Survivors Guilt

Every year as a resolution, one friend of mine gives up spoons. He thinks it is the easiest thing to avoid. They may not be needed in everyone’s life I guess. Personally I love spoons, they are so useful – for soup or ice cream. The scoop up what you need and you can savour every drop. He is a fork and knife kind of guy. If you need to take a silly stand about something you may or may not live without, why not spoons, right?

The web is a wonderful and terrible thing. Sometimes, it is a mirror to the soul, and some strange pathways to get there. Yesterday I came upon by stumbling upon accidentally, a web site where people shared their stories of survival with the hope that someone else would know that they are not alone.

A warning. If you know me personally, this may change everything you think you know about me, and you may not want to read further. If you don’t know me, you will wonder how I managed to survive so long with my sanity. It is your own choice. It’s like most people finding out I dropped out of high school. They think I am joking because I am well spoken, and well read.

The funny thing is, I am not entirely sure I AM sane. Not so funny, actually.

When I was four years old, I became sexualized. Most people use the term “molested”. I won’t go into details. I have a very clear memory of it. What it did more than anything is make me aware of something I should not have known about for a long time. There is definite history of sexual abuse on my father’s side. My father was molested by his uncle at the age of 12.

Some of my memories are clear, and some of them are not. I have no idea how by the age of ten I had genital warts. I have no idea who it was who gave them to me. There are vague recollections of someone in my room while I was sleeping many times in my life. I became a habitual door locker and was obsessive about keeping doors closed.

A life is a varied thing with many layers. When I was in the first grade, I was bullied so bad that I no longer wanted to go to school. So I stayed home with my mom’s roommate. My mom became so upset at this, that she dragged me to school by the arm and made a huge deal in front of the teacher, and the whole class. Singling me out for “better” behavior, things became “easier” for me, but not really.

Suddenly everyone knew who I was and they whispered names. The one yelled at me down hallways and even to my face was always “gay”. Funny, that doesn’t mean a lot now, but to a shy nine year old it was like stones being thrown. One kid told me I walked like a girl. I became hyper aware of how I walked, which probably made it worse. But for years I was overly conscientious that I was being observed. Not having a father in my life, made things worse. I had nothing to compare my behavior with.

Those “it will get better” campaigns give me the creeps. Unless you can change the core of your being, things will always remain the same in the back of your mind. I will always be a frail frightened child on the inside. Some things get better. Like patience, a bigger view of the world, knowledge that we are not alone no matter how much we feel like we are the only one. Unfortunately, some scars don’t heal. They can be ignored, they can even be drowned out with a lot of activity, but they are always there, and I don’t know what to do about that.

More than anything, I always wanted a best friend. A best friend was the next best thing to a dad for a kid. But I never had one. Sure, I had friends here and there, but no one who was really my best friend. When high school started, things changed a bit. I never really knew that I was attractive, but apparently everyone outside of my family thought so. But that kind of attention was frightening. I didn’t want people to pay attention to me, I wanted to be alone in the shadows.

I was a very frail child. Until 25, I was probably 135 dripping wet. At 6 foot, that is bean pole size. Especially for my frame. In photos I look like an Auschwitz victim. Growing up, I was always taller and skinnier than everyone else. I read books, didn’t have friends, and never played sports except when forced to in school. I hated gym. The only thing I was good at was running, but my coach was indifferent and my mother worse. Anything that took attention away from her, was not encouraged. She was not the kind of mother who took us anywhere, let alone encourage us to join a club, or a sport, or do anything active. As long as we brought her ice water on demand, and cleaned the house, we were mostly ignored.

The first time I tried to kill myself was at the age of 13. I had enough. My mother was mentally and physically abusive, so I swallowed a bottle of 500 aspirin and went to sleep. Then I woke up the next day and went to school, wondering why I was still alive. The second time was at 14, my life was so miserable and I had no control over it, all I wanted to do was die. My own grandmother had called children services, but I was too frightened of my mother to actually say anything, so nothing happened. Then I saved up some money, and bought a bottle of over the counter sleeping pills. Guess what kids? It’s not like the movies, I was too dumb to die. Too afraid of the pain of living, but too afraid of the pain of doing something drastic. No one ever found out, I just woke up the next day and went to school again.

