At some point between four and five o’clock this morning, I got married.
It was a long time coming.
John and I met at a time when gay men were fighting for their lives, not the right to exchange vows at an altar or in some municipal building. Thirty years ago, an AIDS Project Los Angeles volunteer appreciation gala called Friends in Deed was in the winding down stage. I stood awkwardly with a few volunteers I’d trained with nine months prior. They were the only people I knew and, as much as I’d arrived with the hope of meeting some cute, single guy, that notion quickly evaporated as I snuck glances at men in trendier, tighter shirts, flashing whiter smiles and repeating a mantra in their heads: “I am fabulous!” Sometimes it’s a curse being a mind reader.
Call it a hunch, but I don’t think this is the only issue this guy and I would disagree on. |
Normally, I’d have headed home already, stopping at a Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf to console myself with an ice-blended mocha, but the gathering had a kitschy ’70s theme and I’d never caved to the “Disco sucks” movement. I grinned into my cup of ice—Look! I can make something melt!—and tried to tell myself that casually swaying in place was a super chill version of boogie-oogie-oogie-ing.
The facilitator of our volunteer group rushed over, grabbed my hand and pulled me across the dance floor, stopping upon reaching a group of people dancing in a friendship cluster. Scott yanked one of them toward me, shouted introductions over the chorus of “Boogie Wonderland,” said, “You two need to know each other,” and walked off.
My notoriously pale complexion went all B-52s Rock Lobster, but I managed to grin and refrain from staring at my shoes. I’m rarely at ease in a social situation, but perhaps Scott sensed that my best shot of shining came with a retro disco beat. John and I grooved out of obligation as organizers took down tables and chairs on the fringes. Then the music stopped completely and we stood awkwardly, with me willing a stupid grin—was it frozen in place?—to stand in for witty conversation. Nobody pulled John back to his group and none of my acquaintances swooped in to rescue me. The deejay announced it was time for the final song—What else but Queen of Disco Donna Summer’s “Last Dance.” I remained in place as the song started into its slow beginning—not all that danceable for two strangers. I expected John to utter a carefree “Thanks” and walk away, but both of us shuffled slightly from one foot to the other, again and again, until the beat picked up and we were back in a full-on geeky groove again. (Most likely heavier of the geeky than the groovy.)
A
week later, we had our first date. It
should never
have happened.
That
afternoon,
I’d
met a law school classmate for a margarita and couldn’t find a way
to wrap up our conversation. If I told her I had a date, it would
lead to questions with
me answering
awkwardly
using they/them pronouns—at the time a sign of still being
hopelessly closeted rather than anything to do with gender fluidity
or enlightenment. I
showed up at his
Silverlake apartment two hours later
than agreed
upon
after sitting
in Sunday
summer
beach traffic on the PCH in Malibu. It
was probably a sign of things to come, something always a bit off,
but we made a go of it for nine months until my First Love ended with
a thud as John dumped me for a friend of mine, another
guy in my APLA buddy group.
Scum.
Both of them.
Imagine my surprise to wake up three decades
later married to him.
It’s another reason I need to talk
to my psychiatrist about changing my meds. The dreams are too vivid,
often surreal, persistently
continuing, picking
up right where I left them, even when I wake myself up to make them
stop.
It wasn’t all bad. It’s not like I woke up in Vegas with a hangover and a snake tattoo on my forehead. Finding myself married to John wasn’t a nightmare. Mostly, I just kept saying to myself, “Really?” while sneaking peeks at him through the crowd of people celebrating at “our” place. The dream offered me a chance to see a dear friend from my APLA days who died from brain cancer a few years ago. And, hey, “our” place was a trippy, expansive beachside hippie condo, swathed in avocado green, burnt orange and dark brown, adorned with oversized pillows and enormous rubber tree plants. Needs an update, I told myself, but listen to those ocean waves.
As with most of the dreams that I still recall long after awakening, I kept shaking my head and wondering, What brought that on? Surely it wasn’t the roasted cauliflower.
