Wednesday, April 26, 2023

A CHANCE TO UNDERSTAND AIDS IN THE 21st CENTURY


With COVID restrictions loosening by January of last year and feeling a little more secure after getting double vaxxed, I decided to expand my Reentry into Civilization. I would return to one or two daily writing sessions in various Vancouver cafes, as was my custom pre-2020, but I would also commit to being a regular volunteer for a nonprofit. 

 

It just so happened that the place I was most interested in was less than two blocks away. I’d popped into AIDS Vancouver before the Christmas holidays and filled out a volunteer application. It made me feel like fifteen again, when I had to fill out a form to be a busboy at Papacita’s, a Mexican restaurant in Longview, Texas. There were more things I could fill in this time, but there was still an air of humbling uncertainty. Am I worthy? Being passed over for a chance to clear taco dregs, plus all the tortilla chip bits and salsa drippings on the tables and seats, would have felt humiliating, but being told by an agency, “We don’t want your free help” made the stakes seem higher. 

 

It took almost a month before I heard back, the executive director apologizing about holiday shutdowns and his own January illness. We chatted on the phone for a little bit and it seemed like a collaborative decision that I’d serve as the agency’s receptionist Monday mornings after first coming in for eight hours of training and going through my paper copy of the receptionist manual which included detailed instructions about photocopying, transferring emails, answering calls, retrieving messages, reserving rooms and so forth. There were also opening and closing procedures as well as plenty of codes and passwords.

 

There was a distinct sense of nervousness as I began my training day and I seemed to perspire every time I had to take a call under the scrutiny of my trainer. COVID had made my people skills go to rust. Moreover, the only phone calls I’d handled in the last five years were to my mother and customer service representatives who walked me through my recurring internet challenges or threw up barriers to refunds related to my Epic European Vacation which got dashed when we went into Worldwide Lockdown. Basically, all phone calls within memory involved me being testy. I suspected I’d need a different approach when answering calls at AIDS Vancouver. Getting fired as a volunteer would be even worse than getting passed over.

 


One thing I’d forgotten is how I have a tendency not to hear the first second or two of what a person says on the phone. Is it a legitimate hearing problem? Do my ears just require time to adjust? It suddenly seemed like a significant handicap when answering phones was a fundamental part of my volunteer position. My struggle was further magnified by the fact many callers sounded groggy, their voices muffled by illness, the effects of medication or a morning coffee not yet doing what it needed to. I typically needed the caller to repeat who they were and who they wanted to speak with—basically, the entire essence of the call. 

 

I sensed that, if I wasn’t fired, I’d have to quit. I didn’t have what it took to be a receptionist.

 


Still, I stuck it out. I became less embarrassed asking people to repeat themselves. I may have even gotten a tad better at getting my ears to tune into the call quicker. It seemed to help when I slowed my greeting—“Gooood morrrning, AAAAIDS Vancouuuuver”—allowing my left ear to settle beside the receiver before the caller launched into their spiel.  

 


My overall goal in volunteering was to get back in the loop regarding the current state of All Things AIDS and HIV. I’d spent the year prior reading daily posts on The AIDS Memorial’s Instagram, where loved ones pay tribute to people who have died of AIDS. Many of people being remembered had died when the ravages of AIDS were at their worst, unchecked by protease inhibitors which didn’t begin to save and extend lives until the mid-’90s. Still, there were some people being honored who’d died within the last five years: “longtime survivors” and people who’d more recently gotten AIDS, the stigma, their geographical location in this world or other issues keeping them from a regular medication routine. 

 

No. As I reflect, gaining an understanding of AIDS today, while important, did not surpass my need to remember what had been. The AIDS Memorial posts took me back to the bleakest years of the AIDS crisis. The photos and the written accounts confirmed that, yes, all of it happened. How quickly, it seems, the world and most of the gay community moved on. I wanted to do something more to honor magnificent loves lost—talented people who’d had much more to offer, regular folks with ordinary lives like mine and dear friends and acquaintances who didn’t live long enough for us to one day reestablish contact as Facebook friends, receiving that annual nudge to reach out and wish one another happy birthday.

 

AIDS shaped my years of coming out. When I first told my parents I was gay, my mother’s immediate response, through tears, was, “Can’t you abstain?” To her, my identity meant death. I can’t blame her. I had acquaintances who ignored safe sex practices, resigned to the fact early death was unavoidable. More than once, I heard someone utter, “Only the good die young” as a twisted defense to not being more responsible. Conservative, vile outsiders cast AIDS as God’s wrath while a few gay men viewed AIDS as a badge of honor. I’m living my life to the fullest. No fear. 

