Knowing (Blog #1079)

What a long day. Yesterday I spoke about, upon my sister’s recommendation, stocking up on food and supplies for my family. For the next month. Because of COVID-19. Well, today was more of the same, since Walmart didn’t have many of the things on our list last night. This afternoon my dad and I went to Sam’s (which, incidentally, was seriously picked over in terms of chicken, beef, and paper products), Aldi’s (where we found chicken thighs at one location and dog food at another), and Walmart (where we finally found chicken breasts, ground beef, ground turkey, and pot roast). This after I went to Walmart (for a prescription), the health food store (for elderberries), and Target (for distilled water) this morning.

In the midst of my running around, I had an hour-long discussion about COVID-19 with my best friend Justin. I always call Justin whenever I want to know something because he’s super smart, well-informed, and level-headed. And whereas I don’t have time and it’s outside the purview of this blog to relay everything he said, Justin basically said, yes, stock up so that you can comfortably survive a quarantine, limit exposure, and avoid the madness. “The last thing you want is to be standing in line at the pharmacy waiting on your blood pressure medication with everyone coughing on you,” he said.

This makes sense to me. So thanks to my sister and Justin, I’ve now spent the last two days preparing. Granted some people refer to preparing as panicking, but there’s a distinct difference. There’s a lot of middle ground, room for common sense. Because I’ve been to half a dozen grocery stores in the last two days, my common sense tells me it’s smart to take this seriously. Pandemics don’t fuck around, especially if you’re in certain age and/or health categories, and neither do scared/worried/concerned citizens who want to be able to wipe their butts during a pandemic.

I’m trying to tell you that toilet paper is almost impossible to find.

But don’t worry. “French people have been living without toilet paper for centuries,” Justin said. “It’s called a bidet.”

As Crocodile Dundee said, “To wash your backside, right?!”

This evening my parents and I spent a couple hours rearranging our refrigerator and freezer and getting everything we bought today put on shelves in our pantry. Of course, my mom has already started a list of things we forgot. Ugh, you don’t realize how much stuff you use and depend upon until you start thinking that stuff may soon be difficult to come by. Anyway, I’m worn out. It’s been a full day of go, go, go, and I’m spent. At the same time, I’m still wired, thinking, What else do we need to do? Alas, at some point, after all our hand washing, all we can do is wait. Yes, we can be prepare, take good care of ourselves. (“Getting good sleep is essential to a strong immune system,” Justin reminded me.) But we can’t control everything, certainly not a virus. (They don’t historically take orders from well.) At some point we have to surrender. At some point we have to admit that we’re human. Vulnerable. Temporary.

Even if it’s not from this, sooner or later, we all have to go.

This being said, more and more I’m believing in our bodies’ phenomenal capacity to not only adapt but also to heal. Earlier this week I did EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) on a major car accident I was in when I was fourteen, which for over twenty-five years has left me feeling “vulnerable.” Well, the major message I got from my body during the EMDR treatment was, “We know what to do.” I wish I could adequately convey how deeply I felt and heard this, that my physical organism wanted me to know, “We have good instincts, we’re smart, we know how to survive, we know how to get through things and be better after the worst has happened.”

Of course, I was like, “Who, me?”

This really has been the longest journey, coming to trust myself, coming to believe that I’ve come equipped with everything I need to “make it” on earth. And yet I am coming to believe this. Not just because I read it in a book somewhere a long time ago or because my therapist says, but because I’ve experienced it in my being. And whereas I know the path I’ve taken isn’t the path for everyone (or even anyone) else, I do wish everyone this same knowing. Even if, in the beginning, it’s just a hoping. The conviction that no matter what happens, no matter how ugly things get, we’re going to be okay.

At least in our souls, if not in our bodies.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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There’s nothing you can do to change the seasons or hurry them along.

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If You Had to Leave the Planet Tomorrow (Blog #1078)

It’s three in the morning, and–good lord–I need to keep this short. All day long I’ve been engrossed in conversations about and preparations for COVID-19. Perhaps this is rightly so. Cases are popping up, well, more than anyone would like. Consequently, schools are closing, small and large gatherings are being canceled or postponed, and people are washing their hands like crazy. (Some, I understand, for the first time in their lives.) This afternoon I went to the library and learned they’re wiping down their hard surfaces with disinfectant three times a day. Scrubbing the outside of books like it’s going out of style. “But what are they doing about the insides?” a friend of mine asked. “What if someone sneezes on the inside of a book?”

This, of course, is what’s got people so afraid. When it comes to viruses, we simply don’t know where they may be lurking. If we wanted to, we could drive ourselves mad imagining.

Historically in these types of situations (like flu season or Y2K), it’s been difficult for me to find the happy medium between panic and apathy. Like, I’m either completely paranoid or totally flippant. More and more I’m learning to find balance. To not scare myself to death, but to not bury my head in the sand either. Along these lines, I haven’t been overly concerned about COVID-19 until recently, despite my having a sister who’s been paying more than close attention to the subject for six weeks now. “I know you think I’m crazy,” she says. Then she adds, “But you don’t know what I know.”

