White

I miss snow. There. I said it.

I could also add with a snicker, that I appreciate a good nine inches, but I won’t.

It’s late October in South Florida. It’s still touching, if not hitting with both fists, the 90’s, and I am exhausted by the extreme heat. I am sweating before I can enter a store from the parking lot. I never feel clean, especially “down there”. The house never quite cools (one of the perils of a flat roof and young trees that don’t provide enough shade). So, when I see snow falling on The Weather Channel in some state I’d rather take a public floggin than reside in, I get mad.

Know this: I do not miss wading titty-deep into snow to fetch my morning newspaper. Or the shoveling. Or the salt. Or falling (a new peril now that I am verifiably in my 50’s). Or Winter’s caked detritus encasing the lower 1/3 of my car. Watching tree branches snap under the weight of an ice storm….road slide-offs…air so cold your exhale lodges in your lungs and removes to budge…I yearn for none of those.

But I miss steady, silent snow. More, I miss the change of seasons. Florida veterans insist we have those, and I see evidence. Some foliage sheds. Lawns slow and lose their effervescent green. The average temperature will, at some point, drop, and the threat of Hurricanes will dissipate into recycled reminder footage of Michael. The sun shifts and I am again receptive to an adult beverage on our screened porch.

But it never feels like Winter. I am not unaware that is why many relocate here: to escape the darkness and extreme weather of November-March. Christmas shopping always feels off-kilter (even though, contrary to popular belief, most retail Santas don’t wear shorts or sunglasses in South Florida decor).

It’s a conundrum. Life itself is based around cycles — restfulness, resurgence, quiet, cataclysm — and it feels as though I am robbed of that dormancy. Every day should NOT be a party or at least receptive to one due to climate. Sometimes, it’s nice just “to chill”, and down here, that never seems to happen.

Straighten Him Out

As I was watching the HBO documentary ‘Jane Fonda In 5 Acts’, and her acknowledgement of her upbringing’s effect on her, I could not help but recall my own.

Mine was certainly not privileged or celebrated like the Fonda household, and by no means as dysfunctional — Henry was cold and critical and adulterous, Jane’s mother battled depression and mental illness, tried to ignore her husband’s infidelities and ultimately slit her own throat, something kept from Jane for years — but I am certainly the product of how I was raised.

Aren’t we all?

This isn’t a declaration of blame. I am not big on psychiatry that lays every phobia, neuroses and anxiety at the feet of parents who, by and large, did their best in an era/ circumstances that were a constant challenge. My own parents imprudently had me at 19, had no money, no advanced education and no newborn primer, just advice from well-meaning relatives who carried their own baggage. My paternal grandparents were humorless Germans; my grandfather beat his children mercilessly, often lining them up when he returned from time away and strapping them “just because”. I recall no embraces or kisses from them. All I could smell was their fear. They rarely answered the door and they hung thin strips of torn cloth at the sides of blinds to prevent passersby from seeing in. My maternal grandparents embraced the Baptist Church a little too strenuously and my grandmother lost her mind routinely, deciding she’d been struck lame and refusing to walk or that Satan himself was sitting cross-legged atop the television set and tempting her. She underwent electric shock in the late 1950’s and attempted suicide more than once. Yet, to me, they were loving and kind…but my mother grew up in what was essentially a sanitarium, returning from high school many times to watch her own mother literally carted away by men in white. It wasn’t the most stable environment.

And that’s what they brought forward. My parents did their level best in a modest home with modest means. We three kids were very different. Me, bookish and effeminate; the middle child, my brother, athletic and popular but troubled by self-esteem demons at a very young age; and my sister, the youngest, Daddy’s Little Girl who became an adolescent hellcat. Sometimes, my parents handled things poorly. This is not a confessional that will shock my mother, still living; I have told her so and, while pained, she grudgingly acknowledged my feelings on the topic. “We’d never raised kids before!” she exclaimed, rightfully so. I cannot second-guess their decisions, since their working class finances, a narrow mentality, my father’s reliance on alcohol as an anesthetic and a certain level of small town ignorance dictated their comportment. I have no children of my own, but I am certain I would have made my own parenting missteps, and they might have been monumental.