 

I volunteered for a year, adding on an extra month to make up for many missed shifts as I continued to travel to places near and far. Sometimes it’s hard to ascertain what I learned and whether I made any difference at all.

 

At times, I felt like I represented a slight relief to the organization’s operating budget. Working reception is a paid position in the afternoons; thus, each of us who volunteered in the mornings provided a savings. It wouldn’t be my phone skills that made a difference, but some other program or paid position continued to be funded on account of volunteers. If that’s all that came of my time, I’m okay with it. I don’t need pats on the back and gushy thank yous. I’m an under the radar kind of guy.

 

Many of the clients I encountered seemed to struggle financially. The agency offered a supplemental food bank—not a primary source for meals—and it was well-subscribed. On many occasions, I also headed to the back in search of clothes, shoes, backpacks and other items that might make a client’s means of living a tiny bit easier. Across from my desk was a resource room where some clients (and non-clients) dropped in to use a computer, to grab a coffee and a donated snack or to just plop down in a chair, out of the rain, the cold or the heat, away from more chaotic situations on the street and in shared housing spaces. Some clients with no fixed address or who didn’t want sensitive mail arriving at a shared residence picked up mail delivered to the agency. 

 


I learned more about comorbidity and harm reduction. Whereas I recall free condoms and lube passed out back in the day (they’re still available), there were clients who stopped in to pick up free bubble pipes, sheets of tin foil and fentanyl testing strips to ensure that drug use was cleaner and safer. No judgment. 

 

I also learned more about how the LGBTQ spectrum is getting broader. I’ve known this from reading articles online, checking out books, scrolling Twitter and watching the occasional news segment or documentary. But there’s nothing better than direct contact with people who identify as trans or nonbinary, knowing they’re here, they’re queer and, yes, I’m getting used to it. Often, it felt as though I was getting more out of my volunteer stint than the agency and the clients were getting from me. That’s typical, isn’t it?

 

Still, there were many moments when I wondered what the point was of my being there. Technical skills have never been a strength and I would cringe each time I’d accidentally hang up on a caller. I’d pressed the wrong button to put them on hold. I’d tried to transfer them and messed up. I couldn’t scan or print something. There were so many questions I couldn’t answer. I’d never felt so incompetent at a job. What if the desk were unmanned (unpersonned?) and messages when to voicemail until the paid receptionist arrived after lunch? There would have been a spike in anxiety while clients waited—clients were often anxious about whatever issue had become so pressing as to push them to seek guidance and support—but it was rare that I could offer a direct answer that would alleviate the problem. All I could do was transfer the call to a social worker or, more often, that worker’s voicemail or monitor offices back in the locked hallways to see if and when a social worker stepped out of a meeting or finished up with another client. Basically, I was a traffic guard, trying to keep matters flowing while not having the ability to change a client’s situation firsthand. 

 

I had some clients call repeatedly over the course of a morning. “Is she available now?” “How about now?” “Did you tell her this is urgent?” There would be heavy sighs and subtle or not so subtle references to how the delays were making a dire situation even more problematic. They were helpless and, in those moments, I felt as much so—granted, without the personally dire predicament. Being a volunteer is a privileged experience.

 

When they dropped in, they were doing relatively well. Most didn’t risk coming to the agency when their health was at all compromised. Presumably, they didn’t want to take chances seeing how COVID might mix with being HIV+, even when undetectable.

 

There were many one-off tasks never contemplated in the training manual. One man, waiting for an appointment, used the restroom room, then approached my desk and said in a hushed voice, “I think the toilet seat needs to be cleaned. Someone made a mess.” Yes, of course. I’d worked in homes of people with AIDS in the early ‘90s. I knew about diarrhea; I’d had to empty urine bottles. I took out the key for the janitor’s closet, donned plastic gloves and ventured in. The toilet was fine. Not spotless, but better than most public toilets. I scrubbed anyway. Maybe I was helping ease someone’s OCD.