Granted. I certainly don’t claim to be an expert on the topic. If you watch the news, you probably know more than I do, so let’s be clear–it’s not my objective to inform anyone about the facts. This being said, I have spent a fair amount of time in grocery stores this week and am listening intently to the conversations of friends and strangers, and here’s what I know–people are afraid. At the very least, they’re cautious. To this end, the toilet paper shelves at at least two of our Walmarts are completely barren, as they are at our Target. Tonight between eleven and one in the morning, upon my sister’s encouragement, I stocked up on non-perishables for me and my parents, and there wasn’t an ounce of disinfectant to be found. Otherwise, I didn’t have much problem finding things, although they were EXTREMELY low on rice, Ramen, peanut butter, and canned soups, fruits, and vegetables.

My sister says that stocking up isn’t panicking; it’s preparing. To me this makes sense. If you don’t get sick or quarantined, fine, you’ve got some extra food. If you do, you’ve got food period. Plus, the fewer trips to the grocery store you make, the more you limit exposure to yourself and others. And even if all of this doesn’t persuade you (which really isn’t my objective here, do what you want to do), there’s the fact that plenty of other people are stocking up, and therefore certain supplies will soon become much harder to come by. Toilet paper, for example.

Honestly, and I realize this may be future fodder for me and my therapist (the people, not the blog), one of my biggest concerns when I think about the possibility of getting COVID-19 is that it could keep me from finishing three consecutive years of blogging. I think, What if I got too sick to write, or died?! What if I couldn’t finish? But then I take a deep breath and remember that the truth is, it would be okay. I’ve done more than enough here.

In this sense, I think there’s benefit in contemplating your personal worst case scenario with respect to this thing. Because, let’s face it, we’re all leaving this planet one day, so the sooner we confront our fears, the better. This is part of the reason I’m so determined and vigilant to “deal with my shit” through therapy, this blog, EMDR, and other methods. I simply refuse to be a slave to my fears if I don’t have to. So I’m like, Let’s deal with them. Let’s get them out on the table. Let’s look our monsters in the eyes.

Let’s ask ourselves, “What am I really afraid of?”

One thing I’ve realized from thinking about the possibility of dying–and dying soon–is that if I did die, I’d leave this world satisfied. Not that there aren’t a hundred other things I’d like to do and accomplish, but I really do have a deep feeling of pride and satisfaction having (almost) completed this blog. Like, I believe it was and is part of the reason I’ve been put on this planet and part of my legacy, my gift to humanity, including myself. And I’ve done it. I’ve risen to the occasion, and I’ve done it. I haven’t shared every detail of my life (that’s never been the point), but I’ve created and given something true. Not that every word is gospel, I’m just saying this is honest and real, from my heart. And I would hope that everyone, if they had to leave the planet tomorrow, could feel this good about something they’ve done and the life they’ve lived.

Like, I did it right this time.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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If you think only girls cry or that crying is inappropriate for some reason, fuck you. Some things are too damn heavy to hold on to forever.

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Let Me Have My World, I’ll Let You Have Yours (Blog #990)

A few things–

1. On creating

Lately I’ve been working on a few creative projects, and today I finished one of them–a vintage Hollywood wallpaper magnet board. I made the board itself over a decade ago, but it’s been screwed to the back of a desk that’s been pushed up against a wall in my parents’ front room for I don’t know how long. Anyway, last week I took the board off the desk, two days ago I spray painted the wood for a frame, and today I attached the frame to the front of the board and fastened two hanging hooks to the back. And whereas I could tell you every little thing that went wrong with and what’s NOT perfect about the whole project, believe it or not, I won’t. Rather, I’m happy to say that for less than twenty dollars in supplies I have something that’s not only so much better than the industrial metal shelf I was using before, but is–I think–pretty cool.

As my therapist says, cheap thrills.

2. On perspective

Along the lines of cheap thrills, this evening I went shopping for a few craft items. One of the places I stopped was Target, and just after I looked at their furniture and was about to look at their picture frames, I noticed their wall clocks. Eyeing one in particular I thought, That is so beautiful. Well, not five minutes later I overheard a man ask his wife if she’d found a clock yet, and she said, “Hell no. All their clocks are ugly. I guess we’re gonna have to go back to Hobby Lobby.”

Now, I have no idea what KIND of clock this lady was looking for, where she was going to put it, or what her particular taste or style is. Nor, let’s be clear, do I care. I just think it’s interesting that what one person considers gorgeous another can find offensive. What’s the saying? Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I also think it’s interesting that we all KNOW that beauty is in the eye of the beholder and that everyone sees the world differently (according to their background, tastes, and predilections), and yet we spend so much time judging other people for not seeing the world like we do. Trying to convince them they should be more like us (because we’re so pleasant and fun to be around). I love peanut butter and eat it out of the jar, but recently someone said, “OH GROSS, THAT’S DISGUSTING!” UUUUHHHHH. Obviously in your world it is. In my world, it’s heaven.