But, oddly, one memory bubbled up after I watched the documentary, and it concerns my mother. It’s not a suppressed or buried memory. It’s always there. I choose not to anaylyze it, like many others. I tend to compartmentalize; I visualize a series of drawers and I carefully tri-fold the unpleasant into one of them before firmly closing it. It’s a coping mechanism that works for me. Dwelling on past injustices isn’t the kind of scab I want to pick. When I do open one of those drawers, it’s on my terms.

I was 9, perhaps 10. A neighbor on the street where I grew up was large, loud and on the public dole, with three illegitimate children in a fatherless, filthy home. Wilma, in her floral housedress with the belt loops cut off, was the block’s know-it-all, although her own life was bursting to the seams with bad decisions. No one liked her, including my family, since their domicile was an eyesore even to the blind and had a collection of “rough” friends. They really weren’t welcome in our home, so it was immediately perplexing when WIlma shuffled a nephew or cousin, roughly my age, to our front porch with bad intentions. Mom invited them in. I said “hi” and shyly hung back; I preferred my bedroom, books and record player to meeting new boys with dirty knuckles.

And then, as my mother sat there, Wilma proposed we wrestle. “That’s what boys do and Rod needs to act like a boy. He prances around too much” I remember the words. I didn’t act like a boy? Prance? Like, on my tippy-toes? I didn’t play with dolls or teacups. I peed standing. Rather than defend me, to my astonishment, my mother agreed to this wrestling match. “Fight him, Rod!’ I was expected to have a rough-and-tumble with a boy I’d never met, right there, on the celery-green and sculpted living room carpet.

Suffice to say, it didn’t go well. I didn’t know workarounds when pinned and I had never twisted someone else’s arm intentionally. I came away with several rug burns and malevolent triumph in Wilma’s narrow eyes. She had proven it: I was more flower than football. I think my Mom agreed to all of this hoping that a wrestling match, something alien to me, would advance me toward behaving like a normal boy, or at least convince this neighbor with self-cut bangs that I was. I had been defeated. I was a sissy, weak and bound to be victimized my whole life. I don’t recall how I managed to leave the room but I did, and I cried in self-pity — probably a dramatic monologue into my tape recorder, as I was wont to do — at my surrender to a clear enemy. I didn’t feel safe in my house and I didn’t feel a mother’s protection. I wanted Wilma to die, and her three fat bastard brats, too.

It’s a meaningless and menial memory…maybe. This wasn’t about practicing a firm handshake, learning how to tie a tie or even a father’s birds n’ bees lecture to a son. This was about brute force, strength, winning through not wile but hurting someone until they cried “Uncle!” I bear my mother no malice. She was and is no sophisticate. Both she and my father, rather than discouraging fighting, had impressed upon me that I should always hit back. Calm discussion, a truce, those weren’t a family option. The worse thing, my father instructed, was to be “called a sonofabitch, which is an insult to your mother, and anyone who says that to you on a playground, you should hit them in the mouth, even if the school punishes you for it.” It’s like they were prepping me for a career in boxing. So my mother probably decided on-the-spot that wrestling WAS a good idea, a way to quickly bond with another boy my age. I don’t comprehend or agree with this line of thought, but hey, parents do worse damage to their kids and for all I know, the other boy was just as confused as we breathlessly rolled on the floor, our knees and elbows and chins colliding.

Watching Ms. Fonda, in her own sad but pragmatic words, bravely process how her childhood brought forth bulimia, misguided rebellion, many warped attempts to mold herself to the men in her life (and this she was still doing when married to Ted Turner) and ultimately, acceptance, I remembered that life’s long journey can be shaped by other people’s roadmaps or your own. I found my own. I ignored my Dad’s invocation to “get a skill, goddamn it, that means something, and tuck in your shirt, it’s more masculine, goddamn it” and went to college on a Journalism scholarship with scant help from them…I met a man whose smile made me happy and kept my parents at arm’s length until they understood I was happy and safe, employed and even finding a measure of succes in advertising…I never once asked for advice, because I intuited that it would be safe and no-risk and their decision for me would be to relocate my stifling hometown and live on their street.