 

One day I threw out my back after getting pulled into a strange sort of threesome. There was a homeless gay couple who’d moved to Vancouver from another province. One man was in his forties and dressed casually, the other was in his twenties, always clad in groovy vintage clothing—platform shoes, floral print blouses, daring sherbet-colored pants. They were always polite, but I registered with them about as much as the cubbies stocked with harm reduction supplies. They’d approach me to pick up mail or to ask to speak to a social worker and then get back to their own world. The younger man showed up one morning, asking if I’d seen his partner. I hadn’t. He paced back and forth from the waiting area to the resource room, often sinking into a chair by the phone ten feet away from me that was available for clients. At one point, a mournful wail filled the room as he held the phone. I rose, thinking he was experiencing sudden physical pain. Then I heard him say into the phone, “I thought you were dead.” He cried and I found myself reaching for the box of tissues, dabbing my own eyes. When his partner stepped off the elevator an hour later, there was no emotional reunion. They were back to doing some sort of tasks in the resource room, only turning to me to ask about snacks. I heated up some breakfast wraps, made another pot of coffee and resumed desk duty until the man in his forties fell in the reception area. I helped him up. He fell again. His body was deadweight, but I got him up again. His partner appeared and, rather than sitting and resting, they asked for help getting onto the elevator as they left. I worried about them the rest of the day, my back pains not allowing me to forget.

 

Another time a trans woman on the phone sounded irked and distressed. Her social worker wasn’t returning her calls fast enough. She started unloading all her stressors on me. My god, life was tough. She kept cutting people and nonprofits from her circle. People were doing her wrong and she was filing complaints to hold them accountable. Due to my hearing challenges and her emotional state, I kept having to ask her repeat things. This was making her more agitated and I apologized, adding the explanation, “I mishear things.”

 

She became outraged. “Did you just call me ‘mister’?” 

 

Suddenly, we were both taken aback. I blanked for a moment. Where did her accusation come from? When I managed to replay my own words, I figured out she’d taken “mishear” for “mister.” I clarified, she paused. Then a laugh. I was her bestie for the final five minutes of the call. She was still stressed and I still couldn’t offer any of the direct support she needed, but I’d been an ear, hearing-challenged and all.

  

The last call of my last shift seemed like an odd sort of closure for the entire volunteer experience. A caller didn’t even wait for me to get through my greeting spiel before saying, “What’s the number for Loan Express?” Naturally, I surmised I was mishearing again. She repeated the question, a tinge annoyed. 

 

“I’m sorry,” I said. “We don’t offer loans. Do you need to speak to a social—?”

 

“I know, I know,” she said. “I just don’t have internet. You got a computer. Can you look it up?” I shrugged. I typed on the keyboard. I gave her a number. She called back five minutes later. I hadn’t done it right. “There’s another one,” she said. I found another number. She didn’t call back. At least, not on my shift. Presumably, she knew The Other Guy, the paid receptionist, was due to start in a few minutes. Her loans needs would have to wait. 

 


Overall, I’m still not sure I learned anything new about HIV and AIDS. If anything, I have a clearer image of people living with HIV, a welcome counterpoint to visions I’ll never fully shake of people dying of AIDS. I knew this going in, but seeing people negotiate non-medical aspects of life offered a welcome update. Food, housing, transportation, mental health and connecting with others remained issues that required ongoing support. 

 


My role wasn’t to solve or alleviate these things. I committed to being the polite, friendly dude, greeting drop-in clients with a smile covered up by the mask I was required to wear. (Shout-out to Tyra Banks for trying to teach me smizing, aka, smiling with one’s eyes.) I’d like to think my smile came across on the phone too…in between “Pardon” and “I’m sorry. Could you please repeat that?” 

 

Snapshots stay with me. There was the scruffy man I fed one day and offered extra snacks against protocol, then scrounged up donated clothes roughly his size, a toothbrush, toothpaste and disposable razor. He asked for directions to the restroom and stayed in there so long that I started to panic about giving him the razor. Was that against protocol, too? I peeked in and the floor was covered in liquid—water, not blood. (I headed to the janitor’s closet to get a mop ready.) He emerged with a faint smile, clean shaven, perhaps the finest Before and After specimen I’d ever seen. 

 

There was the older mom whose son had been admitted to hospital the night before. Since she wasn’t a client, I couldn’t refer her to a social worker, but I gave her information to offer her son if he wanted support and I offered plenty of information about how to advocate for him at the hospital I’d learned to navigate from my own admissions. She lingered, the worry lines on her face softening slightly as she hung out by my desk. Things evolved from me giving information to providing distraction.

 


There was the trans woman in the wheelchair who seemed to crave any kind of human interaction. She’d regularly share a corny joke of the day which I always laughed at. She beamed when she showed me the free professional photos she’d sat for on the weekend when a trans photographer wanted to uplift others. “I updated my dating profile with them,” she said. “Suddenly, I’m alive again.” She and so many others.

 

Small things are bigger than they may seem. 

Monday, April 17, 2023

SUSPICIOUS MINDS


I could be wrong. I feel I need to say that at the outset. But I have a hunch what I felt and what I thought were real. 

