Edmond Manning's Blog, page 4
April 1, 2015
Gentle Pranks
I may have gone too far today, in prank world.
It wasn’t the first prank. The second one went off well, too. But the third one. I might have crossed the line on that one.
The first prank was kind of an eye-roller.
I like to make a big deal about the fact that I was Employee of the Month, January 2014. At the time, I ordered a sash. To this day, if I have a comment to make at company meetings, I will sometimes say, “Hi. Edmond Manning. January 2014 employee of the month. I think…” Everyone groans. Everyone knows the EOTM is picked randomly. They get the parking spot in the front of the building. It’s about 30-40 feet from all the other spots in the parking lot, so we all know the parking doesn’t matter that much.
But once a month, the email comes out and introduces a coworker we see every day in the kitchen, and we learn she’s a black belt in karate or that programmer once lived in China for two years. It’s a friendly way to remind us all we work with some cool, impressive people.
Our front receptionist–who selects the EOTM and sends out these lovely emails–agreed to plot with me. Today she announced I was the April 20014 Employee of the Month and even created my lovely interview she does. I emailed my acceptance speech and reminded people I was only available for photos on Thursday afternoon in the break area between 2-4 p.m. I promised change would be coming. A new era of change under my reign. Everyone assumed it was a joke almost immediately. Nobody wants me in that position again.
Not after the last time.
Prank number two was a little more sophisticated. I mean, no genius level stuff. I am a simple man.
A work friend has been pranking me gently for the past month. He told his story on reddit funny and it became a front page story–a big honor. Today Cheeseburger website named him “Coolest April Fools day prank.” The video catching my reaction to finding out lasts about 10 minutes and has been watched 20,000 times. I heard from two friends I hadn’t spoken to in months who reached out to say, “Hey, that’s you in this story, right?”
In the office, we’ve been chuckling over Tom’s insano-flakes patience and art skills, chuckling over my blindness, including not noticing the comic he changed so it screamed EDMOND int huge red letters on the cube wall right behind where I spend 90% of the working day staring at my computer.
Never saw it.
This week, I was the April fool, but in a gentle, friendly way.
I announced via email that we should gather at 3:00 p.m. and celebrate Tom. With a gift.
He IM’d me immediately to say, “What did you do?”
At 3:00, I stood behind Tom with a big knife and said, “It’s time. Come to the pool table.’
He glanced at the knife and walked in front of me.
We all gathered and stared.
I had purchased a grocery store cake and offered it to Tom as ‘thanks’ for all his hilariousness, punking me so damn publicly. Everyone in my studio was in on the prank, waiting for weeks for me to figure this out. In purple frosting, I had the the grocery store baker add these words: There’s Nothing Wrong With This Cake.
He read the cake, noticing my patch-up frosting areas where I tried to make it look someone had fucked with the insides. Maybe inserted something. Then, tried to frost over any evidence of foul-play.
Tom looked at us, all of us, staring at him and said, “No way. No.”
We cajoled him and I offered him the knife.
He held it reluctantly.
Someone said, “Can other non-Tom people have cake?”
“No!” I spoke with vehemence. “This is for Tom.”
Everyone laughed. But waited expectantly.
Through gritted teeth I said, “After all the effort I went through, it would be downright rude not cut the cake and eat a piece.”
“But, I don’t eat–”
“IT WOULD BE RUDE.”
He gingerly cut a piece.
Stepped back.
A producer in our studio put her hand on my arm and said, “I need Tom this afternoon. He’s on deadline. He can’t spend time in an ER.”
Tom poked the cake with the knife.
She said, “I’m serious.”
Her seriousness did not reassure Tom.
After a little stalling, Tom eventually cut a piece and raised it to his mouth.
The worried producer gasped out the word, “No!”
Tom bit down as if he might lose his teeth, but then he ate the rest of his small piece, and said, “It’s just cake.”
After that, we all had cake!
The cake had not lied.
It was a pretty gentle prank. Nobody went to the ER.
But could I stop there? No.
The third prank.
I had this idea to do something a little dark.
I think April Fools Day is like Halloween. We celebrate the parts of us that are not so nice. Sometimes it’s funny when a person slips and falls. Saw a guy put Post-It notes all over his girlfriend’s car and she was late to work so had to drive with the entire car covered. She said all the flapping sounded like kazoos. We are compassionate people, most of us, but sometimes we can be a little rude. A little sharp. We need to indulge that desire to laugh at someone else.
We can choose as adults not to indulge the super mean pranks. We can choose to run to someone hurt and say, “Are you okay?” Personally, I cringe at the really mean stuff. We can find gentler pranks and still somehow honor the dark side in all of us.
The other aspect of this holiday is that we all get made fools of by life. We age. We say dumb things. We make mistakes and sometimes they aren’t so funny. We make big plans for our lives and they head a different direction. It’s not easy to laugh everything off, so we need a holiday that reminds us to laugh when reality is not what we thought it would be. April Fools Day helps us laugh at ourselves, our gullibility, our trusting nature, the goofy playfulness of our relationships with each other.
It’s nice to be prank and be pranked. It’s an affectionate punch on the shoulder from someone who thinks buying a $4 greeting card is bullshit.
For the third prank, I decided on three sentences.
I typed them .
Printed out the piece of paper and left it sitting at the printer for someone else to find.
The three sentences were these: “I’ve made up my mind. Let’s go forward with this. Have them both killed.”
Okay, that was a little dark. I know.
When I left the building tonight, our HR person (let’s call her HR) was in her car and rolled down her window. We chatted for a few minutes. She and I chuckled over my temporary Employee of The Month status. Later today, when I was officially ousted, like a cat shooed from the window sil, I warned the new employee of the month that this wasn’t over. I also bragged that I spent the full day parked in her parking spot.
She replied to me privately and said, “I’m gonna need you to go move your car.”
I shared this with HR and we reminisced some good pranks we had both heard. Then, we reminisced about her car deoderizers. Last year, HR pranked all the executives with balloons in their offices, so many they couldn’t get in. She covered someone else’s entire office with Post-It notes. The walls, computer, the desk. One exec was traveling, so she opened up four dozen cheap air fresheners–mostly car wash variety–and sealed his office with a towel under the door so that when he returned from his trip, the air was unbreathable.
After his return, we all paraded by his office to see him working with his eyes watering, and choking as he said, “Yes. Verrrry funny.”
HR is a gentle pranker, The very best kind.
Worried I over did it with my third prank of the day, I said, “What would you say is going too far?”
Immediately, she said, “Sexist. Racist. Mean-spirited. Homophobic. Any phobic, really. Anything mean about a person.”
She added a few others conditions to the list because gentle prankers don’t want to exclude someone or make them feel like crap. We want them in on the joke with us. Come play.
“What about murderous threats type pranks?”