So Jane Fonda’s story gave me permission to open one of those drawers. And now, I close it again.

Self-Destruct

There’s been a recent spate of suicides in the community I once lived in — Key West, Florida — and with those has come the rush of anger, guilt and tremendous sadness. It’s not something unique to Southernmost Florida, obviously, but the dark underbelly of living in a state of constant Summer, where everyone assumes every sunset begets a fresh party (and where many live as though it is), takes a particular toll, especially after Hurricane Irma and its devastation to the Keys. I have never seen so many suicides in such a short window of time.

I’ve had several friends kill themselves. One classmate shot himself in a Missouri telephone booth as his horrified parents listened on the other end. But, most notably, there was the older male couple, both hair stylsts of fine repute in Indianapolis, Indiana with whom Greg and I were quite friendly throoughout the late 1980’s and early 90’s. We dined with them and vacationed with them and they mentored us. They introduced us to some of the finer things in life; they always had fresh and fragrant flowers and so I did, too. They even personally took me to a wholesaler to show me the best stems. They were also the dreaded restaurant guests who made multiple Friday night reservations and would decide last-minute what was the hippest place to be seen, cancelling all of the others; they would refuse any table near the kitchen or the bathrooms. Some of it was a little precious. We weren’t celebrities or wealthy and had no right to some of those expectations, but they wanted every moment to be uncompromised, to be special, and I admired that quest for excellence. When we hosted a rather large party with them, they alerted the press and a particularly-obnoxious “society” tabloid in Indianapolis, and I bristled, asking them to rescind the invitation, which they reluctantly did. As misguided as it was, I know they meant well. They wanted the evening memorialized and for others to envy us. They loved cosmetic procedures and would show off their new chin or refreshed eyes. We drove in a fierce snowstorm to Chicago to see the tryout of a Broadway musical and NOTHING would dissuade them, not even when we witnessed trucks literally sliding off the road into ravines. They always ordered dessert and they’d send wine to our hotel room for no good reason, except to start an evening in New York off properly. They were committed to “making memories.” One of their favorite phrases was “Isn’t this perfect, guys?” And it usually was.

As time passed and others came into our life, a baseless resentment and possessiveness grew . They openly called a new male couple, younger, in our radius “friend stealers” and would not be in their presence. The relationship dwindled due to their jealousy, plus our own growing discomfort at their covetous demonstrations. I didn’t understand why we couldn’t all play in the same gay sandbox. Wasn’t it more fun for 8 or 10 to invade a party or a male strip club together? I never had a clique in high school — I was a clique of one — and the prospect of having a genuine posse was a delight to me. But they wanted no part of it. Their calls and invitations were less frequent and their comments when we were together were passive/aggressive. We became uneasy about the inevitable confrontation. Maybe it was their age. They felt threatened by our younger friends. Or they genuinely felt abandoned and wronged. We probably could have navigated it with more sensitivity, but I resented the power grab they exerted. Had they mentored or had they “groomed” us? Had I missed a hidden agenda? Ultimately, they devolved into the two handsome men in black sunglasses in a lot of framed photographs and that is where they remained, frozen in time, on bookshelves or nightstands. We were cordial, not effusive, when we saw them but I got a personal Facebook message when my novel ‘The Cool Part of His Pillow’ was released, how proud they were, how they couldn’t wait to read it.

I don’t know if they did.

Shortly after that, we got a call that they had hanged themselves, together, in their library. For one, the rope broke, and he survived, only to do the same thing, alone and this time successfully, in less than a year’s time, in that same room in the same apartment.