 

As I’ve done twice a month for the past year, I loaded up my Mini Cooper, cramming in my bike, suitcase, clothes on hangers and backpack and headed out, making my way from Vancouver to Seattle. The ordeal has gotten easier now that I don’t have to worry about getting a COVID test—and negative results—to return to Canada. I don’t have to mess with filling out details of my trip—length, destination—and physical health symptoms on the Arrive Canada app. That was, of course, part of the return trip. My biggest concern driving over the border at the Peace Arch crossing into the U.S. has always been how long the wait will be as I join the queue of cars. 

 

On Highway 99, both digital signs I saw indicated the wait would only be five minutes. Was it good fortune or a message malfunction? My last crossings have taken about an hour and a half. As I approached, there were four lanes accepting cars, two with no wait at all. Hurrah! I pulled right up to the booth in one of the open lanes and passed the agent my passport as I offered a cheery, “Good morning!”

 

He swiped my passport while maintaining a well-rehearsed serious face. “Where do you live?”

 

Yes. Almost always the first question. “Vancouver,” I said.

 

“What’s the purpose of your trip?”

 

“I’m heading to Seattle to see my boyfriend. Coming back Wednesday.”

 

“How long?”

 

Silly me. I’d jumped ahead. I knew the routine too well. “Until Wednesday,” I repeated.

 

“That’s a lot of clothes,” he said. The temptation was to smile and say with a shrug, “I’m gay.” Like that explains it. On this particular trip though, my wardrobe haul was more about practicalities than fashion whimsy. It’s spring. At least that’s what the calendar says. We’re in that iffy period when every day has moments of winter and moments of spring. I could have pointed out the mix of short sleeves and long sleeves, items with fleece, others 100% cotton. I could have mentioned the rainy forecast plus my stubborn hope for a flash or two of sun. I could have told him my boyfriend has stated many times how he wants us to dress every day as if it’s a date. That’s why I had daytime and nighttime options. But it felt like an overshare to account for any suggestion of overpacking. 

 

They make it look dreamy, 
but I predict a cold, wet 
sleepless night.

Mr. Serious started typing madly on his keyboard as I explained that I need extra clothes for exercising. Plus hiking. We were thinking of camping Saturday night. I figured he didn’t need to know I wasn’t all that clear on what to bring since I’d never camped before. I like places with mattresses and toilets and showers. Evan’s a camper. This was supposed to be my weekend to show him I could rough it. Look ma…no walls! Wouldn’t that have been another overshare? I kept quiet. I didn’t want to mess up the guy’s typing. I’m known for being a thoughtful, courteous man.

 

“What do you do for work?”

 

“I’m a school principal, but I’m on a leave of absence.”

 

“For how long?”

 


“It’s indefinite.” Not a chance I’d share that I was diagnosed as bipolar and having an anxiety disorder. With all the mass shootings in the U.S., I didn’t want my mental health issues to be a red flag, never mind that I’ve never owned a gun and that I think the Second Amendment is an archaic, wrongfully applied NRA crutch. “Well regulated [sic] militia,” my ass. I don’t have a violent bone in my body. I catch and release mosquitos. 

 

More waiting, more typing. Was it me or was he wanting to see me sweat while he caught up on emails? Stay calm. I tried to sit back and enjoy the catchy tune on the car radio—Jennifer Lopez (featuring Pitbull), “On the Floor,” what they call “old school” now; what I call my music. I rested my arm on the open window. I almost drummed my fingers out of habit but stopped myself. He’d think I was being impatient. He’d take offense or maybe even think I was getting nervous, as if I had something to hide—a contraband apple or maybe a live animal. I thought of a line from a Barenaked Ladies song: “Haven’t you always wanted a monkey?” No. Never, actually.

 

I sensed my breezy border crossing getting stormy. Stay calm, stay calm, stay calm. Uniformed authority figures make me anxious. I’ve had bad encounters with U.S. border agents before. “Abuse of authority” is what my lawyer brain always concludes.

 

This was a perfect opportunity for a border guard to have a little fun. A slow day. No backup of vehicles. Here was an older guy with a boyfriend at his mercy. A clotheshorse. One of those gays. This guard was older too. White hair, closely shaved. No tattoos in sight, no earring. (Canadian agents commonly have such markings.) He looked classically conservative. A good ol’ boy, like so many I’d met during my decade living in Texas. If he was typecasting, so was I. 

 

He stuck an orange sticker on my windshield, told me to put on my hazard lights and drive up to the building to go inside for further questioning.

 

I knew to shut up and comply, but my anxiety kicked in. “Why? What have I done?” 