“Ah,” she said. “That would explain the piece of paper that ended up on my desk this afternoon.”
I am so going to be fired from this place.
Happy April, fools everywhere.
February 23, 2015
Michelle
It’s easy for us to be outraged these days.
I mean, true, there’s a lot to be outraged by. But it’s also easy to express our outrage in Facebook comments and anonymous replies to angry strangers where we can say, ‘NO, YOU’RE THE JERK” and feel satisfied that we didn’t use the word asswipe instead. Demonstrates some modicum of civility, yes? We have the pleasure of hindsight when we respond online and say things like, “You know what I would have said?” or respond from a compassionate distance to say, “I feel for this person.”
It’s so much easier to comment from far away.
But do you confront the outside world’s daily outrages? Could you do it with compassion and firmness? Not betraying your values but also not descending into asswipe territory?
I don’t think it’s that easy.
Especially when it’s someone you like, or liked up until that second they said something racist. Someone you trust. Someone who you don’t think is a total asshole . In circumstances that are challenging, would you confront an outrage if witnessed?
Michelle did.
She is a coworker of mine.
We’ve worked together for many years, but we don’t work in the same state, so it can be a year or three between our sightings. She’s in our company’s QA (Quality Assurance) department, which means she and her team review the software our team and other teams are building, try to break it, clean up our sloppy words, and sometimes have the dreaded task of saying, “I don’t really get this piece.” It’s their job to raise the flag on anything that’s not functional, inappropriate, or questionable.
I got an email from Michelle last week.
The contents shocked me.
With a professional tone and language, Michelle very courteously told me that she and a coworker had come upon a QA comment I had made some months ago. They discussed it. Michelle decided to address it, because it was so very inappropriate. “It’s not the swearing that offends me,” she said in her email.
I hadn’t actually remember the offending QA comment I made, so my eyebrows were pretty high over my head in disbelief.
What had I said?
She provided a link to the offending comment but due to the space-time continuum (that’s the short version), the link didn’t work. I had checked work email from home, so I couldn’t see the actual QA comment until I got to my work computer, later that day.
I continued to read.
Michelle explained how it was very unprofessional to call out a colleague with such disrespect as I had done in the comment. She urged me to remember that whoever’s words I had criticized with my comment, that person was a coworker, someone we value, someone on our team. They deserved our respect and if that person had made a mistake, then certainly our compassion.
What the hell had I said?
With great heart, Michelle pointed out that she had always thought of me as a very compassionate person and she couldn’t believe I would treat someone this way.
We’re Facebook friends (one of the few coworkers I friended outside the office) and she has read my fiction. She’s an author, too. She first introduced me to National Novel Writing Month. Politically, we both lean left, so we can bitch together. We think Obama got the shaft and we’re angry about it.
She’s political outside Facebook. She’s knows every senator and most house of representatives, in her state and nationally. She writes thoughtful opinion pieces. She advocates for social justice causes in the real world. It was years before I realized her two sons were adopted because they are not really adopted to Michelle and her husband. It’s simple. They are family.
And now she was standing up to me.
Michelle urged me to think of other strategies for communication and gave me a few ways I could have explained my frustration (minus the f-word) with how the original writer crafted the instructions.
It was a longish email, carefully considered, and I was mystified how and why I could say something so horrible to cause her such upset.
I can be harsh sometimes. I know that. But what the fuck did I say?
Was my account hacked and another coworker was playing a joke on me? We tend to joke around.
Had I experienced the worst day of my life and blocked it out of memory?
Michelle is patient and fair. She has to be. People are constantly telling her she was wrong to point out their software bugs and her job is to smile and nod and say, “I’ll do better next time. Thank you.” Even when she is right, she is the dreaded QA expert who finds flaws. It’s not an easy job.
I drove a little quickly to work.
After logging on, first thing I did was to click the link and see my exact words.
There they were, staring at me: “Existing instructions are just terrible. Seriously. Who the fuck wrote that nonsensical bullshit? Use these instead: Click…”
Wow. That was pretty mean.
But would I write something like that? Did I? Something that mean to a coworker? Could I–
I remembered to look at the date the comment was made. Light bulb. From Michelle’s email, I got the impression the comment I made was from many months ago. Many months ago, I had been on a half-dozen different projects. I couldn’t remember which might have driven me to be such an, well, asswipe. But the date of this comment was only January 2015. I had misunderstood – this comment was recent.
And then. Light bulb.
Because I remembered which coworker this comment was directed at: me.
I wrote the original instructions for a computer interaction we built. Two week later, when I reviewed the software, performing my own QA, I reread my own instructions and they seemed like gibberish to me. So I made a QA comment and insisted they be rewritten. I provided the rewrite, but first I chastized myself: Who the fuck wrote that nonsensical bullshit?
I was bad-mouthing my own words.
Michelle both stood up to me and also protected me, though neither of us realized I was the victim as well as the bully. Maybe she’s skilled at addressing conflict as a result of parenting two sons. Maybe her unapologetic respect and compassion is grown from years debating politics with friends. I don’t know.
I wrote her, greatly relieved, and explained that the original writer was me and I thought my developer pals would laugh at my comment when they got into the software to update the instructions. We live for small funnies like that.
Michelle was then flooded with relief because she couldn’t believe she had to call me out the way she did, and the whole situation upset her. We laughed the way you’re permitted via email, exchanging LOLs at the end of sentences.
After a few emails updating each other on politics and writing, we went back to work.
But I was touched, very touched, by her actions that day. She stood up for me. She said, “Nobody can treat Edmond this way. Nobody. Not even someone I like and respect.” (She actually said in her original email that it was hard to confront me because “she liked and respected me.”) She was kind to the bully and unapologetic in representing the aggrieved.
But what if she never confronted me and just lived with the knowledge that I was an asswipe?
What if a client saw it, somehow?
Michelle and I agreed that I shouldn’t joke around like that in the QA software anymore, because of the rich potential for misunderstanding. Now that I think about it, I probably shouldn’t have done that.
But I learned another lesson from this experience, too.
Michelle will not tolerate meanness.
She will stand up to outrages and abuse. She will defend those who need defending.
And not just when it’s easy.
January 7, 2015
King John
This story takes place in 2002
Chapter 1
I am Bedouin.
I walk the hard-packed alkali desert in my canyon-brown thobe, the thin, cotton gown flitting over the tops of my exposed feet, tickling them. I feel the scorching heat rise up through the barren earth, through my sandals, slowly cooking me on this oven-blasted day. A sturdy rope belt, woven from camel wool wraps around my waist twice and is slung over my shoulder, the excess swinging at my side almost as a lasso. My canvas water bag sloshes at my side. A shorter length of camel wool secures my kufeya, the long white sides flowing down my back and sides of my face, protecting me from the brutal desert rays.