My point: let me have my world, I’ll let you have yours.

Your world without Target clocks. Your world without peanut butter.

Your world without joy.

3. On interacting

This evening a total stranger commented on one of my ten-year-old YouTube videos. “Never, never, never count rumba 1,2,3 / 4,5,6!!!” he said. (The idea being that rumba, although it has six steps in a basic, is actually an eight-count dance and should be counted 1,2,3,4 / 5,6,7,8, where either the 2 and 4 or 4 and 8 are held beats.) These were his first, maybe his last words to me. Not a greeting or conversation starter–hi, hello, excuse me but I beg to differ–but rather a command with three exclamation points. As if he were my authority or dance boss. As if I weren’t another adult worthy of his respect.

Now, this online nonsense happens fairly often in my world. And whereas sometimes I let it go and sometimes I don’t and am rude in return (I’ll count rumba any damn way I want to), tonight I simply replied, “You’re obviously quite passionate about this, Stan. Please tell me more. In my experience teaching, I’ve found that some students prefer counting beats of music and some prefer counting steps or footfalls, which is why I count rumba two different ways in this video.”

Will he reply? Doubtful. Regardless of what he does, my point is that it’s important what I do. It’s important what you do. It’s vital that we ask ourselves, “How am I going to treat my fellow humans? Especially when I disagree with them, am I going to be rude and condescending (as if in this whole wide universe I know everything there is to know and therefore have the right to rub my superior opinions in your face), or am I going to be kind, compassionate, and humble?

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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All things become ripe when they’re ready.

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You Never Know (Blog #779)

Phew. Today has been go-go-go. This morning I woke up at 8:15(!) to teach a dance lesson at nine. I’m not complaining–it’s nice to be employed–but this means I didn’t get a lot of sleep. Again, this is okay. If someone wants to pay me to to teach the mambo at five in the morning, I’m gonna prop my eyelids open, brush my teeth (because I’m courteous), and get my hips a-movin’.

Thankfully, people don’t normally schedule dance lessons at nine in the morning. But today’s couple, when they originally scheduled, needed to be somewhere. Then, yesterday, when they tried to push it until later in the day, I’m the one who said I’d like to do it sooner rather than later. (Me!) Because I had a family reunion to get to.

The family reunion was for my mom’s side of the family, the side that we haven’t been historically close to. Granted, I know a few cousins (once removed) and second cousins. But, y’all, today I met dozens of relatives–third cousins, fourth cousins–people of all ages. It was the weirdest thing, this whole senior citizen center full of family I’ve never met. It was like, I don’t know, going to Walmart, except knowing you’re related to everyone in the dairy section. I kept thinking I’d probably crossed paths with some of them before but hadn’t realized it. I mean, what’s a relative look like? I still can’t get over the idea that next week I could easily be at the taco truck ordering a chicken burrito and a distant relative could be standing in line behind me without my having any idea.

When the reunion ended, I met my friend Megan to say goodbye. She’s been visiting this week from Israel, and she’s flying back home tomorrow. Who knows when I’ll see her again? I’d say it will be a while, but then again, two weeks ago I wouldn’t have said I’d see her this week. Her whole trip was planned last minute–so she could see her nephew’s graduation. Anyway, this is the cool thing about life–you never know–when you’ll see your friends again, or even whom you’re related to. So hope and be kind. That guy at the taco truck could be married to your third cousin!

This evening I had dinner with a few friends. We ate at a local sushi restaurant that sat us in the back corner of a small room. My friend Aaron joked that we were in sushi prison. Oh well, the food tasted the same. However, just as we were getting ready to pay and leave, the power went out. Like, completely. All of a sudden we were in the dark. Thankfully, no one panicked, and the lights came back on in short order.

Leaving the restaurant, we all went to Target. Aaron and his wife, Kate, have a four-year-old son, and I guess they’d bargained with (bribed) him earlier in the day–if he’d wear a bowtie to a wedding, he could have a Target toy. And whereas he had a fabulous time, the lights were off there too. Well, sort of. See, there was a teensy-tiny tornado that apparently passed through Fort while I was at the reunion today (in a different city), and a lot of people and places ended up without power. Consequently, a number of businesses closed. But not Target–they had backup power. This amounted to–I don’t know–one in every forty florescent bulbs working. Kate kept calling it “Dark Target.”