I’ve attempted drowning, suffocation, gas. So many points in my life where I just didn’t have any hope, and I couldn’t talk to anyone about any of this. My mind just froze up and I just wanted the pain to go away. Depression is a hard fact of my life, and so is self destructive behavior. It took many years for me to realize why I did some of the things I do – It is because most of my childhood was in a state of extreme unhappiness and torture, that I am used to NOT being in control, and NOT being happy, so something inside me does something to sabotage myself, it’s like I can’t help it. A part of me refuses to be happy, refuses to take control.

You may wonder what could be so horrible? My mother ritualistically told us stories of how other children were killed by their parents – actual news stories and their details, so that we would appreciate how “good” we had it. This included all the gory details, and especially stories of sex perverts who take in children who run away. Alas, that avenue of escape was blocked by yet another horror worse than the one I was living, so I was told.

I was never allowed to invite a friend over, or to go into anyone else’s house. Friends were discouraged at all levels. I started washing clothes for our household at the age of 7. My mom would drape clothes over my zombie arms, and I would walk to the laundry mat, climb up and put the money in, then come back for the detergent, and another load of clothes. This allowed my mom to sit and watch tv while I did laundry. Sometimes my sisters would help, but it was mostly me, because I was the oldest, at seven.

At the age of ten I started cooking. We were latch key kids during the summer while my mom worked, we were just suppose to sit home and pretend not to be there, to read or watch TV and not break anything. Mom would call at a certain time and tell me what to take out of the freezer. Then she would call and tell me what temp to set the oven to. Then describe how to oil the pan, and the spices to use and how long to cook it. This went on, until I was doing jams, pies, cakes, cornbread, whole turkeys. All before the age of 12. What century do we live in?

Once she came home for lunch as a surprise, to find we had built a tent over the dinning table and chairs with sheets and blankets – we would have put it all back together before her normal time home from work, but she was furious that we would entertain ourselves in such a creative manner. I believe she enjoyed getting mad and taking it out on us, as an outlet for her own frustrations at work. When she came home from work almost every day, she beat us with a belt, like clock work. Nothing we did was good enough. That was just the way it was. My feelings of entrapment and unfairness never ended.

Mom slept in on Saturdays, and would send my sister Patsy and I to the grocery store with food stamps and a list (this is when I was 9). One T-bone steak for my mom, one box of Captain crunch and milk for my sister’s and me. Then she would tell me how to cook the steak from the bed. Then we would serve it to her, and she would let us eat the fat she cut off the sides. Such a loving person.

At the age of 19 I had already dropped out of high school and had been working full time for two years at Shoney’s Big Boy. Then I got sick, my mom and I had a fight over money, she constantly needed whatever I brought home, even though she was working two jobs herself. I needed money for a new battery for the car she would never give me the title to and she was mad at me because I finally got frustrated with her calling me from work, to tell useless things. This was a type of control for her, to keep me under her thumb, wanting me to always answer to her. So she would call, then put me on hold for up to 30 minutes. I just hung up, then she asked me if I hung up.

Any sane person would not care, but it was about control, so my mom made a huge fuss about it, and told me to move out and not come back. It was the middle of the night, I was very sick and had just been to the emergency room with no explanation for why I was in so much pain, they claimed stomach flu. So I packed up a few things and went to a friend’s place, but I didn’t want to wake him up, so I slept in my car in the middle of winter until he got up to go to work. He let me stay there, and I kept getting sicker and sicker.

At this time, it was not unusual for hospitals to turn away people who they suspected had HIV. What I had turned out to be hepatitis B – but that was associated with HIV. All they did was talk to me and make the decision that I was gay, I had Hep B and would probably be dead within a month. The would not even tell me what was wrong with me, just “drink lots of fluids and ride it out”. It was easier to let me die at home quickly, I guess. It took me two years to pay off that hospital visit.

So I suffered through full blown Hepatitis, unable to eat anything but broth and water for almost a month. Lost my job and honestly thought I would die – for real this time. It felt like death. Symptoms include jaundice because the liver is not functioning properly and expands to such a large size that it pushes against the stomach and you can’t eat anything solid. I had no energy, and slept all the time. Although I was starving, all I had the strength to do was warm up broth, eat it, and go back to sleep.

When my mom found out I was gay, she told me I would get AIDS and die within two years. Just bluntly to my face. As if there were anything I could do about it. She was more afraid of what other people would think, than my well being. Thanks mom! Every two years she tell me her psychic says I will die in a year. Thanks for keeping me in your thoughts, mom. Luckily, I have remained negative in that regard, all these years.