I am Bedouin.
We could die out here.
We could all die out here. Desert heat. Dehydration. A deep, fleshy wound, so far from civilization.
I walk with my thick staff, observing my people, wandering among this clan, pondering the fate—
A young Asian woman jumps in front of me, sporting a spiked, yellow faux-hawk and glittery green eye shadow extending beyond her eye lids, curling into flowery spikes on her cheeks. She holds melted ice in front of me, dripping off her fingers.
“Cherry popsicle, Arab man?”
I nod solemnly. “Yes. Yes, please.”
She hands me the ice pop, red stickiness dripping down my fingers as they touch hers.
“May I do anything for you in return?”
She says, “Kiss me.”
She turns her face and indicates the bronzed cheek not covered in sparkly green makeup. I lean in to touch my lips to her soft skin, silently blessing this sparkle pony who decided to make my day better.
She bounces away, eager to distribute her icy prizes before they melt. Over her shoulder, she says, “Be wonderful.”
I will try, Sparkle Pony. I will try.
I suck the red juices and look around at our Black Rock City clan, the outrageous, volatile clan gathered for this, the seventeenth year of Burning Man.
My name…my name is Vinicio Vanablay. No, that sounds almost Italian. That’s a terrible Bedouin name. I need a more Arabic-sounding name. What about…Vanaco. No. that’s just….Vintalmach. Well, no, that’s just a mess of letters flung together without any regard for their personal safety. This is hard. There is no letter v in Arabic alphabet. It’s like my name couldn’t possibly exist.
January 5, 2015
2015
The promise of a new year is the promise of a clean slate. New opportunities to shine brighter, to let go of more baggage, to be that better person.
New me!
Well, one and a half hours into 2015, I had already taken that clean slate and metaphorically wiped my butt on it, Instagrammed it, and tweeted, ‘Screw you, New Year. I intend to be as much of an idiot this year as I was last year.’
You see, at 1:30 a.m. on January 1st, I wrote the most intimate, wildly inappropriate graphic text message I have ever crafted, so terrible I shall never reveal the exact words, not to anyone. I sent it and then, for the first time, looked at the recipient. (Cover your face with your hands because you know where this is going.) Yup. I failed to send it to the intended person.
Happy New Year.
I’m an idiot.
The message was intended for a man I feel extremely close to. We had been texting earlier that evening. For him, the message was crude but appropriate.
But it was not the kind of message you’d want read at Senate hearings, and I sometimes worry my life will be analyzed on CSPAN, possibly a Tuesday night special report hosted by angry senators with little hope of re-election unless they make me their last-ditch attack on behalf of public morality. In my imagination, I find myself apologizing into a dozen accusatory microphones.
“Mr. Manning, we need to know the exact wording of that text message.”
“I am so sorry, esteemed senators, but I fail to see the relevance–”
“We’ll decide what’s relevant,” says a snarling senator (R-Texas) facing charges from the Ethics committee.
(She is hoping to draw attention away from those charges by making a name with my inquiry.)
Near tears, I say, “I can‘t tell you the exact wording. If you just let me explain, Senators, I can tell you why I don’t have a copy of the message.”
“Mr. Manning, this outrageous claim…”
They never let me explain.
The reason I don’t have this message anymore because when I reread my lengthy paragraph of human depravity in hair-tingling panic, the first thing I did was to instantly delete the message from my phone, hoping this action would cancel delivery. Of course it didn’t, but I wanted to believe, so desperately, that there was a way to undo this.
See, I had sent the message not to one person, but two. My two sisters.
I want to believe that a dozen of my close friends would have replied to an accidental text like that with something amusing like, “Kiss your mother with that mouth?” But this was the filthiest thing I had every written and as a guy who writes about men engaged in graphic sex, I think that’s saying something. I honestly believe that even a good-humored friend who accidentally received this message would eye me with naked disgust and say, “Seriously? You wrote this?”
Nobody would laugh.
I certainly wasn’t laughing.
Sure, it was an accident both sisters received this text. Accidents happen. I think they would forgive me, despite how enormously distasteful and disrespectful this message. But worse, worse by far, was how I believed they would forever look at me. See me. I’m not sure I’m a knight in shining armor to either one of them. But this message would tarnish any remaining silver in our relationship. I knew it.
My sisters have seen the worst of me. I have yelled at them unfairly, needled them, criticized them, and suffered them to endure my icy, damning silence. And yet, for all our childhood grievances and adult fights, they love me. We have colored with crayons together. Invented games together. Attended high school together, sharing classes. Over the years, we celebrated three dozen Christmases together, and more birthdays than that.
I wept with these women at my father’s funeral.
As an adult sibling, I am prickly to their very belief systems, and they are not exactly supportive of gays. But we still find ways to play together, to laugh together, to miss our Dad together, to celebrate this gift that we’re all a family. For whatever shortcomings we all tolerate in each other, there somehow remains a certain purity and light in our sibling love. When I call my younger sister, Eileen, we often replay stolen lines from Harrison Ford’s The Fugitive.
Brusquely, she answers, saying, “Talk to me.”
I say, “I didn’t kill my wife!”
With a slight Tommy Lee Jones twang, she says, “I don’t care.”
Our good stories together outweigh our bad.
I need that unadulterated sister love.
Less than two minutes after clicking send, in blind panic, I did as thousands of other freaked-out individuals like me have done in the past, frantically googling, “UNSEND TEXT MESSAGE.”
Every link sadly proclaimed the same message: sorry, buddy.
I typed them a follow-up text explaining DO NOT READ THE PREVIOUS MESSAGE, which was silly because they would not read this latest message until they had finished the one immediately above it.
After sitting in terror and sadness and general freaked-outedness, I decided I may as well go to bed. I mean, relationship damage done. What else could I do? I sat in silence and thought about my older and younger sister.
I missed seeing them at Christmas this year.
I mean, I missed mom and my brother and new sister-in-law, extended family, and all my Chicago friends…that sucked also, but this is a story about missing your sisters, an older sister who I idolized in my youth, and a younger, so close to me in age, we are referenced as ‘Irish twins.’
Because of work-related project deadlines and a business trip between Christmas and New Years, this year, I did not take holiday vacation days. I chose not to drive to Illinois. I could have, I guess, but I felt exhausted by a frantic autumn and the prospect of four days’ vacation–at home–for two consecutive weekends felt like a Christmas gift I could not ignore.
I mostly did not regret that decision, not until Christmas Eve when I spoke on the phone with each of my beloved family members. It really hurt to hear them laughing in the background, imagining the house smells and last-minute gift wrapping chaos. When the phone was passed to Andrea, I opened the Christmas gift she had ensured arrived the day prior, a gift made for each sibling: a gorgeous replicas of our parents’ wedding album. We discussed our favorite photos, the Hollywood photo, the one where they are most happy, the one on the church steps, the one where our brother looks most like our father. I pretended not to cry and hoped she could not hear me.