Now I’m back to the place where I’m house sitting. It’s almost midnight, and I’m really fighting to stay awake. On the way here I noticed that several areas of town are still unlit. No overhead power lights, no traffic lights. Just Dark. And whereas this was a bit unsettling at first, I was reminded that this is what happens on planet earth. It gets dark at night. And just because we’ve found ways to brighten our homes and streets around the clock, that doesn’t mean the world itself doesn’t get dark the way it’s supposed to. That’s the thing with darkness. I’m speaking literally and metaphorically. It’s natural. It doesn’t have to be scary or unsettling. Having fallen in love with staying up late (when I’m not exhausted) to work or look at the stars, I now find the dark quite comforting. It’s quiet, peaceful. I can hear myself think. I can create. In my imagination, anything can happen.

You never know.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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Confidence takes what you have and amplifies it. Confidence makes anyone sexy.

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On Soul Repair (Blog #571)

This afternoon I went to the post office to mail my sister a birthday card (her birthday is Wednesday), and just as I was about to pull out of the parking lot ran into my friend Bonnie. I mean, I didn’t literally run into her, I just saw her then stopped to talk to her. Anyway, it was a fun coincidence, if you want to call it that. Personally, I don’t believe in accidents. I prefer to think that, as my travel writing friend Tom said about our meeting each other this last week in Tennessee, it was meant to be. Because think about it–what are the odds?

Recently I wrote about my first-ever experience with being called a derogatory term by a total stranger. You can read about it here, but basically I was standing alone outside a theater warehouse in Tennessee reading posters for the group’s upcoming musicals, and some guy in a Jeep drove by and shouted, “Queer!” And whereas I can’t swear that was the word he used (maybe he said, “We’re glad you’re HERE!”) or that he was even shouting at me, I reacted as if that were the case. And it’s not that I was offended, like–How dare he!–because, well, ACCURATE. Rather, I felt fear, since–let’s face it–this world is full of not only beauty but also brutality, and people have been beat up, hung up, and left to die on fence posts for much less. For simply being themselves.

It’s graphic to think about, I know.

For the last several days, this incident has lingered in my mind, the memory flickering off and on like a faulty lightbulb. Hum. I guess I have a lot of thoughts about it. And although this post could easily become a political or human rights essay, I don’t intend for it to be. Rather, I’d like to review several at-first-glance seemingly unrelated incidents that happened that day, and in so doing discuss–The Mystery. That being said, since I assume not everyone has my background or thinks like I do, I’d first like to back up and provide context that will hopefully explain how my brain work and why I’m choosing to look at this particular incident as “also not an accident.”

So here we go.

The foundation I’d like to lay first is that The Universe Communicates. This is an idea that I’ve blogged about here, that synchronicity, coincidence, and “accidents” are reminders that you and I are part of “something” larger, that we’re all connected “somehow,” that there is some sort order behind the chaos. Not that I believe this every minute of every day, but I do believe it. Deep down, it’s something I know. As cliché as the idea has become, it’s one I buy into–we are one.

To remind myself of this concept, a couple months ago I changed my laptop background image to a circumpunct. A circumpunct is basically a circle with a dot in the middle of it and is one of the oldest symbols known to man. Like many ancient symbols, the circumpunct has several meanings. For some, it’s the symbol of God, the one within the all, the all within the one. For astronomers, it’s the symbol of the sun. For alchemists, it’s the symbol of gold. For Target, it’s simply their logo, the symbol of hip, trendy home-goods and everyday low prices. For me, it’s the symbol of The Mystery.

The next major idea I’d like to lay down has to do with dreams (the kind you have when you’re sleeping), something I blog about often. Last week I wrote about a book I recently finished, The Three Only Things by Robert Moss. In that book, the author says that we should take our dreams more literally and our waking life more symbolically. I’ll say more about this in a moment. The author also says we can request certain information from our dreams, so I’ve recently started asking my subconscious to give me information in my dreams about how I can heal with regard to my headaches and upset stomach. Well, last night I dreamed that a man named WILL (who had a large NOSE) slowly stretched the muscles on the right side of my neck. Later I dreamed that a woman named GRACE told her granddaughter to drink more water as I was setting the kickstand down on my bicycle.

To the idea that dreams should be taken more literally, and if I’m to assume that my subconscious was actually answering the question I asked it, the advice seems clear. Use your WILL. (Set your intent to heal.) There’s part of you that KNOWS (nose) what to do. Stretch. Go slow. Drink more water. Rest. (Rest was the first think I thought of when recalling the kickstand image.)

Isn’t that a trip?

Okay, just two more things as background. (I know this is waxing long, but it’s a complex topic. Also, this is my blog, and I’ll write as much as I want to.) In one of the posts where I mentioned dreams and the book I just referenced, I said that the author says that dreams about shoes often refer to our SOULS, since shoes have SOLES. In that post, I discussed all the shoe dreams I’ve had since starting a dream journal. (For reference, my blog about soles and souls was FOUR DAYS before the “I spy with my little eye something that starts with a Q” incident.) In a number of other posts, and most recently in this one, I discussed how part of one’s spiritual path (or at least mine) is to keep one’s soul intact by forgiving or “not carrying the dead,” that is, by not leaving one’s soul in the past or–better said–by being fully in present time. (As Jesus instructed, “Give no thought for tomorrow.”)

