Tuesday, July 5, 2016

The Smallest of Things

I have been stewing on this post since the Summer of 1994.  Naturally, not literally this blog post since to my knowledge blogs didn't exist way back in the day of dial up internet and 5.25 and 3.5 inch floppy disks.  But the events I'm going to describe have troubled me for more than 20 years, and I've finally decided to put them down on paper, so to speak.  My story is off topic really.  It has nothing to do with being Mormon or gay, except in the most tangential way which I will try to pull together at the end.

I doubt this will be read by many, if anyone.  Like all of my posts, I'm writing it for me.  More or less as a way to talk to myself and express my feelings.  If someone actually does read it, and further still perhaps finds it interesting, all the better.  But that isn't the point.

It's the summer of 1994.  I have just finished my first year of law school.  My school offered three week summer courses with the University of Salzburg law school.  I decided that it was an opportunity I just couldn't pass up.  So I borrowed an extra $5k on my student loans, threw caution to the wind and went for it.

I flew from San Francisco to Atlanta where I had a six hour layover.  The next leg of my journey was from Atlanta to Orly Airport in Paris.  As I was standing in line to through security at the international gates, a gentleman approached me.  He asked if I would mail an envelope for him from Paris.  I agreed to do it for him so he gave me a standard sized letter envelope and a dollar or two for postage.  I can't remember what reason he gave, but I don't recall being particularly worried about it.  And at that time in my life, I was something of a wilting flower.  I couldn't say no to people.

Now, let's remember that 1994 was a much simpler time.  I could still walk right up to the gate when picking someone up at my medium-sized hometown airport.  This was all pre-9/11.  Yes, terrorism existed in the world.  But it was "over there" in the Middle East mostly, not in the good old US of A.  In fact, I don't recall feeling even the slightest bit of nervousness about traveling in Europe.  It didn't even cross my mind that there might be any danger.  So, when the gentleman approached me, I wasn't enthusiastic about doing it, but I also didn't see it as something particularly hazardous.

Here's the thing.  I never mailed the letter.  I thought about it several times.  Wish I could say that I knew why I didn't.  I believe on some level I thought perhaps it just wasn't a good idea considering that I didn't have any clue what was in the envelope or who gave it to me.  Strangely enough, I think it was mostly because I was so shy and reserved that I didn't want to go to a post office or ask someone where to get stamps.  I laugh now, especially considering the career I was pursuing. 

Whatever the combination of reasons, I hauled that letter and the money he gave me around Europe for a month.  Then I brought it home, where it sat for years.  In fact decades.  I would periodically run across it and wonder.  All that time, I never did anything with the money and I never opened the envelope.  Partly because I didn't want to know the impact of what I failed to do, and partly because I wanted to respect the sender's privacy.  I finally destroyed the letter, again never having opened it.

My failure to keep my commitment has haunted me.  Still haunts me.  Perhaps it was nothing, or at least a thing not so very significant.  On the other hand, maybe it was major.  Perhaps it was a letter of acceptance for a job or for school or for some other life changing event.  Maybe it was emergency money for a close friend or relative.  Perhaps it was an important document that had to be somewhere and couldn't wait for overseas mail.  There are many, many things it could have been.  Some great, some insignificant.  But whatever it was, it was important enough to him to bring it to the airport.  

We never know what the impact of our choices will be, on ourselves and on others.  I look back at my life and realize that the failure it has become is not really the result of a few major decisions, although there have certainly been several that have had an out-sized influence.  Rather, it's the accumulation of choices great and small, most of which have been consistently poor, that has brought me to where I am today.  What's more, I've learned the magnitude of the impact of some of my decisions on those around me.  In a few cases, that impact was life altering for others in ways I would never have believed or even considered.

I've gone through life with what I see now as reckless abandon.  I refused to take the hard path and accept my homosexuality for what it was until it was much too late.  The hundreds of opportunities missed and dishonesties have hurt me and those around me in unknown, and probably unknowable, ways.  While I'm not so self loathing as to fail to excuse childhood and youthful misjudgments, there is simply no excuse for the way I lived my life once I reached adulthood.

I don't really know what I'm trying to accomplish by writing this.  Perhaps there is nothing more to gain than finally telling the story in the hopes of moving on from the guilt associated with it.  But for better or for worse, whether something is accomplished or nothing at all, there it is.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Thanksgiving in January

I can't believe it's 2015.  And that I haven't posted since October of last year.  It's not like I've had nothing going on in my little pea brain.  I actually plan to write soon about the following topic:  The far reaching consequences of the many small decisions we make in our lives.

But for the moment, I just want to be grateful.  Let's call it my three months too late Thanksgiving 2014 post.  Without further ado, I'm thankful for the following:
  • A vacation to the Northern American International Auto Show in fabulous Detroit, Michigan.  I saw many wonderful cars, toured the Ford Rouge plant where they build the F150, saw The Henry Ford museum, went to the General Motors worldwide headquarters and saw the Detroit Institute of Arts museum.  But best of all I spent my time with an old, dear friend.  There was no romance as he is as straight as a new nail from Home Depot.  But my was it fun.