 

STOP IT! They can turn you away. They can ban you from future crossings. Up to five years. They have full discretion. I’d read stories. I’d even perused immigration sites online to try to help an American friend banned from coming to Canada.

 


I reminded myself of the obvious. You have a boyfriend. An AMERICAN boyfriend. A ban would nix everything. Or add significant challenges, at least. Would he still love me if things became one-sided, Evan always having to come my way? Wouldn’t things be even more imbalanced with all our adventures being in my world while his home, his friends, his family were out of the mix until 2028?

 

“Thank you so much,” I said as I proceeded to the parking lot provided for people extending their border stop. I smiled, I sounded sugary sweet. We both knew I was giving him a not so thinly disguised middle finger. He didn’t care. He was having his way.

 


Seven uniformed officials assumed spots at the counter, three talking with other detainees, five staring at computer screens. There was a woman who smiled—a break in protocol—as she interviewed a couple. Please let me get her. There was a young, tall, thin guy who projected kindness as he talked with another couple as they took turns holding a baby. Or him. As I continued to wait, the agents who had Important Screen Things to deal with kept their heads down. One by one, they disappeared into a back room. I heard the tall, thin agent tell the couple, “You’ve been denied entry.” No! Who turns away a baby?! Maybe not him then. 

 

Eventually, it was just the nice woman (had she laughed?) as the counter area cleared. Yes! I’ll get her. But then my typing agent from the booth appeared and took a seat at a free screen. 

 

Noooo! Not him! I didn’t want to insincerely thank him again as he banned me. He’d messed with the gay guy enough. I didn’t want another round. 

 

No one else came out from the back room. I edited photos on my phone to distract me, to appear calm, to not give the typing master any inkling that I was a squirmy mess on the inside. After another five minutes, the line behind me had grown. Still no other agents. “Next,” my harasser said. I don’t know why I didn’t think to turn to the man behind me and say, “You go ahead.” I could have feigned an untied shoelace emergency but that would have aroused suspicion, right? 

 

I proceeded to the counter. Dead. Man. Walking.

 

“Hello again,” he said. His turn to sound falsely pleasant. He took my passport before floating a pen and paper across the counter. He told me to write down my boyfriend’s address and my own phone number. He asked my boyfriend’s date of birth and whether I’d ever been arrested. He asked me where I’d last worked and why I was on a leave of absence.

 

“Health reasons,” I said. I may have been at his mercy, but I said it with grit. Don’t you dare ask me more. I was done being a mouse to his cat. 

 

“The reason I had you come in,” he began, “is because I couldn’t see that you have a regular history of border crossings.” He nodded to his screen. “I see it now.”

 


It was a bullshit explanation. I’ve had several agents swipe my passport at the booth and comment about my frequent crossings. He’d had full access to that information. It’s quite likely that he knew I knew. It was his final play. I wanted to call him on his lie. I wanted to see his supervisor. I offered a slight nod, an acknowledgment I’d heard him even if I didn’t believe him.

 

“Have you ever been arrested?” he asked.

 

Nope. I have a squeaky-clean history. No drugs. No cutting labels off mattresses. If I jaywalk, I always scan to make sure there are no police officers in sight.

 

He slid my passport back across the counter. “You’re free to go,” he finally said. 

 


Only when I was back in my car did I allow my hands to shake as I gripped the steering wheel. Again, I could be wrong. The guy would say he was just doing his job. As I drove away, I had more insight into why some people are deemed to “pull the race card” too readily. I’d pulled the homophobe card. In either situation, error is possible. And yet, having gone through a history of discrimination, individually and as a distinct group, the thought arises and then the defenses kick in along with the desire to fight it. We’re taught to be on alert. It’s part of survival.

 


I’m all too aware of Stonewall. That history gets brought up vividly every single June as part of Pride. I know about police harassment in Toronto in 1981. On a personal level, I felt the gaiety silenced in gay bars in West Hollywood whenever I’d be there in the early ‘90s as a few officers walked through, letting their presence known. Sometimes they’d smile at each other: Isn’t this fun? Aren’t we powerful? It always felt gross. Intimidation. Oppression. I’m not a de-fund the police guy. I just want more training, more careful recruitment and better screening. And, yes, in situations when someone is in a state of mental distress, I’d love for skilled counsellors to be on the scene. I understand panic and the irrationality that follows.

 

I shook things off after making a planned stop at a post office across the border. It was another wait but nothing involving any imbalance of power. I had cash. Getting my stamp was never in jeopardy. Even as the tension eased, the sense of being violated lingered and a sadness set in. Long distance relationships are challenging enough. When there’s an international border involved, it’s creepy having an extra layer added on. I’m fifty-eight and now the border stop feels like having to ask permission to see my boyfriend. 

