whether he ever ate meat or not, that it would only be if he personally knew
the cow. This always seemed to imply also that one really should know intimately
whom they are eating and that they had done the killing and butchering
themselves.
I think this would be a splendid plan for all meat-eaters to
do their own slaughtering. I imagine this would end much of the cruel factory
farming and vastly increase the number of vegetarians and vegans. This would
then go a long way toward saving the planet by helping to reverse global
warming. Remember there is virtually nothing we as individuals can do to impact
climate change more than to refrain from eating any animal product. Hunting
these days should really only involve looking for a good sale on kale.
© 25 Sep
2016
 
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. 

Hunting, by Ricky

I am always hunting. Usually it is for my next meal. Often, it is for ice cream. Sometimes, it is for a cheap gas station. Occasionally, I’ll hunt for a traveling companion. Once I hunted squirrels, but gave it up after the time I shot a squirrel high in a tree. The squirrel fell down landing “spread eagle” practically at my feet followed two seconds later by the branch he had been sitting on. Whereupon, the squirrel jumped up, looked at me with those big squirrel eyes as if to say, “How could you?”, and ran away. I decided I wasn’t much of a mighty squirrel hunter, if all I could bag was the branch he was sitting on.

I gave up all animal hunting for good on the night some friends and I were “spot lighting” jack rabbits in the Nevada desert. I had shot one but not a clean kill and it lay on the ground squealing. I tried to put it out of its misery from a short distance away but kept missing. I finally had to walk up to it, look into its eyes while I pulled the trigger. My heart broke and I gave up the thrill of killing animals. Spiders and snakes are another matter.

I even have an on-again-off-again passion to hunt for my ancestors to keep my genealogy moving backwards. I frequently have to hunt for a public or private place where I can be naked soaking in hot water alone or with a friend. The soaking is not always required as I often just contemplate nature’s eye candy.

My absolute favorite hunting activity is to locate a really good pun or good clean jokes like: 

Why do sharks swim in salt-water? Because they sneeze too much in pepper water. 
What did the chicken write in her diary? “Dear Diary, today I crossed the road, yet I have no idea why.”

Don’t you wish we lived in a society where a chicken can cross the road and no one questions her motives?

© 26 September 2016

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 began living 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 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

Confessions of an Agoraphobe, by Louis

Since I come from an urban environment, I really cannot comment on rural mostly men going out into the woods and shooting animals. In bygone years, the hunter would kill the animal, decapitate it, take the head to a taxidermist who would stuff the head with cotton or Styrofoam, and the hunter would hang the animal head on his living room wall as a trophy or decoration. How sick is that?

Hunting means to me gay men cruising. The most extreme adventure I had with cruising was getting arrested for public lewdness in a public bathroom in Pennsylvania Railroad Station on 34th Street and 8th Avenue in Manhattan, New York City. This was about 35 years ago. I have noticed Penn Station is on the news almost 7 days a week. Now with the bombing on nearby West 23 Street, we see even more of Penn Station. For years I worked in a social services office on nearby west 28 Street and 8th Avenue.

Nevertheless, I found getting on my Long Island Railroad car every evening to return home a somewhat traumatic experience. Ordinarily, I am a timid civilized person who would not dream of carrying on in a public bathroom. But one evening, I had an attack of agoraphobia, which the dictionary defines as a fear of public spaces. What it really is is a fear of crowds.

My rational civilized self told me that it is logical and normal that very large numbers of people are racing about to catch their trains, to board them before the scheduled moment of departure. But evidently I had another creature inside me that said these were not people going about their business, this was a life-threatening mob engaged in a riot. Walking about in these mobs, I became very confused, I felt threatened. I felt blood rise into my neck and head. In a daze I went to the Men’s room and did some unmentionable things. I sort of reverted to what Rousseau would have called the state of nature.

You smile at a guy you like, he smiles at you. You do what you have to get him excited and interested. And vice versa. And if it weren’t the public bathroom, you would then go at it and have a roll in the hay. Unfortunately for me, a police undercover cop caught me being naughty and arrested me, even putting handcuffs on and taking me to the nearby police office in the station. The handcuffs were metal (not the soft plastic), and my hands were behind my back.

When the rather good-looking cop interviewed me, I told him I got confused and I asked him if he did not ever get confused walking in the midst of the crowds at Pennsylvania Station. He said no. As time passed, the cop noticed I was amused at my situation and was even enjoying what could be seen as skin flick fantasy. The cop told me originally I would have to go to court in about two weeks and answer the charge of public lewdness.