Sitting in my New Year’s middle-of-the-night funk, after my colossal texting fuck-up, I decided to go to bed, and wondered if I would sleep at all.
Then a final, ridiculous idea dawned on me: call them.
Maybe they hadn’t seen the message yet?
After all, it was 1:30 in the morning when I sent it.
I called my older sister, Andrea, and woke her up. I didn’t care. This was worth it.
I explained the circumstances. Eileen had sent a post-midnight message of “HaPpY nEw YeArS” to both Andrea and myself, which made it to the top of the text messages pile. When I opened my message window, the phone defaulted to show me the newest message, so while I thought I was typing to someone else, I was actually typing to them.
With a sad and anxious voice, I explained how I feared the message I sent would change the way she looked at me, and not for the better. I said it would make me really heartbroken. I begged her not to read it. I told her it would mean everything to me.
In a soft, alert voice, she said, “Of course. Of course. I won’t read it. I promise.”
Of course she would show me that respect and love. Why did I even not consider this option, the phone call, until after fifteen minutes had passed? Of course she would show me the love I needed.
Moments later, I called my younger sister who answered her phone snorting, laughing, speaking before I could. She said, “Mom and I were just watching–”
Clearly, she hadn’t seen the text message.
I interrupted her and said, “Eileen, I need to talk to you. This is important to me.”
Instantly, the hilarity left her voice and she switched to cautious. “What’s wrong?”
For a second time, I explained the situation and let her know how much it would mean to me if she deleted before reading. I pleaded with her.
She assured me she had not read it and in her cheery voice said she was actually glad I asked this favor, because she got a new cell phone the day prior and she needed practice on deleting messages. Hell, I don’t even think she was mildly curious as to the message contents. After her assurances, she asked me a question or two about iPhones and their interfaces.
We wished each other happy new year, and hung up.
I went to bed.
I slept soundly, so soundly.
The next morning I awoke at 6:00 a.m. to find a message from Andrea who wrote to say ‘mission accomplished.’ She explained she wasn’t sure if it would be physically possible to find and delete the message without reading it, but she managed it.
Eileen texted me by 7:30 a.m. to say, “Deleted without reading. Both messages. And I learned a new feature! I love this new smartphone!”
Maybe I don’t need a ‘clean slate’ come New Years. The 2014 version of me seems to have a great deal of love and trust in his life. Maybe I just need to reevaluate “my existing slate” and show better appreciation to the people who have loved me all my life. Maybe the only real ‘clean slate’ is accepting who you are, the life you have, and trying to polish what’s already there.
I told a good friend this miraculous tale, my idiocy, and my sisters’ love.
He said, “Yeah, but how do you know they didn’t lie and just read it anyway?”
I know.
I know because I heard the promise in their tone as much as their words. And because they love me.
In the darkest hour, on the first day of 2015, they both promised, and then kept, their first New Years’ resolution.
December 25, 2014
The Gift
One of the most unusual and wonderful presents I ever received was from a Catholic nun. And I don’t even remember her name. I was a high school junior attending weekly Catechism in the straight-backed wooden pews of St. Mary’s Catholic Church. St. Mary’s was brutally cold and darkly solemn that Wednesday in mid-December. A few pale candles waved weakly from the alter, perhaps waving goodbye to my slipping faith. It’s a terrible thing to doubt your Christianity during Christmastime.
The Sister who taught us now was a soft-spoken but confident woman with slow and elegant movements. She announced, “I have a Christmas gift for each of you. It’s actually from God.”
She passed around a shallow ceramic bowl filled with scraps of paper and continued to speak. “On each of these slips of paper is a gift from God. I promise you that God will grant you this gift sometime in your life when you need it most. I do not know when that will be. It may be next week, it may be in two years. But I promise.”
I reeled at what I considered the blasphemy of her words. Who was she to promise a Christmas present from the Almighty? This kind of “I-represent-God’s-will” grandstanding was exactly what eroded my belief system. I was tired of hearing what I considered hypocritical messages from people of faith. My high school counterparts each took a slip of paper as the bowl passed my way. I looked at them anxiously, wondering what their slips of paper revealed. Then I took mine.
In typed blocked letters was the word “gentleness.” Gentleness? Who the fuck wants gentleness? I remember thinking that God had a pretty crappy typewriter. I crumpled and the scrap and kicked it under the pew ahead of me.
Sister continued to explain, “I promise that God will give your gift to you.”
Sometime over that Christmas break, I had a fight with one of my sisters. I don’t remember what we fought about. After we had each skulked away, I thought of my gift and wondered where God had been during that fight – why didn’t He – the Almighty – provide the ‘promised gentleness?’ And I thought about gentleness – what did it mean to be gentle? Gentle in your heart? Your words? Did gentleness stop you from fighting or hurting someone you love? Did it make you rise above the petty conflict? Is gentleness a realization that the fight isn’t as important as the person? I thought about my sister and how I would want people in the world to be gentle with her. Soon I was calm; I was feeling…I didn’t know…could that moment be the experience of gentleness? Was this the promised gift?
I found my sister in another room of the house and we reconciled.
A year or two later in college, I had to initiate an uncomfortable discussion with my college roommate. I truly hoped that I would display the kind of patience necessary for this talk to go well. And I wondered ‘Is this time? Will the promised gentleness will come now?’ Though I shook with nervousness (being very new to confrontation), the conversation went very well. I held my ground. Respected his feelings. After it was over, I asked myself, ‘Was that the moment of the gift?’
I asked that question again a year or two later as my best friend cried in my arms over a failing relationship. How could I find the right soothing words? What do you say when someone’s entire world just ended? ‘Please, let now be the time of the gift.’ I begged. ‘Please God, let me find words of comfort. I’m not good at this stuff, but help me be gentle with her broken heart.’ And somehow I said things that made her feel better. Or maybe gentleness wasn’t in the words I said, but in holding her, in feeling sorrow with her.
Later in life when it was I who desperately grieved a failed relationship and my own heart was pierced with jagged regrets and unspoken recriminations, I wondered the familiar question ‘Will the gentleness come now?’ It did.
And I wept with gratitude.
I have been visited by gentleness many times since then, yet I still don’t know that I could define it. Does gentleness yank you out of anger? Or is it more like a child’s soft but insistent tug on the back of your shirt? Perhaps gentleness seeps into you like milk through an Oreo, a delicious and thorough sensation. Gentleness could have a far-away voice or perhaps it acts like a warm baking pie that wafts into consciousness and changes your perception. Or maybe gentleness is present in buttery, toasty yellow, a pretty color acting as a distraction, encouraging a better part of yourself to swim to the surface.