I went through a lot of boyfriends, very few of which ever lasted more than three months, a few made it to a year, but most of them were just self serving. I was a trophy, or a sex toy for them. After the newness wore off, they were on to someone else. Almost everyone I ever dated admitted to cheating on me when we broke up. I lead such a charmed life.

When I moved to Atlanta, things seemed to change. I was pursued by a very nice older man who I liked a lot, and was an amazing kisser. He gave me Herpes Simplex (just on the mouth). After 15 years I finally became asymptomatic and no longer break out. I’m lucky. These are the only things I have had to suffer through. Many of my friends died in the late 80’s and early 90’s due to HIV and complications. I am one of the lucky ones. I lived.. somehow.

Many people know me by my strengths. My smile, my humor, my laughter. They would never know about the dark things in my past that haunt me constantly. Or maybe they guess the reasons why sometimes my life is larger than most, is because I am a survivor. If I am silent, or stare off into the distance. Maybe you really don’t want to know what I am thinking. Trust me on this one, you probably don’t. So except my smile and my silence, sometimes I reflect on the past, and it’s sad, but all in all the future is bright. After all, it IS a new year!

Now, the only thing I worry about is not having a job for the past year. How I am going to pay for my phone bill. How much the IRS is wracking up in late fees for the life I have wasted. Where am I going to live next? This year has been an endless road of beauty, and despair. I don’t know what the future holds, very few people do. Every time someone tells me they have an incurable disease, I tell them “look up, I could be hit by a bus tomorrow and you will outlive me”.

There really is a lot to look forward to. I just feel weary and close to tears all the time. It’s a hard knock life, and no one said it was going to be easy. I just wish someone had told me earlier in life how important it is to use sunblock.

I am not making any resolutions. It all seems fake to me. Something to laugh about over whine (yeah, I spelled that right). With the world spinning out of control, who cares if you use spoons or not?

A long time ago… before Lady Gaga…

If you are easily squimished, stop reading now.

Once upon a time, a long while ago..  in a place, racked in mystery and legend, a place where many famous people are FROM, but whenever I go back, the only feelings that emerge are of depression and despair… Macon, Georgia.

Travel back with me, over 20 years ago. When the air was a little bit cleaner. When the sky was a little bit bluer. When I was a whole lot younger and life revolved around working, and dancing. Yes, dancing. The thing I lived for. Going to the club on friday and saturday nights, and dancing until I was nothing but a bucket of sweat.

The visual you might get is how skinny I was. Maybe, MAYBE 160 pounds soaking wet, at 5’11” that wasn’t much (I grew another inch at 21 – don’t sass me, it does happen to some men). One night a guy walked up to me, and told me that the sleeves I had rolled up to look “butch” – which I did because some girls took me aside in high school and told me how handsome I am, but how bad I dressed – and “worked” on me one afternoon. The result was, I always rolled up my tshirt sleeves.

So this guy walks up and tells me, “with arms that skinny, I wouldn’t go try to show them off”. Bastard! I had just walked in, paid my 2.00 and was ready to dance all night. Now, it felt like someone punched me in the stomach. Saddened, I left and went straight to Kroger and bought their biggest size weight gain formula. The next day – a trip to use up my entire saving to buy a weight set. I was 21 and those weight gain shakes became part of my daily routine, and I tried so hard to lift those damn weights, I hated them.

Jump forward another 4 years, and suddenly my body went “surprise” and I had muscles.

Jump back where we were, and I am still in that hell hole Macon – where for some strange reason, in a small town, it was the height of gay defiance to be a female impersonator. Just about everyone I knew did it. They are all dead now. Back then, they were full of life – with oversized personalities, snide remarks, catty come-backs and creativity that busted at the seams! I both loved and hated them, because our one room bar stopped the dancing three times a night, so the drag queens could perform.

It really annoyed me. I was only there for one reason, and that was to dance. Taking time out for anything else, just cramped my style, pulled out my flow. This was a time in my life when shyness was all I had, or maybe it had me. To be able to get out there at all was a miracle, usually with my eyes closed, just listening to the music. The DJ was my favorite person, and he knew what I liked, and spun records to keep me going. Damn those other people and their stupid requests!