With all this in mind, I’d now (and finally) like to proceed to the incidents leading up to (and following) The Great Queer Spotting of 2018. As you read, please keep in mind the suggestions that the universe communicates and that we should view our waking lives less realistically and more symbolically.

Also, feel free to take a bathroom break or grab a cup of coffee if you need to.

1. Tom’s story

That morning, Friday, my friend Tom and I were in a mini-van with at least one other journalist and one of our trip organizers, and Tom, upon prodding from someone who’d heard it before, told a story about being threatened at gunpoint in Morocco. Tom was in a busy marketplace with a camera. For reasons that I don’t recall and would be too long to explain here anyway, Tom had a bodyguard, but the bodyguard wasn’t nearby. Then a stranger came up to Tom, stuck a gun in his gut, and said, “You have camera. I have gun. I shoot you.” Later, the bodyguard caught the guy, held a gun to his head, and threatened to kill him in return. And whereas Tom said, “Fuck ’em,” the bodyguard let the guy go. “HE’S NOT A TRUE THREAT,” the bodyguard said.

2. My story

During the same car ride, our group–mostly our friend Steve–told a number of jokes. After one joke about an ugly woman, we laughed and laughed. Steve said it’s a joke that separates the men from the women; men laugh at the joke, women go, “Awe, that’s terrible!” (Later when a women in our group laughed at the joke, Steve said, “You may be a man and not know it.”) Anyway, I ended up talking about one of my major regrets in life–a night in high school when a friend of mine and I performed a roast and–apparently–took things too far. I mean, people were crying. I said, “It’s taken me a long time to forgive myself and move on from the event, the better part of two decades.” Tom said, “Isn’t it funny how a little thing like that can TRIP YOU UP?”

3. My earring

That afternoon, while touring Fall Creek Falls State Park, I noticed that I’d lost the back (but not the front) to one of my tiny dinosaur earrings. I’ve blogged about dinosaurs here, but for me they represent THE PAST, or THAT WHICH IS DEAD.

4. The park ranger’s story

While several members of our group and I hiked back up from the bottom of Fall Creek Falls (a waterfall), one of the park rangers told me that they often have to rescue or carry out hikers who have sprained their ankles, broken their legs, or died while in the canyon. The process, he described, involves a large stretcher and requires 12 to 18 rangers or volunteers to lift the person’s body and get them back to the top of the mountain. The image/lesson that stuck in my mind: IT TAKES A LOT OF EFFORT TO CARRY THE DEAD.

5. My shoe

Later that day, at another state park, I TRIPPED on a rock and ripped the SOLE off the front of my left boot.

6. The thing

That night, some guy in a Jeep called me A QUEER.

7. The other park ranger’s advice

The next morning, before going on a hike at another state park, I asked the park ranger if he happened to have any duct tape that I could use to hold my boot together so the loose sole wouldn’t get caught on anything else. As “luck” would have it, he had some camouflage duct tape in his truck, and reaching into his cab, he handed it to me. “Ask and you shall receive,” I said. Then the ranger suggested I put my foot up on his running board to apply the tape, so I did. As I began to wrap the tape around my boot, he said, “You wouldn’t want to lose your sole out here.” What I heard was, “You wouldn’t want to lose your SOUL out here.”

I didn’t take a picture of my boot at the time, but here’s a picture of my boot from this morning. It shows my damaged footwear slathered in super glue, held together with duct tape and clamps while the glue dries. (This is my attempt to repair MY SOLE. This blog is my attempt to repair my MY SOUL.)

Having had a few days to consider all this, the whole affair seems like something that was meant to happen. That is, how can I say that it wasn’t an accident that I met Tom and that it wasn’t an accident that I ran into Bonnie at the post office and at the same time say that my being called a queer by some guy in a Jeep was simply a random injustice, a fluke? Indeed, I can’t because–what are the odds? I know this is an extreme example, but did Jesus whine when he was delivered up to Pilate or say, “This shouldn’t have happened”? Did he even attempt to defend himself? Did he insist on accepting only the pleasant from his father and refuse to accept the strenuous and the challenging? No. No he did not.

He trusted; he surrendered.

This is something I’m trying to do. Reviewing my experience as A WHOLE, it seems clear that the universe was communicating several important messages to me before, during, and after the event. First, I’m not the only one who’s ever been called a name, scared, or threatened. My friend Tom was at gunpoint. Second, my words have unintentionally hurt others in the past, so the gracious position for me to take now is that the guy in the Jeep also had no intention of causing me harm. Regardless, HE’S NOT A TRUE THREAT. And even if he were, it’s my intention to not let the matter TRIP ME UP. It’s IN THE PAST. I’ve CARRIED THE DEAD before, and IT TAKES A LOT OF EFFORT. As today presents its own challenges, I can’t be afraid, I can’t give any thought for tomorrow, and I can’t LOSE MY SOUL “OUT THERE.”