We were devastated. They were no longer part of our radius, but many tears were shed. What had brought them to that moment? It was too difficult to contemplate, and still is, the image of them looking at each other in nooses, ready to step off a ladder or sit down very hard. (I don’t know the precise details, and don’t care to.) Rumors, of course, flew, intimations of drugs abuse, a financial calamity, a terminal illness. A few speculated that they simply didn’t want to face the infirmities and indignities of growing older and pointed out their vanity, the Botox, the dyed hair. Their codependency was obvious. Rarely would one do anything by himself. Perhaps this was their way of departing together, although it didn’t quite work out that way. I can only imagine the survivor guilt of the one who didn’t die, their spousal pact destroyed by a length of faulty rope, and how he bided his time until friends and family looked away long enough for him to buy more rope.

I can’t looked at those framed photos now. I have, in fact, replaced them all, but they’re still there, behind the new picture in the frame, a surprise reveal that occasionally takes my breath away when I switch out photographs. At a Halloween fundraiser party. Toasting at The Royalton in New York, which set our group back almost $200. Watching fireworks from their rooftop. For me, tragedy hangs over every single one of them. If they misguidedly presumed their dramatic deaths would confer immortality or some kind of legend, they were wrong. What I see is barely-there foreshadowing of their inevitable ending and I forget the laughs, the drunken shenanigans, the comportment they taught us by example. They robbed me of joy. They muddied memory. All I see are smiles hiding their grisly, unspeakable Plan #B and another shadow in the photo: The Grim Reaper.

The suicides of late have left me numb. I wasn’t acquainted with most of them, but I know people who knew and loved them, and they are shattered. Life will never quite be the same. Sometimes, vindictiveness IS the point: “I’ll show you. You’ll be sorry.” What a legacy. For others, it’s a deep and black well of despair they cannot climb out of, and the last thing they consider is the effect on others, or they assume others wil be better off when they are gone. I am no stranger to depression. It seems to roil in my DNA. My grandmother required electric shock in the 1950’s. Other relatives in my direct bloodline have experienced great periods of disruptive “melancholy”. My own brother, who battled his own demons, died too young from an excessive reliance on pharmaceuticals. But I have never experienced misery so all-consuming I wanted to make a permanent exit. Drive toward the horizon and disappear, if just for awhile? Hell yes. But there is always something to live for. My husband. My cats. My mother. My sister and her wife. I cannot pretend to understand suicide, but I try to say the right things, not blame the departed, to recognize warnings, to sensitively steer troubled folks toward counseling and intervention…but I can never quite shake the anger, the echo of “what a waste…what a fucking waste”.

Change

The recent announcement of the closure of 'The Village Voice',  a free mainstay of activist, participatory journalism, hit hard, and it started me on a reflection why these types of things inevitably leave me melancholy and a little disoriented. I hadn't read the 'Voice' in years, and I hadn't even glanced at its online presence once the print version succumbed.

When I was at Butler University (1979-1983) and didn't have two dimes to rub together, I still managed to subscribe to 'The Village Voice'. The back pages were crammed with raunchy sex ads. I remember one rather vivid profile of a performance artist in some ratholee who literally shot yams out of her/his ass. Crammed into my too-small student mailbox, the 'Voice' represented a weekly dream: to flee the Midwest, to go to New York, to live in the Village on an alphabet-named avenue and dodge those flying yams myself, to hopefully wrap myself in the glory of advertising, or maybe theater or publishing. I never did, and now I've outlasted the paper itself.

And I think that's the bigger issue.

I'm outlasting shit I never expected to. Without fanfare, my hometown elementary school was torn down. I hadn't planned a pilgrimage of tears, but that it was suddenly and brutally subtracted left a chasm in my childhood. It's gone. It's like they salted the earth where it stood. Nothing seems to grow there. I don't know even know why they tore it down, beyond its abandonment. It couldn't have been repurposed as affordable housing? The same for a bookstore where I felt welcome and nurtured as a kid -- Carroll's Card Shop, on Main Street, on the right side of the tracks (I lived on the wrong side of the town's railroad tracks), where I would read 'Variety' every week. I don't even know why, after awhile, they got this showbiz tabloid, it since it rarely sold. I strongly suspect the kind owners, Art, Helen and Jill, got that single copy from the distributor specifically for this awkward kid with few friends who hung around all the time.  The store closed, another victim claimed by Wal-Mart. And that's another sidebar rant: the community didn't even support its own. They went for the cheaper Christmas wrapping paper, bagged cashews and the marked-down paperbacks.

