Last summer, I stumbled upon a Meetup link on the internet.
I discovered that people weren’t waiting anymore for their spouses and friends
to commit to a “dreaded” art gallery visit or fondue tasting adventure. Shockingly,
your partner or BFF doesn’t share your interest in a creamy vegan cheese fondue
party. Seems opposites do attract.
You can go online for anything. Casual, momentary connections?
Twitter. Peeping updates from old high school friends? Facebook. Potential
dates? Take your pick of sites (and don’t take any advice from me). Turns out
you can create any club you want online and you don’t even need to get the Chemistry
teacher to be your sponsor.
I joined a Vancouver screenwriters Meetup group and I have
attended a couple of worthwhile events. Have I truly connected with anyone? No.
Perhaps because this cluster of people was birthed from technology, everyone
turns to texting or playing Angry Birds or checking Pinterest during breaks.
Still, I sit in a room, take in information from a speaker and marvel at the
fact I’m not the only one hanging on to a Hollywood dream without moving to
L.A. (Heck, if my writing’s that good, they’ll move Jay, Gloria and the rest of
the Modern Family cast and crew to Vancouver, right? Or maybe CSI: Miami. The
viewers will never know the difference.)
I also found a Meetup group of adults that met on Saturday
afternoons to play tag in various parks. That made me laugh. And make no
mistake, if I didn’t have to come over on a ferry, I’d be right in on it, quick
to yell “Not it” at the outset and shouting “Time out, time out” every time
someone got close to tagging me. (I have NO idea why the kids back in Hamilton forbade
me from neighborhood tag all those years ago. Lifetime bans mean nothing when
you cross provincial lines.)
About two months ago, I joined a gay Meetup group, started
by someone who may be creatively challenged. The founder called the group “Nice
Intelligent, Successful Vancouver Gay Men”. Sure, that’s the kind of people you
want to attract, but I think he should have consulted a drag queen for
something cheeky or at least a tad sparkly. No need to worry about scaring off
a few guys. The self-consciously butch gays wouldn’t give up a night of “Ice
Road Truckers” or inventorying Phillips screwdrivers anyway.
This group plans quite a few events, one or two each week,
things like attending an Oscars house party, going to see a gay-themed play or
snowshoeing on the North Shore mountains. The problem (for me, at least) is that all activities
are scheduled for weekends. It takes an awful lot to get me back on a ferry on
a Saturday after my grueling weekday commute. Perpetual isolation is not
enough.
Finally, someone posted an announcement for a weekday event,
a 6 p.m. social at a club called The Junction in Vancouver’s West End. I did
not RSVP until the morning of since attending would mean I’d have to take a
later ferry home and, after hobbling around work in my boot cast all day, I
usually want to get the commute over with as soon as possible. I was the
fourteenth person to commit to the event so I figured I could have a few quick
conversations before dashing—er, limping—out at 6:30 to catch the 7:25 sailing.
Being a shy guy, thirty minutes of socializing with strangers would be a fine
first effort. Best to leave before people spot the pit stains.
This Meetup group is not meant to be a dating pool. It
merely offers an opportunity for gay men to socialize, to create a few
connections in a city that is gaining a reputation for being disconnected. I
looked forward to an opportunity to mingle and to be reminded that I am not the
only gay man on the planet. (And if some guy happened to be single, attractive
and “nice, intelligent [and] successful” as advertised, well,...bonus!)
By the time I found parking a few blocks away and limped to
the meeting site, it was 6:10. At the door, I talked myself out of entering. Why feel so rushed in making it to the ferry
terminal? For once, I ignored that nagging inner voice, pulled the handle
and walked in.
The place was empty. Well, almost. Two women sat at a nearby
table and, in the darkened cave at the back of the place, a few men gathered
around a two-top. I headed toward the bar and figured there was no harm in
ordering a club soda before hitting the road. They always load the glass with
ice anyway. Besides, my cuticles were overdue for an inspection.
I asked the bartender if a Meetup group was gathering here
and he pointed to the cave dwellers. I took my drink and approached. The five
guys introduced themselves and, as I pulled over another chair to squeeze in, I
realized none of the names registered. Oh, yes, this is what social awkwardness
is all about. Funny how long bouts of isolation don’t miraculously improve my
social skills.
After introductions, Guy Number One resumed telling a long story
about a charity fundraiser he’d just done. Or maybe he was talking about a trip
to the dentist. Or giving his opinion about what it will take for Lindsay Lohan
to reconnect with that persona we all loved in “Freaky Friday”. I can never
follow conversations that begin in the middle. Taking the cue of others, I
simply smiled and nodded along. My understanding was wholly unnecessary. Guy
Number One had come with a monologue and, dammit, he had to tell it.
Ten minutes later, there was a pause and I realized he’d
finished. The fundraiser had been a success or he had no cavities. Or something
like that. He smiled and sipped his beer.
The Meetup host had done his homework and knew that I
traveled by ferry so the focus shifted to me for ninety seconds before Guy
Number Seven arrived and I got another shot of ascribing names to people.
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John. Or something like that. I did learn that Seven was
actually named Lucien (George Costanza would be relieved), a transplant
from Quebec, also attending his first Nice, Intelligent, Successful Vancouver
Gay Men Meetup. He openly shared that he’d lost most of his Vancouver connections
in the past year—a breakup, a dog dying, friends retreating to Montreal, a
couple moving to the (relatively) affordable suburbs. All unfortunate, but I
was thrilled that I retained something—ears and mind still worked after all.
Another person arrived and I hoped that the group could
finally break off into smaller conversations. Larger group talks always lead to
a few big talkers and a passive audience. There were others who’d been limited
to silent gesturing and stating their name. As wallpaper, I had company. Alas,
I glanced at the time, announced that I had a ferry to catch and departed. I
hobbled back to the car, fretting that some may have thought my hasty exit
arose from boredom, a perfectly plausible deduction. I’d made no impression and
neither had most of the other guys. I’ve had Twitter exchanges—a couple of
140-character back-and-forths—that revealed more.
Still, it’s a small step. The next event is on a Friday
night, a movie at someone’s home. I cannot attend as I would have to miss the
last ferry home. (Yes, all ties with civilization are controlled by BC Ferries.
Last time I Googled helicopters, they were out of my price range.)
I’ll keep my eye out for another opportunity. Fondue at
five? Heck, yeah! As long as I live where I live, it cannot be about the event.
If it fits with my commute, I’ll be there.
4 comments:
Sounds like your success with MeetUps parallels mine! My next one is May 5 with an LGBT photography group!
Hi Jeff,
I'll keep trying to attend. My social calendar is WIDE open.
How are the book sales going? And the dating life? I do hope all is on the upswing!
Book sales are going okay, I need to do some more promoting. I'm just not in the mood for dating. Work has me so overwhelmed, I have no energy left for anything else. In time things will change.
A break is on the horizon. Summers were meant to restore and replenish us. Hang in there!
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