Because I need it IN HERE.

In conclusion, I’ve been wanting to write about this since the other park ranger gave me the duct tape and made that comment about my sole/soul because it hit me like a ton of bricks. A coincidence, you say? “Coincidence is the language of the stars,” Paulo Coelho says in The Alchemist. Still, I’ve been putting off writing this because–I know–it’s a lot. But since starting this blog I’ve always known when I needed to write about something, and all day today I kept thinking, Today’s the day. Then tonight when I got home I stepped into my driveway, looked at the almost-full moon, and saw that it had a giant halo around it, the result of certain atmospheric conditions that cause the moon’s light to both refract (scatter) and reflect off tiny crystals of ice. The result? A giant circumpunct, the ancient symbol of God, the sun, and pure gold, and a personal reminder of–The Mystery. Or, as one website I stumbled across tonight says, the symbol of the universe, the place where we can “redeem our souls.”

Isn’t that a trip?

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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Your story isn’t about your physical challenges.

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Have You Seen a Gay Man Pack? (Blog #375)

I have been adulting all day–paying bills, dealing with credit cards, sending official letters regarding medical bills and car accidents. I hate this stuff. However, I’ve also been teaching dance, which I love. But then I’ve also been doing laundry and packing to go out-of-town tomorrow, and I hate doing laundry and packing. Well, I guess I’m indifferent about it. But in the process of packing I realized I left my only pair of tennis shoes in Dallas a few days ago, and I hate that. Also, I have to get up early to go to the airport, so that’s another hate.

I’m ready to scream.

As a species, gay men don’t travel light.

Really, I’m just stressed. I thought I was going out-of-town for five days, returning for one, then leaving again for four more. But I found out today that the two trips I’m taking (to Memphis and Hot Springs) are literally back-to-back. I’m going from one place to the other, which means I have to fit ten days worth of clothes into a small carry-on bag. Y’all, I realize I’ve been living as a minimalist this last year, but–HELLO–I’m still GAY. Have you SEEN a gay man pack? As a species, we don’t travel light. Seriously, I could fill my carry-on with hair products alone. Currently my bag is filled to capacity, and I STILL have clothes in the dryer.

I’m going to have to pray about this.

About forty-five minutes ago I went to Walmart to look for a replacement pair of tennis shoes. This was a waste of time. Not that they didn’t have plenty of shoes to choose from, but none of them were the right brand. Again–I’m a stuck-up homosexual. I thought, I’m desperate, but I’m not THAT desperate. I’ll make do with my Polo boat shoes. Even if they hurt my feet, at least they’ll look nice. I realize this line of thinking is in direct opposition to yesterday’s post about the inside mattering more than outside. I make no apologies for this. As Walt Whitman said, “I contain multitudes.”

Surely I’ll find a way to make it work.

Now I’m trying to talk myself down from a ledge. I still have some packing to do and also need to take a shower. Oh, and sleep–I need to sleep. I’m telling myself that the upcoming trips are going to be great. Regardless of how much rest I get tonight or what clothes I end up taking, I’m sure I’ll have a fabulous time. Plus, if I need a new pair of shoes or anything else, I’ll find a Target or a shopping mall. I’m also worrying about how to do my job (travel writing) on the trip AND continue this blog, but I’ve obviously found a way to make this blog work so far, so surely I’ll find a way to make it work again. Like tonight’s blog, some of my posts may be shorter. (And that’s okay, Marcus.)

Also, some posts may conclude abruptly.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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If life can create a problem, it can also provide an answer.

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Late to the Party (Blog #279)

Today I’ve been obsessing about what might be causing my allergies. My latest fear is that it’s my waterbed, so earlier this afternoon I stripped all the sheets off it in order to check the bladder, the thing that holds the water, for mold. I read online that if there’s a leak, mold can grow on the outside of the mattress. Also, it can grow inside the mattress if the water isn’t treated, which I’m sure mine hasn’t been in forever. If that’s the case, the internet says it will smell “musty.” Well, I didn’t immediately see any leaks or mold on the outside. Also, things didn’t smell musty on the inside. So maybe I’m not sleeping on a deathtrap.

Phew.

All that being said, now all the sheets are off my bed, so I’m thinking I might as well add conditioner or cleaner to the water while I have everything taken apart. Except I don’t have any. I just called a couple mattress stores in town, and no one carries waterbed supplies anymore because it’s not the 1980s. I told one guy, “I guess waterbeds are a little out-of-date.” Which just means I’ll have to order the conditioner online and–once again–try to be patient. I hate that.

Last night I taught a dance lesson at a friend’s house. Their eight-year-old son greeted me at the front door wearing a pajama onesie that looked like one of the Ninja Turtles. It was the cutest thing you’d ever want to see in your life. It even had a hood on it. On his feet he had a pair of red-and-black plaid slippers. Since I hate the winter and spend four months out of the year shivering, all I could think was, God, that entire outfit looks so warm. So later I asked the kid where he got the slippers, and in all his innocence, this is what he said–“My mom bought them for me.”