I still don’t know.
All I know is that God kept the nun’s promise, over and over. I still pray for gentleness to come to me when I need it most. And when my heart feels it or my eyes get wet with tears, I often think, ‘Is this it, God? Is today the day you keep the nun’s promise?’ I have since left the Catholic Church.
But I still have faith.
And now, I offer you a gift from my own crappy word processor, typed in all caps. This gift is actually from God. But it will come to you. I promise.
GENTLENESS
December 21, 2014
The Longest Night
I read an article online today promising tonight, Winter Solstice 2014, is the longest night ever in the history of our planet. Because the earth always moving from the sun due to IMAGINE SCIENCTIFICAL-TYPE STATEMENTS HERE ‘CAUSE I WAS TOO LAZY TO COPY THEM, which therefore means that today is roughly two seconds longer than last year. Tonight is the longest night we’ve ever experienced.
Ever.
This alarms me.
I realize in checking the spelling of ‘exaggerate’ three times I already used up those extra two seconds allotted to our spinning planet this year, but it still freaks me out. Some days I look around me and I worry the darkness is winning. There are cops being killed in Florida tonight, possibly in retaliation for the killing of an unarmed black man. Our country is dealing with the after-effects of yet another racially-convoluted killing. How many people of color need to be slaughtered before we, on an institutional level, start saying, “No more deaths. We have to figure this out.”
It would be one thing if this were the first, shocking instance. But on the night before I was born in 1967, mom could see the McDonalds burning down across the street. She thought, ‘What kind of world?’ These were the Detroit Race Riots. Followed by a lot of incidents between then and now. So, you know, this isn’t new news.
Sometimes our world feel like the longest night. The darkest night. Will it ever get better?
And, hey. Happy holidays.
For me, the holidays are a combination of my best memories and a few of my least-favorite. Luckily, awesomeness outshines the bad, but that does not mean I feel both freely. Tired and needing a break, this year, I opted out of Christmas.
I didn’t know you could do that.
Other times, when I’ve missed Christmas at home, they were exceptions and had good reasons. I’ve had a lot more years in my hometown than away.
One year, Ann and I drove to Mississippi to do cleanup after Hurricane Katrina. An intense experience grieving and loving strangers. My first Christmas away from my family. When I called home on Christmas Eve, they passed the phone around and I sat in the back seat of my car and imagined the smells in mom’s house. Fresh gingerbread. Roast beef.
Peppermint burning candles.
Last year, Ann and I drove to Galveston, Texas and treated ourselves to a vacation. Another first. I’d never spent a holiday pampering myself with my best friend in a gorgeous location. The experience was shocking to me. Liberating and naughty.
This year, I’m skipping the holiday claiming exhaustion and no vacation days. Both are true. And though I’ve seen family a lot this past year including Thanksgiving weekend, this is a lost opportunity to see family. No decorating gingerbread cookies with siblings on Christmas Eve morning. Beautiful friends in the twin cities have offered me invites. And yet, I want to see who I am without the holiday. I want to see who shows up.
And on the plus side, I didn’t have to put up outside lights this year.
Although I do like looking at all the lights. I will admit to my well-orchestrated neighbors, I’m impressed. Sorry for not doing my part this year, but good job.
They’re pretty, right? Regardless of religion or creed, we all agree that colored lights on a charming, snow-covered home is something we can appreciate as having a kind of loveliness. You don’t have to live here to appreciate that. You can nod to the north and share that appreciation from Texas. And still think, ‘They’re insane to live in that snow.’
Lights are pretty.
Obviously, I’ve been a little torn about the holidays. Happy to have zero shopping, and no decorating responsibilities. But sad, because it’s fun to get caught up in the excitement of gift giving and wrapping, and seeing surprise on a loved one’s face. There’s some real beauty in this season.
Friday night I was chatting with my friend Joel, and explaining my missing out. Joel and I talked about a number of things, previous holiday experiences, the good and the bad. At one point, he sounded distracted I asked him what he was doing. He explained that he was untangling his lights.
I asked, “Christmas tree?”
Just asking that made me miss all my favorite Christmas ornaments and remembering I would not see them for at least another year.
“No, a solstice tree. Just white lights. Last year, I dried out orange slices and placed them on the tree to represent the sun. They turned out really well.”
“Why celebrate the longest night?”
I was feeling a little contrary, I guess. Maybe I was looking for something to celebrate. I had been dwelling on the darkness all around us. Institutionalized racism. Revenge killings. So many wrongs still need to be righted.
Joel said, “I celebrate what happens next. The light. Days start getting longer.”
We talked about it and though I have plenty of friends who celebrate Solstice, I had never really given it much thought and I now found myself intrigued, the idea of celebrating nothing but the light. The light comes back. Weakly at first, but it’s coming back. Though January and February must unfurl with blizzards for us to slog through, still the light grows stronger.
And so do we.
By the time we hung up, I had found the clear lights in my basement storage and selected which potted plant to decorate, my Norfolk Pine, a former Christmas tree. I realized what I had been missing by not participating in Christmas this year. The ability to celebrate with others. To just feel celebratory.
Maybe this week is the anniversary of Jesus’ birth. Maybe it’s a marketing campaign masterminded by a hungry world religion. Who cares? Can we just say, Merry Christmas and let the words mean, ‘I celebrate you in your language.’ Happy Chanukah and Blessed Be if that’s what they want to hear. If we can’t celebrate the ideological differences or embrace each other’s life experiences, maybe we can still find surprising common ground.
Without agreeing on the target, we can celebrate being people who love to celebrate.
I awoke this morning excited to celebrate my non-celebratory year. I created a list of 34 things I’d like done this week. House projects mostly. Cupboards and storage things cleaned up. Piles sorted. I am getting rid of 50 items from this house. I make tic marks on the massive chore sheet. This is my celebration, and I gotta tell ya, I like making lists and checking things off.
I’m also seeing a few friends, so do not fret over me. I’m not completely isolated.
While scrubbing old water stains on the basement floor this afternoon, I spied the tub of Christmas decorations and decided to add one of my favorite ornaments, a cardboard bungalow home almost identical mine, intricately carved and hand-painted, crafted by an ex-boyfriend from my youth. Also, a jade elephant from Ireland made the tree, the last elephant from Ireland, sent to me by ridiculous, wonderful people. New friends.
I would never know them except for the internet.
Had a little shopping to do so I ended up going to Target. I chatted happily with the checkout lady and I was surprised she had so much good cheer, working in such a demanding environment, hour after hour. She celebrated me.
In another grocery store, a meat company employee offered me a cocktail wiener. He tried to explain the unique grilling flavor, but I cut him off immediately with “Yes, please. Yes.”
I love little cocktail wieners at holiday parties.