Antiquated buildings get torn down. I understand that. Business that are insolvent close. I've lost a few friends along the way: self-inflicted, cancer, car accident or just general good goddamn riddance. Relatives, too -- a Dad, a brother. Pets that were cherished. As difficult as those were, I processed those losses as the grim collateral damage of living a life. But when I gleefully hurry to my specialty store in Manhattan to find it too is gone -- Coliseum Books near Columbus Circle, Applause Bookstore, the Tower Records by Lincoln Center, Footlight Records in the Village, the wildly-overpriced Colony Records in Times Square  -- I am being robbed of Chapter headings in my life. My Table of Contents is being dismantled. It's like my past is being wiped clean and the future is uncertain, because these touchstones, as you grow older, are fewer. Everything is magic in youth...a sense of wonder. A few years and the Internet and access to everything has robbed the world of newness.

Maybe that's what I mourn: that inevitable collapse of discovery. Hearing doors slam behind me is an unnerving sound because I fear that with that soundtrack, my own possibilities dwindle, too.

 

A Great Motivator

Recently, a couple of friends on FACEBOOK have earnestly lamented how hate and blame have thwarted them from moving on. They wonder if it's somehow weak to forgive wrongdoers? Did they "give in" to the person who mistreated them by forgiving them? Yet, by doing so, they continue, only will they finally heal.

I say embrace that hate. Feelings are real and rarely betray us. Accept the damage done you. Acknowledge the loathing you feel. Those people who seared themselves into your brain with their nasty deeds probably deserve your hate, and they probably won't, or didn't, change all that much. 

For me, a hate has been a great motivator. Not corrosive hate. Not the type where you seek out voodoo dolls, drive-by stalk or wish harm, disfigurement, death. Oh, I've felt that, too...that kneejerk and immature response where you daydream about car accidents, crane collapses, slow-moving-but-painful-cancer. That particular layer of hate is counter-productive; you have surrendered even more power to those individuals to bring you more harm, to your soul, to your energy, to your night's rest.

I believe in a measure of forgiveness so I CAN forget, but it is never total. Some things remain inexcusable. I was treated very badly by some people. I was mocked. Told I wouldn't achieve even a measure of what I hoped. It was predicted that I, as a gay man, could not weather some of the storms of the business world. My husband were denied our first mortgage by a man in a too-short tie who clasped his hands over an ample belly and said a relationship like ours wasn't stable.

You can strip these kinds of memories and anecdotes of their ability to pick the scabs, to put it crudely. Some turn to religion. Some chant, run marathons or turn to prescribed help -- and there's nothing wrong with that. I also try to remember that Karma, is indeed a bitch, or maybe a bastard. We're not guaranteed the glee of seeing someone get their comeuppance but I do believe meanness is a boomerang, with sharp knives. I was reminded of this just today, so I make a small detour to explain how and why:

When I lived in Key West several years ago, there was a couple who, from our first introduction, had great disdain for me. We're talking Stinkface, if I approached. I had no idea why. Maybe it was because Greg and I had some means, a lovely home and looked happy.  They just didn't like me. I once greeted the stout one at a public event with a perfunctory "It's nice to see you" and he eplied, "I know" before walking away to join his partner, who resembled a weasel. They were grasping, pretentious, showed up at the opening of an envelope and would push themselves forward in photo ops. One teltale sign about them: neither could hold a job long, even though one made sure he was always noted as a Dr. in captions. (A doctorate in what, I still do not know.) Their mouths seemed to run far ahead of their skills or work ethic.  Not surprisingly, with most bridges burned, they left Key West, to what they assured everyone was greater glory elsewhere -- Tampa, I think. And now I see on Facebook they have mounted a GoFundMe to help get their car out of the shop. The cost is $1500. The narrative they weave is a sad one of transportation and mounting storage fes, but what it tells me is they have no savings. Can't they call a friend? A family member with a credit card? 