Oh, of course she did.

By the time the dance lesson was over, I decided I had to do “something” about my winter woes. So I drove straight to TJ Maxx and bought 1) a thicker pair of sweatpants for wearing at home and 2) a long-sleeved thermal shirt for all occasions. Then I started my hunt for slippers. Y’all, I looked at TJ Maxx, Burlington’s, Target, and Kohl’s, but apparently everyone else in the River Valley had the same idea I did–before I did. I couldn’t find a single pair of slippers that were my size.

Well–correction–I couldn’t find a single pair of “cute” slippers that were my size. I mean, this is about keeping my feet warm, but it’s also about maintaining certain fashion standards. Not to reinforce stereotypes, but I am, after all, a homosexual, and you never know when you’re going to walk out of your parents’ living room on your way to the mailbox and stumble across Mr. Right, who–quite possibly–will be so impressed with your handsome slippers that he’ll immediately think, Now there’s someone I want to marry.

These are thoughts that I actually have. And yes, I’m in therapy.

After all the running around last night, I ended up finding an acceptable pair of slippers at Walmart, of all places. Tickled shitless with myself, I immediately came home and changed into my new sweatpants and house shoes. And whereas I’m thrilled with the sweatpants, y’all, I know why they call them slippers–my feet keep slipping out of them. That being said, my feet are significantly warmer–and cuter–so I’m still considering myself a winner. Now just to check the mail and accept my wedding proposal.

It occurs to me that I am often “late to the party.” Like, not long ago I discovered this new technology called Bluetooth. Maybe you’ve heard of it. Likewise, last night I spent over an hour shopping for slippers–something I’ve never bought before. Of course, they were hard to find because the rest of the world was on top of it–they bought slippers months ago. Maybe I’m resistant to change. I get comfortable doing things a certain way, like sleeping in a type of bed that’s older than I am. I guess we all like our routines. We get stuck in shoes, beds, or even relationships that are hard to get out of because they’re familiar. We think, Maybe I can make this work a little longer. In my experience, this thinking isn’t effective, like walking around in bare feet in January. Ultimately, you have to acknowledge the winters in your life, the things that aren’t working, then do what you can to warm yourself up.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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We all need to feel alive.

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Hooray, We’re Here! (Blog #110)

Bonnie and I spent all damn day shopping. Well, okay, I slept until noon, AND THEN we spent all damn day shopping. FINE. We also stopped for tacos, and–out of the clear blue sky–two Old Fashioneds poured themselves down my throat while I just sat there and let it happen. I mean, you have to pick your battles. ANYWAY, except for all of that–we spent all damn day shopping.

It was exhausting.

We bought a welcome mat at Target that we thought would be perfect for Annie’s Pilates studio. We didn’t tell Annie, so don’t go blogging about it or anything. Anyway, it’s super cute and–well–welcoming. Not only is it in the color family of the studio (teal, turquoise, blue, cyan), but it also says, “hooray you’re here!” Hooray, you’re here! What a perfect message–here could mean here at the studio–here in Austin–here on the planet. I just love it. I’m seriously considering buying one for my house–except I don’t have a house. Of course if I did, I’d probably have to put a note on the door that said, “Welcome mat does not apply to 1) government officials, 2) anyone trying to convert me to a religion or sell me a vacuum cleaner, or 3) little children hocking raffle tickets, buckets of popcorn, or overpriced candy bars.”

In those cases, Hooray, you’re leaving!

Here’s a picture of me and a pillow from Target that says, “Every day is an adventure.” I tried to look as unexcited as possible because I like ironic humor. Well, shit. The grammar nerd in me is not happy, since I just noticed that whoever made the pillow wrote “everyday,” instead of “every day.” One word instead of two. First the president and now this. Seriously, folks–we’re going downhill fast.

Here are the tacos we stopped for, at a place called FoxHole. Technically only I stopped for tacos because Bonnie stopped for pizza. But since I ate half of it, I guess I stopped for that too. Anyway, it was a delightful lunch, and the moral of the story is–shopping burns A LOT of calories.

After refueling, we went to Z Gallerie (and a hundred and three other places) in search of the perfect curtains–which are apparently harder to find than the Holy Grail. (Later we did end up with something that MAY work but has to be ordered.) Anyway, we certainly had fun trying. Check out this cool plate Bonnie found. The text on the plate is probably a more accurate description of what transpired at lunch than the one I just offered. It says, “Butt weight…there’s more.”

It’s funny because it’s true. Don’t you hate that?