 

I’m an incredibly private person, an extreme introvert by nature. For a while, when I had a boyfriend in Portland, I used to say I was visiting a friend, but that felt dishonest to myself and the relationship. I don’t want borders to drive me back into the closet, even temporarily, dammit. This was reinforced by a Canadian border agent years ago who commented, once my explanation became more accurate, “We don’t care who you date. Just say it and it’s okay.” Different agent, different country but her words should be the way it is. In fairness, most American agents have lightened up when I’ve said I’m going to see my boyfriend. They even kid—“And you’re not bringing gifts? Isn’t he worth it?” I’m never quick enough to reply, “I’m making the trip. That’s the gift.” 

 


Let my next crossing offer that kind of opportunity instead. Let me do what it takes to push homophobia back into the closet from which I came.

 

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

FLIPPING OUT


I just finished reading a biography, Flip, by Kevin Cook (Viking, 2013), about a renowned comedian from half a century ago. The recent Tennessee law which attempts to ban public drag performances—the language refers to “male or female impersonators”—inspired me to look back on the life and work of Flip Wilson, the most famous part-time female impersonator from my own childhood. 

 

It's not that Clerow “Flip” Wilson set out to be a female impersonator. No one would have described him as such. He was a comic. He spent years trying to get gigs to do his standup routine on the Chitlin’ Circuit, a series of venues open to having Black performers, as well as in places in the western U.S. In Stockton, California in 1954, he stumbled upon a hit routine, teaming up with a piano player, Charles Calloway. 

Calloway played and sang a brokenhearted blues 

tune. When he got to the chick who done him wrong, 

Flip flounced on-stage in a blond wig and tight skirt. 

Nervous laughter from the crowd as Calloway played 

on, wailing about his girl leaving him for a man with 

a bigger bankroll. Now Flip gave the piano a bump 

with his hip.

 

“Wasn’t just his bankroll was bigger, honey!”

 

The crowd roared. [p. 42]

 


Wilson—and the club owner—knew the routine would keep an audience coming back. There was no taboo to a man donning a wig. As biographer Kevin Cook writes: “[E]ntertainers from Sophocles and Shakespeare to Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon, then starring in Some Like It Hot, had proved there was a simple[] factor at work: drag was just funny. Wilson constantly tweaked his act, filling legal pads with jokes and analyses. As the fifties rolled on, he’d honed his drag bit into a Black, streetwise version of Queen Isabelle of Spain, initially balking before commissioning Christopher Columbus to sail the seas. (“That’s a lot of money, honey! You want me to hock my crown jewels?”)

 

After grinding it out for years, Wilson’s big break came in 1965 when Redd Foxx, a bigger Black comedian he knew from crossing paths at various venues, mentioned him during an appearance on “The Tonight Show.”


Johnny Carson…asked, “Redd, 
who’s the funniest 

comedian out there right now?”


Foxx didn’t hesitate.


“Flip Wilson.”

 

The shout-out got Wilson a spot on the show. Carson loved the standup routine and kept inviting him back. Flip Wilson became a guest host on the show, drawing higher ratings than Carson himself. NBC gave Wilson his own special, airing in September 1969, introducing America to what would become Wilson’s most famous character during one of the skits.


Jonathan Winters, 
cross-dressing as gray-haired, matronly Maude Frickertboarded plane 

ruled by a stewardess decked out in high heels, 

hip-hugging mini-dress, and a wig with a flip. 

“Anything I can get for you, little old broad?” 

the stewardess asked.

 

“Yes,” said Winters-as-Maude. “Get me a 

little old man, Miss…?”

 

“Geraldine,” Flip said. “Geraldine Jones, honey. 

That’s J-O-N-E-S…honey.” [p. 114]

 

As Cook succinctly states, “Here was the coming-out of a character that would dominate Flip’s act and much of the rest of his life.”  

 

Skit with Lily Tomlin as Ernestine
and Flip Wilson as Geraldine

It’s strange trying to make sense of stars with lasting legacies and those who are almost forgotten. I’m surprised how few people, even five years younger than me, remember Flip Wilson. The biography establishes Flip as an entertainer who broke down barriers for Black comedians. In an era when the television variety was popular, Flip Wilson became top in the field when “The Flip Wilson Show” debuted in 1970. It was the number two show of 1970-71 and 1971-72, bested only by “Marcus Welby, M.D.” and “All in the Family” in respective seasons. At a time when there were only three major networks and often only one television per household, Wilson’s show was family viewing for tens of millions of Americans as the lead show for the Thursday primetime lineup. His friends George Carlin and Richard Pryor were both writers for the show which lasted four seasons, accounting for ninety-four episodes and included a wide range of guest such as James Brown, Big Bird, Roy Clark, Lily Tomlin, Perry Como, Louis Armstrong, Marcel Marceau, Aretha Franklin, Tony Randall, Carol Channing, Stevie Wonder, Muhammad Ali, Tim Conway, Paul McCartney, Jim Nabors, Burt Reynolds and Leonard Nimoy.