  • My twitter friends, especially a certain professor from Indiana.
  • Miguel my first personal gay moho friend, and the first person I could be unapologetically gay around.
  • Hearing from Matthew my young friend from my home town.
  • My two brothers.
  • My job and my work colleagues.
  • Music.
  • An old friend's success in his battle with cancer.
  • My 98 year old grandmother.
  • My neighbors.
  • My beagles.

  • The fact that I've lived to 2015, a concept which is nothing short of amazing to me.
  • My buddy the big boss super da da and his wonderful babies who call me Uncle Mike and actually appear to like me.
  • My cars and Harley.
  • All my wonderful electronic gadgets.
  • My cameras and the joy of an image well captured.

  • Hearing from an old blogger friend who once was lost to me, and apparently is now found since I just heard from him after near four years of silence.  This one is a big one.  To just know he's well and happy and, frankly, alive.  Who knows if we will take up where we left off, but hearing from him just this once more is sufficient to make me very happy.
  • So many good books.
  • A loud fan, two blankets and a heated mattress pad on a cold winter night.
  • Annual trips with my professor friend from Arizona who've I've known since I was 12.
  • The fact that I've known my dentist since before puberty.
  • Randomly running into an old friend from my childhood while waiting for the same flight from LAX.  He was there on church business - I was there because I returned from sinning in Detroit.
  • That I'm alive.  
  • That the world is such a beautiful, astounding, unlikely place.

  • National Parks, in all their magnificent beauty, spread far and wide across the land.  And a nation with leaders who have had the forethought to realize their immense value.
And that's just my short list folks.  Oh yeah, I'm also grateful for bloggers in our little gay Mormon world - from the true believers to the confirmed skeptics to the angry atheists.  You've done more for me than I can really express.


Saturday, October 11, 2014

How to Be Alone in a Crowd of Friends Without Even Trying

I start with the following assumption:  To some extent, we are all very much alone.  From the most popular among us, surrounded by family and friends, to the lone, lonely, loners like Sid the Sloth from Ice Age.  While we all assume there's a certain general commonality to life, in the final analysis, all we actually really know is our own experiences.  So, yes, it is likely that everyone feels some loneliness on some level at least some of the time.  I think.

Still, a few days ago it dawned on me for the very first time how truly alone I was during those all-important formative teenage years.  Now, don't misunderstand what I am saying.  In many ways I was incredibly lucky.  I had three siblings who, for the most part, treated me reasonably well.  I often sigh and wonder over my parents' relationship, but they stayed together until my mother passed.  And, perhaps most important during the teenage years, I had a surfeit of friends.  It seemed like I was never without options, especially from 15 on.  

I've mentioned the friends of my teenage years before.  They were incredible.  In many cases they remain in contact today, sometimes frequently so.  My high school years would have been such a lesser experience without them.  So lucky to have such good, caring people in my life then and now.  No, a lack of friends wasn't the issue.

But I lacked that one friend who was like me on the inside.  Gay.  Now, statistically I know that there were plenty like "me" in my high school.  But I'm talking about the middle 1980s.  I can not think of one single person who was actually out and gay in my school.  Gay people all lived in the City (San Francisco) and hung around bathhouses, parks, public restrooms and other locations of ill repute.  Gays were all people of questionable character who wore leather and dresses.  They certainly didn't exist in Straight White Boy High School planted smack in the middle of Every Suburb USA.  Shoot, no one even masturbated, because that would make you gay too.  So, I was left to date girls, force myself to hold their hands and, heaven forbid, grit my teeth and kiss them goodnight. 

I've long understood that to survive in those times, I had to keep things boxed up inside.  Still, until the last few weeks I didn't realize how much it hurt, how sad and lonely it was to be so uniquely alone with my feelings.  I've posted before about some furtive sexual play with a friend or two, but that's not what I'm talking about.  To this day, I don't believe that any of them were actually gay.  Their focus remained clearly, unapologetically on girls.

It would have meant so much to have had just one gay friend who I could have talked to.  Who I could have told about my feelings openly, without reservation.  As silly as it might sound, it would've been nice to simply have someone with whom I could have shared my admiration for some of the incredibly handsome young men who populated my high school. Instead I was left on my own, and that loneliness made an unfortunate, even tragic impact on my life.

I'm glad to see that, to at least some extent, teenagers and young adults today have a much easier time finding gay friends to take away that loneliness.

And another thing, if the the Harley-Davidson Street 750 was out when I bought my bike 1 1/2 years ago, I think I would have purchased it instead.  Liquid cooled heresy to HD purists, but I'm not one of those by any means.  This bike is cool.


Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Curious

So, it's been years since I've really paid attention to Church positions on current issues.  But I'm wondering - and it's genuine curiosity, I'm not looking to bait anyone - would two faithful members of the same sex who were married, but who maintain that they do not engage in sex, be denied temple recommends?