And, the taste of these guys! The rich flavor was tangy-grilled without tons of barbeque sauce (which I also like). Surprisingly perfect. I chatted with him about his hot dogs and then eagerly bought a package. He said thank you to me, and he was sincere.
A few aisles later, I was humming the Christmas carols, vaguely echoing the music swimming above me and feeling very happy about celebrating and not-celebrating. I am someone who welcomes the light. At the end of the aisle, I ran into a woman who only had a few things in her basket which included two packages of the amazing cocktail wieners.
I jabbed my finger at them and said, “You got suckered into that taste test.”
With a surprised seriousness she said, “Those were really good.”
“I bought them, too, see? What is it about those things?”
We chatted about hot dogs and holiday parties for another few sentences and went on our way. She will never know me, hell, she doesn’t even remember me at this point. But we were light to each other, for a split second. She might stand for everything I detest. I might be her worst liberal nightmare. But we chose to be light.
Tonight, I welcome the longest night.
C’mon, darkness, settle in. Depress us. Convince us there is no hope for morning. We will end you, longest night. We end you with a festival of lights. Kwanzaa. Chanukah. Christmas. And those who look at anyone in that pile and say, “You people are crazy.” We celebrate them, too.
People who find cocktail wieners disgusting and people like me.
All of us, together.
When we celebrate each other, we cannot be stopped.
We are the light.
October 27, 2014
The Unmasking
This golden, gorgeous October is one of the top highlights of my year, and it’s a year full of highlights. My brother’s wedding. (His joy radiates from him.) I have a sister-in-law! His bachelor party. My mom and her sisters sang the national anthem at Wrigley field. A Chicago park named after my great aunt Midge. My beloved godson’s wedding to a powerful, talented woman. Gay Romance Lit.
I wrote two books and two short stories out this year. Three dozen reviews written by people who took the time to read my books and thought they deserved their serious consideration when penning their words. Some of them hated it, but many of them loved it, and reviews are like love letters sometimes. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Love letters. I got to be author-of-the-month for dear friends. Made ‘crush alert’ for one review site. Made new friends.
My heart is full.
Impossibly, it got fuller this October, my favorite month of the year.
I like to wander under colorful, sun-drenched foliage as most everyone does. I do not consider myself unique. We all love it. I took five hundred photos of leaves and streams and rocks and little glimmers of splattered red leaves against hard blue skies, including a great photo of a sunflower that seemed to wave right at the sun. And the sun waved back.
Everyone does this, too. We all take lots of dumb leaf photos.
In fact, there’s little that’s unique about my October traditions, but that’s why I like them because you love them, too, and it makes us more connected to know we all crane our heads at the eight shades of orange, maroon, firetruck red, and the most fierce slivers of marigold ripping through slender branches.
We’re agog.
The leaves are mostly gone now. The trees are all but unmasked. I have been drunk on falling leaves for weeks now. But we’ve reached that time in October to celebrate the chilly night, the Halloween scratches of brittle twigs with no colorful flags to wave. I now spend evenings wandering the streets, listening to music and thinking about life. It’s a good time.
Tonight, my cell phone rang while I was a dozen blocks from home. I contemplated not answering because autumn is my favorite time of year and this is my favorite kind of night and I felt drunk on fresh air. But it was Joel.
Joel is one of the very first friends I made when writing my first Vin Vanbly tale. (I had published the first stories in a free-stories website.) I had received emails about Vin’s story. More and more emails came in, asking who is this guy, Vin Vanbly? What kind of story was this? Joel was an early email friend who said, “I read your story an hour ago and I can’t stop thinking about it. It’s making my sternum vibrate. Why is that?”
We became email friends. Then, real email address friends. Then, phone friends. Once when I was in his city for work, we were in-person friends. I love Joel.
Joel called tonight and I realized he’d be the perfect companion on an autumn walk, so I happily answered and we instantly began chatting about sexual words we found distasteful to say aloud. This was our hello. I told him of a recent radio show where I was a guest and I ranted against the word ‘quim,’ like a freakin’ lunatic and we laughed and were silly and chortled. I kicked leaves and Joel was with me.
We shared stories about our lives right now, the milestones in the last month, the in-between-big-events stuff that is interesting to your best friends. I started a story about someone I saw recently and Joel said, “Oh yeah, I remember him. You told me about that guy once. Like two years ago.” Joel shared his recent news and we rocked it together, gently in a warm blanket between us, his happy relationship with his boyfriend. He didn’t know he would ever be this much in love.
So we held hands, metaphorically, and walked through the night. I pointed out a moment he was showering himself with king love and he said, “Yeah,” kinda softly. We were quiet with each other because that’s what love is sometimes. Quiet. And laughing about raunchy words.
The air got colder.
Joel and I had walked together for the better part of an hour. I could hear more branches clattering together in the cold wind. Turned my steps toward home. Our evening stroll was coming to a close.
Walking up my street, I saw two boys, maybe eleven or twelve coming toward me. They had passed my house and were in front of my next door neighbor’s home. I saw a flash of white as one of the boys held it to his face and the other one laughed. They were already stuffing it into the backpack as I drew closer. It was the standard, serial killer Halloween mask, white plastic with holes and eye slits so the murderer can see who he’s hacking to bits.
They had just stolen my yard monster’s Halloween masks. I just hung that up yesterday.
I spent all day in the yard yesterday, doing a half-assed job of preparing for winter. Trying to fertilize the lawn, something I should have done weeks ago. I mowed, gathered bag after bag of leaf mulch and grass, yanked out the tomato plants, moved giant pots to the basement, and yet still had time to find Halloween masks for the yard monster.
One day.
The masks lasted one day on the tree before these two little fuckers stole them.
I said to Joel, “Can you hang on for a minute?”
I let the phone fall to my side. The kids reached me, chuckling and zipping up the backpack.
“Guys, stop. You just took the masks off the yard monster back there.”
Both their eyes widened. “No!”
One shook his head in sheer disbelief that they were busted almost immediately after their caper.
I don’t want to be the neighborhood hard ass. My friend Jenna predicted that kids in the neighborhood will call me “Old Manning,” and I will yell at them in my bathrobe from the front yard, shaking a folding chair at them. The really cheap, light folding chairs.
I don’t want to be that guy.
But I don’t want to be a pushover and pretend like it’s okay.
Joel was in my hand, listening (I imagined) to my every word.
“Guys,” I said, “I just saw you. C’mon.”
They protested, but the little guy was breaking already, his eyes turning into terror. Would I insist we go to his parents? Was that what was in store?
I said, “Be cool. Let me have them.”
This was the second time I implied there was more than one mask stolen though I had only seen the one mask. But there could be more and I didn’t want to fight them on every mask. So I just decided to bullshit my way with confidence.
The smaller guy said in a mournful voice, “We’re sorry.”
Confession! Yes!