Sure, this all seems pretty tame so far. Then, throw in my best friend. His name was Ernie and we went to school together – 7,8 and part of the 9th. I was the ONLY person who knew his real name. Everyone else knew him as Ashley Blake (I hope my memory is correct on this). We tried to date for a while, but I only liked him in boy clothes, and he hated his belly button touched (freak!).

Ashley on the other hand, was a miracle worker. She lived in a trailer, and had a very small job. The things she could do with almost nothing at hand, to create these (not spectacular) costumes, but ones that pushed the confines of style. Her favorite artist, which we shared, was Annie Lennox. Ashley channeled Annie perfectly. She would throw herself down on the stage and crawl across the floor. She did things no one else would dare. She was gritty, dirty, and her acts were not sexual, they were SENSUAL.

All of these strange memories of the past, remind me that some really amazing talent has come and gone, and was original way before people like Lady Gaga – who I admire as an artist, but in reality… I’ve seen it all before. In a small bar, in Macon, Ga.

Here is someone that also pushes the envelope and if you can get past her grossness, there is a real showmanship of talent that goes past simple routines, this person throws “herself” into what “she” does..

Quandary at a Cross Roads

When brought up in the Mormon faith, I tried to do everything “right”, I wanted to be as perfect a person as possible. It took a long time to realized that my nature is human. I am animal, controlled not controlling.

It is also human nature to help one another. I do little things. Quarter for the person who is short in line ahead of me, that’s self serving of course, but it is worse to do nothing, for everyone. Is it possible to give an act of charity without it being self serving? Sure, we get to talk about it with our friends and family, so it occupies our time and gives us something to do. Sure, it gives us a feeling of accomplishment and satisfaction of giving back to the community, knowing that we have helped someone.

I ask myself, what does God have to do with this? I don’t need him/her as an excuse to help someone, to let someone out in traffic, or slow down to let someone in, to open a door for someone, or leave it open for the person behind me. This is just part of being “nice”, and that only has to do with what is inside me, inside how I feel about the human race, not how someone in a mythical throne in some palace in the sky, feels about me.

Oh CRAP! Some of you are thinking. Wes has gone over the edge.

The best example I can give is a friend of mine who works at a homeless foot clinic, tending to the feet of the homeless on weekends, or taking food to people who are sick or in need, and she gives a certain amount every month to feed the homeless in Africa, and conversationally fights for the downtrodden and those without – all the time. She stays up on world events, and talks to people, not to change them over to her view, but to show them the other side of the coin they have missed, so they can change their view themselves rationally.

This friend of mine is constantly asked what church she goes to because most of her conversations revolve around what she IS doing, and it always involves helping others. The sheer silence when she proclaims “I am an Atheist” is shocking. People do not understand the concept that “good” has nothing to do with believing in God. I respect her more than I can voice.

When first coming out of the closet, and finding my own way, away from my family, away from my church, away from the friends I knew from school and church – it took me a long time to equalize my heart with the fact that who I am as a person, has nothing to do with where I go to church, or if I ever go to church again. Finding out that the core of myself was not changed, because I am not what someone else wants me to be. It is okay to be gay, and still a caring, sharing and loving person.

I admire those with faith. Those with a strong passion for what they believe in, and I would never want to change the ones I love who feel as they do. There are an incredible amount of people of faith, who do amazing things. If it were not for little old ladies at plant sales in New Hampshire, with their baked goods and yard sales raising money for a new steeple, I would have had some very boring weekends.

It is those who say one thing, and do another who I scorn. Those who preach “help your fellow man” but they are in fact only helping themselves. After 2000 years, why has no one figured out that straight people have gay kids? Preachers, have the “worst” kids? And preachers make the largest salaries? With all the lies in this world, why is it easy to follow what someone in power says, rather than looking for the reason behind it?

Show me someone who lives off bread and fish, who works with Lepers and the blind. Not when he says “follow me”, but I emulate good when I see it and hopefully someone else does the same from me. Isn’t that how the world really works?

In this very busy world, it is eat or be eaten – Good acts are scoffed at as weakness. I have always been weak, and will always remain so. I can never be as good as someone else, I can only be as good as I am and, I am good with that.

http://habitatta.org/default.aspx – Anyone want to join up with me?

PS. Don’t pay ANY attention to me. There is a man behind the curtain pushing my buttons. If only I can reach inside and dislodge him..