Were they humbled, posting this for the world to see and, hopefully, contribute to? Maybe, but I doubt it. They think it's their due.

Do I take great glee in this? Nah.  Nor do I fashion into some hybrid of motivation, becuse I never felt the need to impress them. I'm not even sure it is hate I feel, although they clearly despised me. Mostly, I was mystified at their dismissal. I have enough friends and I probably don't need more, but that they so clearly didn't want to be counted among them was confusing.  

I am a great proponent that everything in my life, the most glorious times and the most miserable moments, happened for a reason, and it formed who I am as of right now. They gave me strength, mettle, determination. I became defiant...probably more than I need to be. I certainly know my cyncism, if not sarcasm, was spawned by it. The key is surviving them as they happen.

Hate can help you survive, and even prevail.

Manicure

It's curious. Since I've started painting my nails black (to be precise, it's called Lincoln Park, and it's more eggplant, with an undertone of plum beneath the black), people address my hands. Store clerks, servers, friends. Is it because the sight of a man with painted nails is that peculiar? It's 2018, right? Or is it the color against my pale hands which, of course, reflects my disposition: not quite black? Am I Severus Snape? Marilyn Manson? Do I stir a cauldron somewhere?

Honestly, I don't know how women -- or drag queens, or other men who choose to paint their nails -- do it. There's all of this cuticle nonsense, soaking and pushing and softening. Dark colors chip so easily. I find myself being overly protective of my fingers, the way women in the 50's wore hairnets to bed to insulate their curls from muss. The lady who did my nails, Lilly, actually suggested I don gloves to cook. I laughed out loud. To garden, sure. Change a car tire (if I knew how), alrighty. But to stir marinara? And then I thought: wel, maybe this polish, as it flecks off, is toxic. Bits of it among the meatballs might be carcinogenic.

Lilly also inquired this time if I wanted a pedicure. I hastily replied no and probably looked stricken. I am not a foot man. There is no toe fetish in this home. I wear sandals -- it's Florida -- but they are for comfort, not for style, and I doubt I own a pair that retailed for more than $10. I also go barefoot a lot, and my soles have the same general consistency of the asphalt they trod. My attempts to trim my toenails are haphazard, at best; some might mistaken them for being gnawed-upon by an animal. And don't get me started on my heels, cracked and thick and resembling cauliflower. I don't even think of my feet. They're just something at the end of my ankles. I am aware of them when they ache or when I get a toe spasm but, otherwise, they belong where they are, on the floor, propelling me forward.

Writer's Cramp

I hear people talk about all of the worries that rush into their head as they lay it on a pillow at night. Money trouble, marriage issues, family disputes, neighbor misunderstandings.  I rarely have those.

I am kept awake by fake people and situations I made up...dialogue never actually spoken, quarrels never given voice, locales I have never been to , rooms I have never entered or exited.

It would be fair to say "I hear voices," which would get a person locked up, if this country had any sort of mental healthcare these days.

I am not trying to be precious. I sometimes wish that side of my brain fully functioned to process day-to-day minutiae, equations to be solved, things to be postmarked.

But it doesn't. I wake all night, omties evral times in an hour, to write things on notepads that I can barely decipher when the morning comes. Banter. An especially-pithy observation. A vivid, yet concise description. 

Not that I am happy about my outstanding American Express balance. Not to minimize that I had to buy a new washing machine and it sure wasn't in the monthly budget. Not that I don't fret about an aging mother, my vomiting cat and whether that's an ingrown hair or a melanoma on my abdomen.

But the things wanting released from my brain...that's what subtracts my sleep. For any artist, creativity is a gift and curse. It cannot be turned off or even dialed down. Some might say that this indicates something inherently wrong -- that I reside among sketchy phantoms who may or may not ever be birthed, that this is a disconnect with reality. They may be right. I wouldn't trade my flights of fancy...but they might be on to something. 