He began to unzip the backpack.
This is the first time in the history of me, my uttering the words ‘Be cool,’ ever worked on anyone. I almost wanted to yell, “Ha! Gotcha!” But that, um, wouldn’t be cool.
His chubby companion who was the first to deny any theft, clearly was not ready to risk fleeing by foot. He looked down and said, “Yeah, I’m sorry.”
He and his buddy were out enjoying this perfect autumn evening the way eleven-year-old boys do, mischief and talking trash, the way I was talking trash with my lifelong friend, Joel. Just guys out enjoying the glorious night. And in the end, these boys were relatively harmless.
I said, “Don’t sweat it. I appreciate your giving them back. I just want people to enjoy them for a few days. It’s my way of sharing with the whole neighborhood, so don’t take them again, okay?”
Together, they humbly said in unison, “Okay.”
The younger one pulled out a second mask, the really creepy clear one.
Ha! I was right. My bluff paid off.
As he handed it over, he said in a tone of sad appreciation, “This mask is so awful. What it does to your face.”
I said, “I know, right? It’s really gross. Worse than the hockey mask.”
He nodded and sorta smiled faintly.
We have the same sick humor, this goonie kid and I.
I said, “Tell you what. If you leave the masks on the tree until Halloween is over, you can have them both on Saturday. Just come and take them. You have my permission. But leave them up for a few more days, okay?”
They both brightened considerably and immediately promised, “Sure, no problem.”
I said, “Thanks, guys. Goodnight.”
They waved and said, “Thanks.”
We had conducted master negotiations.
Those two buddies resumed their walk and I resumed mine with my buddy.
He said, “Where were you? What happened?”
I conveyed the whole story, especially my excitement that I said the phrase ‘be cool’ and it worked just like a magical disarming spell is supposed to work. Joel though I was missing the point of the experience.
He said, “You showered them with king love.”
His saying this to me caused me to shower myself in king love, to scrub in this golden, five-shades-of-orange-and-yellow love into my body, remembering I don’t have to turn into Old Manning. I can keep love in my heart even with the punk neighborhood kids. I felt like I instantly, explosively showered in autumn leaves as they plummeted and swirled from the trees above.
Our friends unmask us, find the best in us, and witness the worst in us. If they’re really good friends, they help convert the worst in us to the best in us.
Tonight, I walked the neighborhood with Joel.
We unmasked each other.
October 2, 2014
The Best Man
At my brother’s wedding last Saturday, I gave the traditional Best Man toast. I think I did a decent job.
Unfortunately, while facing almost 250 people and hearing my own voice in the microphone, I stumbled and left out a few key sentences, ways of honoring Matt I wish I had remembered. I also deliberately chose to not share full details of a night important in my life as it seemed to make the toast more about me than him.
In the spirit of second chances, I’d like to present the unabridged toast to my brother and include everything I wanted to say.
***
Once, when Matt and I were kids, I convinced Matt and my younger sister to race around the house a few times. As a ‘reward,’ I served them glasses of milk. His had Tabasco sauce generously mixed in. I wanted to see the expression on his face. Another time, I sold him a Kennedy silver dollar for $1.50. I also spent five or six years trying to convince him that he was adopted and that his name in his other family, his real family, was Steve.
My point: I was not always a good brother.
But he was.
He has always been a good brother to me. Always.
The night I came out to my parents was horrible. If you have ever been the cause of your parents weeping uncontrollably, you know how earth-shattering and unnerving it is. I was shaking, head to foot, trembling by how much sorrow I had caused them. I knew I was not evil for being gay, but they didn’t know that. They sobbed in their bedroom, believing themselves to have failed as parents. I was the failure.
I left them to their deep grief and walked in a trance downstairs, right into the kitchen, where I found Matt washing the supper dishes. In a daze, I picked up a dish towel.
I had come out to my siblings in the prior month, wanting mom and dad to have support when I shared the news. One sister also wept uncontrollably and bemoaned the fate of my doomed soul. The other sister said, “So that’s why you never liked football.” When I told Matt, he did a double-take of pure shock, but said nothing more than, “Oh.”
But that horrible night while my parents wept upstairs and I appeared at his side, ashen and silent, I picked up the dish towel and he turned to me. He said, “Are you okay? Do you need anything?”
Do you need anything.
This was the first time anyone in my family had inquired into my well-being while coming out. I was so busy trying to plan for their experiences, providing a six page letter explaining how I knew I was gay, supportive books for parents, religious support, etc., that I had forgotten this experience might be hard on me.
And it was hard on me. One of the most terrifying periods in my life.
Matt knew exactly what had happened in my parents bedroom moments earlier.
He said, “Are you okay? Do you need anything?”
Keep in mind he was an 18-year-old straight guy from a very religious family living in a small Midwestern town. We didn’t know any gay people, except for Boy George from television. We had witnessed the 1980′s plotline on Dynasty with a gay character and changed the channel whenever the gay man appeared onscreen. Matt found out less than a month earlier that his big brother was a homo. He couldn’t have been thrilled with this news himself. But in that moment, Matt forgot about himself.
At the time, I answered Matt by saying, “No, I’m fine.”
I was not fine. I needed someone to say, “Are you okay? Do you need anything?”
Even today, he may not understand how significant that moment was.
That was twenty years ago.
He is still the same thoughtful, caring man, but better.
Over the phone, we discuss bosses, work projects, and how to ask for a raise. He was the first person I called when I accidentally stole my neighbor’s credit card bill. Uh…twice. I regularly text him pictures of things I find absolutely disgusting and he often replies, something to the effect of, “Please do not send me anything like this in the future. I know this request won’t do any good, but I feel obligated to beg you anyway.” He visits me in Minnesota and we attend the State Fair together. Last year, he brought Bridget, his fiance, and the three of us ate deep-fried cheese curds together. It was wonderful.
In his homily during the wedding mass today, the priest commanded Matt to be generous with others and think of their needs as well as his own.
I thought the request was redundant for that is the very soul of who Matt is.
In our family, he is our moral compass. He is quiet and thoughtful. Slow to action at times, because he wants to think everything through. We rely on his good judgment.
I may have the title of “best man” today, but truly, it’s him.
He is the best man.
I almost wish he were adopted so that we could tell the world, “We chose him. We wanted him. He makes all of us better. All of us kinder, softer, more careful of what we say and do. We picked him and we cannot live without him.”
One of the best parts of Matt is how much he reminds of us of dad. Our beloved father died three years ago and we still miss him. He was a great man. If we want to talk to Dad, we can go find Matt on a recliner watching football and talk to him. When Matt grunts out his monosyllabic response, it’s just like talking to Dad.
That was a joke.
Truth is, we know better than to interrupt Matt watching football.