About an hour later, the cop told me that his superior decided to drop the charges, and the record of the charges would be expunged. I was free to go. Informally, he told me that, when the police captain perused the contents of my wallet, he noticed I had several church membership cards (they were gay churches in my case), and so he concluded I was a solid citizen. So he decided in my favor.

The moral of this story is that, though we like to think our civilized personas are in control, and usually they are, if threatened, we all have a more animalistic self inside of ourselves that will act like an animal if going by the rules becomes too constraining or threatening.

© 20 September 2016

About the Author

I was born in 1944, I lived most of my life in New York City, Queens County. I still commute there. I worked for many years as a Caseworker for New York City Human Resources Administration, dealing with mentally impaired clients, then as a social work Supervisor dealing with homeless PWA’s. I have an apartment in Wheat Ridge, CO. I retired in 2002. I have a few interesting stories to tell. My boyfriend Kevin lives in New York City. I graduated Queens College, CUNY, in 1967.

Hunting, by Will Stanton

I know a little about hunting,
but I have no first-hand experience.  So
I cannot speak from the perspective of an avid hunter.  I do have, however, my own thoughts about the
matter.
I know that, for millennia,
human beings were required to supplement their diet of fish, fruits, nuts, and
vegetables, with meat through hunting game. 
Eventually, nobles and the aristocracy turned hunting into a sport,
sometimes even declaring certain forests off-limits to the common folks under
threat of punishment for any trespass. 
Too often, this macho inclination to prove one’s manhood by killing
resulted in the shooting of literally hundreds of birds or numerous animals
within a day.  Many so-called “hunting
lodges” of the nobility still sport the skulls and horns of thousands of slain
animals.  In theory, if I were to inherit
such a lodge, I would remove and dispose of all those morbid skulls.  Only relatively recently, the British
outlawed fox-hunts, a long-time tradition among the British aristocracy.
Only in more recent times in
history, with the development of domestically raised animals, has modern man
been able to sustain life without hunting. 
Understandably, people living in homesteads outside of urban areas
continued the tradition of hunting, even if game actually was not a necessary
component of their food-source.  I also
do recognize the occasional necessity of culling herds of wild animals that
have become so overabundant that they threaten their environment or even their
own species.
But, I also recognize in
America that this so-called hobby became combined with some people’s love of
guns, a phenomenon that has resulted in this country’s gun-collectors
possessing nearly four hundred million firearms.  So, among people of today who are avid
hunters and gun-collectors, the phenomenon of hunting is deeply entrenched in
our society.
As
for me, whose hunting is limited to the isles of the local food-market, I
sometimes look askance at those people whose love of guns and hunting seems to me
to be overly passionate.  I, myself, have
a passion for the beauty of nature, for the exercise of wandering through the
woods and bathing in the beauty of the environment.  I do not, however, feel a compulsive need to
shoot and kill things while I am enjoying nature.  For modern society, I do not see learning how
to hunt as an absolute necessity for obtaining manhood.  And, I never have had the slightest interest
in joining the NRA.

That’s
why I was amused when a 1961 New Yorker magazine-cover sported an autumnal,
Charles Adams cover showing an illegal hunter trespassing in a bird sanctuary and
being flown off in the clutches of a giant pterodactyl.
Also, as a consequence of my
personal discomfort with the concept of hunting as a sport, I understand and
appreciate the satirical “Hunting Song” written more than half-a-century ago by
Tom Lehrer, the humorist who was an apparently ambivalent academic who seemed
to prefer to write funny songs.  So, here
is his “Hunting Song.”            
I’ll always will remember,
’twas a year ago November,
I went out to hunt some deer
On a mornin’ bright and clear.
I went and shot the maximum the game laws would allow:
Two game wardens, seven hunters, and a cow.

I was
in no mood to trifle,
I took down my trusty rifle
And went out to stalk my prey.
What a haul I made that day.
I tied them to my fender,
and I drove them home somehow,
Two game wardens, seven hunters, and a cow.

The law was very firm, it
Took away my permit,
The worst punishment I ever endured.
It turned out there was a reason,
Cows were out of season,
And one of the hunters wasn’t insured.

People ask me how I do it,
And I say, “There’s nothin’ to it,
You just stand there lookin’ cute,
And when something moves, you shoot!”
Ten heads are stuffed and mounted in my trophy room right now,
Two game wardens, seven hunters, and a pure-bred Guernsey cow.
© 25 May 2016  
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.