 


Wilson’s character, Geraldine Jones, was a household name, making the cover of magazines like Jet, Ebony and TV Guide. (Wilson, as himself, made the cover of both Life and Time in 1972.) In one poll, Geraldine Jones beat out Carol Burnett and Mary Tyler Moore as “America’s favorite comedienne.” Her catchphrase, “What you see is what you get,” was especially funny, delivered by a character in drag. 

 

It's hard to imagine that drag is a push-button issue in 2023 when Geraldine Jones was so beloved a half century ago. Cook devotes one paragraph to mentioning what Wilson called a “blacklash” to Geraldine:

To Flip’s consternation, many Black men who 

liked and supported him recoiled from 

Geraldine. “We all watched the show,” one 

recalls, “but I shut it off when he did that part. 

I had sons eight and ten years old, and I 

wasn’t letting them see him dress up as a 

woman. That wasn’t the way to represent a 

Black man.” [p. 145]

One would think that any reticence would have run its course by now.

 

Wilson was undeterred. While he tired of fans constantly asking him to do his Geraldine impression for the rest of his life, he viewed the character as a role model. “Geraldine may not project the image of a refined, sophisticated lady, but she’s honest, she’s frank, she’s affectionate, she’s independent. I think every woman should be like that.” [p. 146]

 


Flip Wilson, who died of cancer in 1998 at the age of sixty-four, was no saint. As a person, he doesn’t even come off as likable. Clerow had to be scrappy during a tough childhood and the years of trying to get by with low-paying gigs. He regularly used drugs, first claiming they helped him write funnier bits and then out of habit or perhaps addiction. He hooked up with many women and was too egocentric and immature to be a decent father. (To be fair, his childhood offered no role models.) Still, I remember watching “The Flip Wilson Show” with my parents and all of us being entertained. He had a cool vibe and used his big eyes to make many of his lines come off as funnier than they were. He had a preacher character who was more concerned with jacking up donations than saving sinners.

 

Lucille Ball & Geraldine

In the eighties, Wilson had a short-lived family sitcom, “Charlie & Co.,” that co-starred Gladys Knight and Jaleel White, the future Steve Urkel on “Family Matters.” But I remember him most fondly for wearing a wig and donning a dress as Geraldine Jones. I wish Geraldine were around today to give drag-fearing politicians from Tennessee and other regions a good talking to.  

Wednesday, April 5, 2023

POLITICIZING DEPRESSION


Leave him alone.

 

I’m writing about Senator John Fetterman (D-Pa); more specifically, his depression and going public with it. I’m not going to Google the circumstances. I’m going to be less disciplined, using Twitter bits and pieces that came up in my feed while he was trending upon admission and then upon discharge from hospital. It’s those Twitter bits I find problematic.

 

The man is a politician and, thus, everything about him is politicized. This is particularly so because he represents Pennsylvania and won his seat last November with 51.3% of the vote compared to Republican opponent Mehmet Oz’s 46.3%. A close race though perhaps not as close as predicted. The seat had previously been held by Republican Pat Toomey who chose not to seek re-election after serving two terms. As a “flip” (going from Red to Blue) in a Senate that is precariously tipped in the Democrats’ favor (51 to 49, with three of the senators in the Democrat tally officially being Independents), any vulnerability of the elected senator gets pounced on. If he were a senator from a clearly blue or red state, his depression wouldn’t garner as much attention. People would be less inclined to pounce, saying he’s unfit, speculating he was forced to run for office and forced to stay in office. In Hawaii where Democratic Senator Brian Schatz was re-elected with 71% of the vote or in South Dakota where Republican Senator John Thune was re-elected with 70% of the vote, the hospitalization of either politician wouldn’t garner much attention outside the given state. Should anything dire happen to either senator and a special election were warranted, there would be little chance of the opposing party scoring a surprise win.  

 


I’ve made a point of not scrolling or researching too deeply the reactions to Fetterman’s depression and his hospitalization. Snipes about depression are not good for my own mental health. I have dealt with crushing periods of clinical depression and I too have been treated in hospital. While Fetterman is a public figure and his detractors can say he’s fair game, any pot shots that demonize the man or the disorder, risk harm to Fetterman and others, like me, who have had to find our way up and back.