Dad actually played a pivotal role in Matt and Bridget’s courtship. After Dad died, Matt’s friends sent cards or messages of condolences. But Bridget did something unique. She had a mass said for our father. Matt knew Bridget through their volleyball league, but he did not know her well. Her thoughtful gesture, having a mass said for our father, touched him.
She saw his faith.
He began to see her with new eyes. Matt began to see Bridget for who she really was.
I met Bridget a year later, at a party in her home. If you’ve been to Bridget’s home, you know she is elegant. The house is gorgeous. The party was amazing, with fun interesting people, food everywhere, and laughter echoing throughout. At one point, Bridget pulled me aside and we went into a spare bedroom. She had read King Perry and loved it. She asked me a million questions about the narrator, the story arc, events in the story itself, the future books, my vision, how well King Perry was received.
Ten minutes passed. Then, fifteen. then, twenty.
If you’ve hosted a party, you know that as host, you simply cannot spend that kind of time with one person. People need ice for their drinks! What if the cocktail sauce runs out–who will replenish it? Yet Bridget’s relaxed conversation made me feel as if I were the most important person at the party. She made me feel like I was the only person who mattered.
Matt, if that is your future–feeling like the most important person at the party–you are in for beautiful years ahead, brother.
Sorrow will come into our lives as it must, as it will, unbidden. But tonight, we toast the beautiful years ahead.
I ask you to raise your glasses to Matt and Bridget, and the beautiful years ahead.
September 25, 2014
Future Me Is A Little Bitch
If I could time travel, I would travel right back to younger me and tell me things.
Yes, I know one of the big rules of time travel is that you don’t go back and mess up your own future. Or reveal winning lottery numbers. These are things that break the space/time continuum and create splinter universes where people have lobster claws instead of human hands because every little piece of history matters. Please. I’m not a complete idiot.
But I’m not good at remembering numbers. Or who won big sporting events. But Younger Me would worry about screwing up the space/time continuum (we are very good about keeping it tidy), so one of the first things I’d say to Younger Me is “Oh, don’t worry about my spilling the beans on anything. You aren’t important in the future, so there’s nothing to screw up. It’s all good. We can talk.”
See? Future Me is kinda rude.
But Future Me will remember thinking that an say, “Sorry, that’s not what I meant. You’re not vice president of the United States or head of a company or famous. In fact, neighbors who live two doors down will argue whether your real name is Leonard or Jim. See? Not important.”
Future Me is a big fucking tool.
But Future Me will continue and say, “No, I’m not a tool. Let me finish. You’re incredibly important to lovely, lovely people. You are so fucking loved that your heart is gonna explode in six different directions. You have family. Big family. Online family. You have goddaughters and a god son and they all turn out amazing. You will be in love and important in a few different men’s lives. Friends in your life will change you forever. It’s incredible. You will know all kinds of joy.”
This sounds better.
“Yeah, life is good. Some days suck, of course, and there’s a little cancer scare ahead, so get those moles checked out.”
Oh god.
“Just be careful. Slap on the sunscreen every day. Don’t worry too much. After all, I’m here from the future, arent I? Just be diligent.”
And it’s true. He’s here.
“Oooo, guess what?” Future Me asks, but does not pause for my guess. “You become a writer.”
I will explain I am a writer already.
“No, you’re really not. You’re not that good and you don’t take it seriously. Some people get better in a year or two but you’re on the slow track, Champ. So keep practicing.”
I will ask Future Me, “Will I ever master commas?”
“No. But luckily, you will work with editors much smarter than you. More importantly, you meet so many great people and friends through writing. It’s amazing. And strange. You will post pictures of your stuffed dolls online and people will talk about them and be eager to meet the various monsters in your home.”
“I am a writer who posts pictures of dolls?”
“No, it’s okay,” Future Me will explain. “It’s a blast. It’s like recess on the internet. You will have friends you never met who are so unbelievably kind to you. And gracious. And people will read your books and write reviews that are like love letters from their heart right to yours. And some reviews are funny and saucy and short and three sentences, but right-at-your-heart sentences.”
“So, everyone loves me?”
“Oh, God, no. No, some people hate you as a writer. They aren’t shy about saying it. One reviewer said she’d rather chew off her own arm rather than read your books.”
Well, shit.
“No, that’s okay, as in really okay. In the future, you can accept their opinion as true for them and let it be. You might get stung, but the love, the crazy, outrageous sparkling love is gonna outweigh everything.”
That’s nice to hear.
“It’s better than nice. You threw a release day party for The Butterfly King and so many people came, and played, and started reading your book right away, and then sent you messages of love. It was amazing. It’s hard to express gratitude for that kind of love. And it’s equally okay if friends don’t care for your writing because they were honest and honesty is celebrated in the future.”
This is where I begin to suspect Future Me is full of shit.
“Well, we’re trying. People are still learning to be fully honest with each other, but the world changes a lot in the next few decades. Some ways worse. And in a ton of ways, better. More people come out of the closet in the future. Not just the gay closet. The mental health closet, the gender fluidity closet, the introvert closet, the I-like-weird-shit closet. People share more of their true hearts. We’re not perfect, but people are growing their compassion and kindness.”
I would tell these things to my seventeen-year-old self so he could start opening his heart now, start getting it ready to bear this future love, this love of friends and readers and family.
Future Me would also say, “The Chicago Bears win the 1985 Superbowl, so if you can, get some money in on that action. Also, I think the human race is about to get lobster claw for hands because I shouldn’t have told you that. You shouldn’t mess with the space/time continuum. My bad.”
It’s okay,” I will say, “because I am the forgiving type, especially when the man before me is so damn handsome.”
That’s right. I said it.
Younger Me will say, “I hope you’re going to find a way to thank all these people for loving all those readers who become your friends.”
Future Me will say, “I will find a way.”
“So, how did you get back here in the past? Who invented time travel?”
Future Me will say, “Huggstibles.”
“Who is that?”
With a smirk and that smug I-know-more-than-you-do expression, Future Me will say, “You’ll see.”
See? Future Me is a little bitch.
September 20, 2014
Butterfly King Release Day!
Wahooooooooooooooooooo!
It’s release day for The Butterfly King, the third adventure in the Lost and Founds series. Vin Vanbly tries to king a powerful man in New York City. But can he pull it off? He’s younger, greener, less sure of himself. Which is dangerous in New York, where anything can happen…
http://www.amazon.com/Butterfly-King-...
And for those who have been enjoying The Lost and Founds series, you might enjoy a few other links:
I blogged for The Novel Approach this past week, sharing why I (Thunderstorm) New York.
Today, I visited Joyfully Jay and wrote about many of the secrets emerging in The Lost and Founds. Oooooo…secrets.
Also, if you missed my introduction to The Butterfly King, this may be a good place to start, a character sketch of him on Gay List Book Reviews.