Unwilling Early Riser

There's few viler sounds than that of a cat preparing to vomit. The convulsive gagging, perhaps preceded by a warning moan...the propulsive retching...then, if you're especially lucky, a splash, because that means it hit tile or other flooring and not an Oriental rug...and all at 5:12 a.m., which means you're up for the day, or until at least the caffeine wears off and you collapse like a marionette whose strings have been sliced.

  • I access CNN on the Interwebs to see if the world has ended; the world as I know it already has, but it's always prudent to see if something big exploded and if I'll need to dodge shrapnel.
  • I light a Bath and Body Works eucalyptus candle, hoping to disguise the residual smell of Friskie's turkey and giblets.
  • I raise certain shades. It is still dark but it's already in the 80's. 
  • I sip coffee from a 'Hamilton' mug and wish I had Lin-Manuel Miranda's royalty check for the week. Reminder to self: write something that will be popular.
  •  My husband opts to get a head-start on Saturday -- he rose, too -- by bringing out the vacuum. There should be an ordinance forbidding housecleaning while it's still dark.
  • I surrender to his energetic dash through the house by doing a load of laundry on Delicate. This setting ensures my clothes don't get any tighter. I don't appreciate any reminders I need to lose a couple pounds, x 10.
  • I check to see if anything shit in the pool overnight. Raccoons often do this. By day, iguanas will. My pool is essentially a big toilet.
  • At first light, I plant a bromeliad, from the porch but now past its bloom, in my front garden. I do so in my robe. While our yard is fenced, I know joggers and early-morning walkers can see through. I discreetly show my penis. They shouldn't be spying on me.
  • It's nearly 8:00 a.m. as I type this. My husband passes me with a Swiffer.

 

Proceed At Own Risk

I have been cautioned about not introducing politics, debate or inflammatory rhetoric into my website or blog. Why alienate consumers or potential readers, the thought process goes. They don't need to know how you feel about today's climate to enjoy one of your works. This, of course, flies in the face of every lesson about social media and remaining "engaged" with readers, but never mind that. I was helpfully being told to, essentially, "pipe down".

Anyone who knows me would never shush me, or even raise a warning index finger to their lips. I am decades away from being a child, but being reprimanded means I will only get louder, more profane. Ask my husband. I am not proud of the fact that I have become a pariah at a party, but it is what it is. I will not nod blankly as someone offers, "Now, Rodney you have to admit, Trump HAS done some good things." To say nothing is endorsement. Of course, I would never yell "Fire!" in a crowded theatre...nor am I going to let anyone else get away with it.

We reside in this odd new world where everyone's opinion matters, even when it clearly does not, yet I disagree with complicit silence, as much as I disagree that one must always yield to their elders. I was raised to open the door for someone burdened, my senior or infirm and I don't require their political posture to do so. I offer "thank you" and "you're welcome" and "good afternoon" without demanding to inspect a Voter's ID. But I have also learned that my elders must earn actual respect. Simply living a bunch of years connotes neither wisdom nor kindness...now, more than ever. I see long-submerged anger and bitterness festering, bubbling to the surface...the angry, wizened faces who are voting against their own interests becaue fear has been fanned...or the "single issue' voters who chose insanity over IQ because this White House promised to erect a wall, halt abortions and silence a black man's symbolic gesture in the name of patriotisim...I will not lower my own voice to placate a few who wouldn't enjoy my writing, anyway.

If you don't like me, you won't like what I create, so it's really not a conversation worth having.

New Terrain

Inspired by a vivid dream I had the other night -- one from which I awoke convinced it was memory, not a creation of too much fried food -- I am trying my hand at a new form: a half-hour dramedy (part comedy, part drama, for those genre-impaired), intended for Amazon, or Hulu, or Netflix. Its plot I will not divulge, but it's coming to me so quickly it's a little scary. I am writing like a man possessed. I even know who I see in its cast.

* Addendum August 5 2018 Someday I will learn not to piss before my water comes. The inevitable writer's block has descended and everything I HAVE written looks and smells like shyte. So much for the man who was writing like he was possessed. I've apparently been exorcised of plot and characterization. Maybe I need another plate of buttermilk onion rings and breaded calamari...