 

I saw many well-wishers, but quite a few judging the senator and his “handlers.” All of it felt partisan and, frankly, that came off as repugnant. If it were Ron Johnson, the re-elected Republican senator from Wisconsin, edging his Democratic challenger, Mandela Barnes, 50.5% to 49.5%, I suspect the same sentiments would have been expressed, just flipped. And that’s gross. That’s how divided the U.S. is. Let a senator’s mental health struggle be an opportunity to criticize him, to question his fitness, to do a little advance campaigning—does campaign season ever end?—so the electorate will think twice—five years from now when Fetterman’s seat comes up again or next year when the other Democratic senator from Pennsylvania, Bob Casey, is up for re-election.

 

I’m fed up with how mental health is manipulated in U.S. politics. I don’t see caring, deep discussions about how to support people with mental health challenges related to depression, anxiety, schizophrenia or any other condition. That’s not altogether surprising. Most countries are behind the times in dealing with mental health and the United States still hasn’t even figured out a compassionate, reasonable, accessible system to support physical health issues. There’s still a frontier mentality. Look out for yourself (and your family) (and your wallet); everyone else be damned. 

 

I was pleased that mental health received more attention during COVID lockdowns. As people struggled in isolation, anxiety and depression got discussed more but, alas, masks are off and everyone’s moved on. It’s the price of eggs, Gwyneth’s skiing skills and train derailments that are at the forefront now. Depression is a downer to talk about anyway.

 


Mental health only trends now when there’s another mass shooting. Okay, so that means it shows up a lot. But, again, the topic is distorted; it’s villainized. The takeaway: People with mental health struggles shoot up schools and malls and churches and movie theaters and concerts. 

 

Damn! They shoot up a lot. 

 

Who says it’s about guns? “Squirrel!” It’s about crazies. Loose cannons. Pariahs. Don’t even think about letting the welfare of schoolchildren and grocery shoppers impede citizens’ right to AR-15s, ammo buildup and all the gadgets that make killing more efficient. Righteous Second Amendment advocates double down. It’s mental health that’s weaponized. 

 


When news first broke that Senator Fetterman was struggling with depression, I naively—and hopefully—saw it as a different kind of opportunity, not one to doubt his competence and vilify his family, but a chance to chip away at the stigma that continues to exist pertaining to mental health. Depression, anxiety and any number of other conditions are not signs of weakness. They don’t mean the person is flawed. Do we say a person with prostate cancer or shingles is weak and/or flawed? It would be rare for someone with either physical condition to deny their symptoms and refuse to see the doctor. Overall, men take longer to seek treatment for an ache, blood in bowel movements or a circumstance that is slowing them down. Testosterone and a persistent tough guy persona can be a detrimental combo. It’s the same—worse, I suspect—when it comes to mental health. I’m a testosterone-lite dude and it took me decades to seek help for depression, anxiety, a bipolar condition and, sigh, I’ve basically told my psychiatrist to nix other diagnoses. I’m enough of a label queen already. 

 

It's of huge significance that Fetterman checked himself into hospital for treatment and did so publicly. F*#k shame. Never mind work and personal commitments. This was an oxygen-mask-on-oneself-first moment. He couldn’t help his constituents, his family or friends, until he got whatever help he needed, be it therapy, rest, a reset in terms of diet and/or medication. Sickness happens. One of the supposed takeaways from COVID was supposed to be to stay away from work when you’re not well. Rest, see a doctor, get better. 

 

Kudos, Mr. Fetterman. He’s been discharged, presumably stabilized, hopefully on the mend. Those who aren’t in the know will continue to shame and judge him. They’ll question his competence. They’ll scrutinize his actions and inactions. They’ll seek to peddle doubt and to cast depression as a character flaw and a liability. I’m hoping though that other people will respect him for being open about depression, at least on a general level. (He has a right to keep personal aspects private.) Let someone see Fetterman as taking action and being responsible in seeking medical help. Depression can be hellish. That notion that it’s a personal flaw deters people from opening up about it. There’s a damaging perception—I know it well—that a person should be able to turn things around themselves. 

 


I’m hoping Senator Fetterman continues to improve and that he reaches out to the appropriate supports when he experiences setbacks and/or when another devastating round of depression settles in. Let Fetterman’s lead serve as a positive example. Let others get help if and when they need it.

  

 

 

 

988 is a suicide hotline in the United States. In Canada, it’s 1-833-456-4566. Wikipedia lists many international hotlines here.