I last saw John over coffee at a fledgling cafe off La Brea Avenue in the spring of 1993. The get-together was my doing. I’d been a terrible mess after our breakup and I suppose I had a need for him to see me calm, composed, even happy again, having found myself in another (grievously flawed) relationship. It was an unexpected bonus to hear his disappointment that things had fizzled quickly with Rick, my ex-friend, the guy he left me for, even if it seemed misplaced for him to be seeking solace from me. I’d recovered but I met his dejection with stoicism.
As
we parted, I knew I needed nothing more from him. I’d entertained
the notion of friendship as proof that I was an evolved person, in
the spirit of thinking that a person who was once important would
always be important, just differently. Nope,
notion
shattered. As our catch-up conversation dragged on, I found myself
bored. As much as I hadn’t liked the way it ended, it was always
going to end. Being
with someone
had
been
too new to me. My mistakes
were
many...and messy. Our
relationship
would only linger as a learning experience.
Married?
Unfathomable! It wouldn’t hurt to steer clear of cauliflower for a
while. A precautionary measure.
I was tempted to Google
him. Nah, I told myself, rigorously shaking my head. What
would be
the
point
of it? But then
I remembered
a dream
from a year
ago in which a lovely
but not particularly work colleague
from
1988 popped
up. When
I Googled
her,
I found her
obituary. It was the
anniversary
of her
death.
Was I clairvoyant? Was there
something
the
universe
was
trying to message
me
about
John?
I caved; I Googled. I’d watched enough episodes of “Charmed” to know you don’t mess with clairvoyance.
I
had instant results. For as common as his first name is, adding
John’s
surname
yielded only one person in
the
whole
world
wide
web.
Hello, Facebook page. Palm Springs. Retired. Grayer, heftier, but
clearly the same guy, that first love.
The search also
yielded relief. No obituary. No abhorrence with me muttering, Hoo,
boy, what was I thinking?! Nope. Just a mild hmm as in, We’ll,
that’s that. There was a LinkedIn profile too which, judging from
the search page, seemed more active. I thought of clicking onto it
but shot that down with, “Why?” No answers were forthcoming.
No
urge to make a nostalgic Friend request either. I’d searched as
much as I wanted to. Last time ever? That may depend on my dinnertime
meal
choices and whatever the side effects will
be
for
my new meds. As astonishingly indiscriminate I apparently am in
saying “I do,” it’s
best to
never say never.
And so the day moves on. By evening, I suspect my shotgun, three-decades-in-the-making marriage will be annulled. Wedded bliss, but a dream. In this case, a good thing.
4 comments:
I've almost finished reading David Sedaris's The Best of Me, and, now that I'm more familiar with the entirety of his work over decades, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say your writing and subject matter are better. Seriously.
Loved this piece too. Who among us doesn't have these bizarre dreams, including people long forgotten, in situations utterly absurd? I can't say I've married any exes in them, but I've sure been involved in strange situation with some.
The things that bind us all as human beings.
Thanks for sharing a little more of yourself in this post. Always fun to know you better.
Thanks so much for yet another extraordinary compliment. I'm just beginning to send out queries on a manuscript, cushioning forthcoming rejections with my own front-loaded self-assessment: I'm not good enough. Your praise provides a glimmer of hope.
I haven't grabbed a copy of Sedaris's The Best of Me yet, but I've put Naked on my nightstand for another read. I'm in the very early stages of what might become an essay collection. It provides amusement as I get foggy-headed working through the query process and falling into rabbit holes while researching a young adult manuscript that has (temporarily?) stalled.
Let's keep writing and see where it takes us!
Why you waste even a moment feeling insecure about your writing is a mystery to me. No need, Gregory. You are the real deal. And I'm not just saying that.
You know you can repurpose your blog posts as an essay collection too, right? From reading I did about this some time ago, all you need to do is change them a bit.
Mine from the wealth you've shared here. More people need to know your work. Their lives will be the better for it.
Thanks, again! I remember being so relieved fifteen or so years ago when I heard Australian children's author Mem Fox say good writing should come from fear and hope--fear in that the stakes are high, that this matters, and hope helping to create a broader purpose for writing beyond that of being a personal journal. (Really, I'm only certain about her mentioning the fear and hope bit. I keep redefining the terms on my own.) When I heard her speak, I felt I had the fear part in spades (about more than just my writing). It was the hope part that needed some work. That's still the case!
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