Before the shopping ended, while we were at a cool store called Arhaus (is a very, very, very fine house), I got stung by a bee. You read that right–a honey bee stung me. There I was, minding my own business, doing my small part to rid the world of ugly window treatments, and one of God’s little creatures planted his stinger right in the middle of my throat. Ouch! I was at the top of an escalator when it happened, felt a little prick on my neck (there’s a dirty joke there somewhere), and ended up brushing a freaking bee off my skin. Well, I immediately stepped on it. (Sorry, not sorry, fella. You fucked with the wrong guy.) And don’t even think about judging me for killing that son of a bee. (See what I did there?) He started it. Plus, apparently honey bees die when they sting someone anyway.

Here’s a picture of the stinger that little jerk left in my throat. Bonnie pulled it out. Yeah, Bonnie!

Oh, and don’t worry. I’M OKAY. My throat didn’t swell up, and I didn’t stop breathing (except to drink a beer later). I’ve had more of a reaction from a mosquito bite. Go figure.

Tonight I went to a swing dance at The Fed, The Texas Federation of Women’s Clubs. The Fed is housed in a gorgeous–gorgeous–historic building with a beautiful–beautiful–ballroom. Tonight was my first time there. Anyway, I ran into my friends Matt and Laura, who were two of the first people to start teaching Lindy Hop in Austin. I told them I wanted to move to town, and Laura said, “Come on! This city will love you.” Matt added, “Most of us artists have day jobs, but those are easy enough to find.”

It was the perfect thing. Most the time when I travel to dances, people are “nice.” But only now and then do I get a warm welcome like the one I got from Matt and Laura, one that ends with the exchanging of phone numbers and an “I hope to see you later.” Honestly, it felt like–Hooray, you’re here!

Later Laura introduced me to some friends, and when I mentioned I’d like to move to town, one of them said that jobs were hard to find. Like, Uh, good luck. And–internally–the weirdest thing happened. Normally I would have been immediately discouraged, started thinking about how difficult it would be when I finally get around to moving. But instead I thought, “That won’t be my experience. Jobs are easy to find.”

When the universe speaks–listen.

When I got back from the dance, I went for a long run, and I started thinking about how much my perspective has changed since starting this blog. Earlier today I told Bonnie that I thought all the lessons were actually learned over the last several years, but that I’ve only taken ownership of them in the last three months. Plus, I’m believing more than ever that I’m connected to something much bigger than myself. Lately I’ve been saying and writing the affirmation, “My dreams come from God, and God has the power to accomplish them.” My friend Suzanne says, “First you know something, and then you KNOW something.” That’s all I can tell you–now I KNOW it–when it’s time for me to move and when it’s time for me to get a job, I will.

There’s a quote by JD Salinger that comes from one of his short stories that says, “‘I was six when I saw that everything was God, and my hair stood up, and all,’ Teddy said. ‘It was on a Sunday, I remember. My sister was a tiny child then, and she was drinking her milk, and all of a sudden I saw that she was God and the milk was God. I mean, all she was doing was pouring God into God, if you know what I mean.'” What I love about this quote–God pouring God into God–is that it makes me feel better about those Old Fashioneds pouring themselves down my throat today. It was like–holy. It also reminds me to have faith. God can get God a job, if God thinks God needs one. As Caroline Myss says, “Life takes care of life.”

So get this shit.

When I got home from my run, there was a book sitting on my dresser called What the Bee Knows. I guess I took it out of my bag yesterday. And since–you know–I just got stung by a bee, I figured I ought to pick it up. (When the universe speaks–listen.) Well, the book was written by PL Travers and is a collection of essays about myth, symbol, and story-telling. So I flipped to the article with the same title as the book and found out that bees, in all time-periods and cultures, are a symbol for life–life as immortality, which could be seen as one thing changing into and out of many forms. God pouring God into God. Fascinating, right?

Butt weight–there’s more.

I suppose it’s ironic (funny) that in a number of languages the word for bee means “life” or “living,” especially when you consider how easily bees die when they either sting someone or get stepped on by a pissed-off curtain shopper. But just as Christ spent three days in the grave, bees spend the winter (three months) in their hives, only to reappear in the spring (raised to walk–er–fly–in newness of life). So today I’m reminded–by a bee sting of all friggin’ things–that although parts of our lives pass away just as insects and even people do, new parts of our lives continually spring forth. Life itself marches forward, every day is an adventure, and one part of God is always saying to another, “Hooray, we’re here!”

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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It's never a small thing to open your home or heart to another person.

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No Pants. No Problem! (Austin, How I Love Thee) (Blog #84)

It’s 8:40 in the evening, Bonnie is driving the convertible back home to Arkansas, and the sun is setting to our left. The sky is full of blues and pinks. Some are light and easy, some heavy and deep. With each passing moment they seem to change, as my mood does. It’s the first time I’ve blogged in daylight in I don’t remember when, the only time I’ve blogged in the car, and I’m working on saying goodbye to Austin–for now. It’s harder than I imagined it would be. But maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe it means I’m meant to be there, wearing tank tops, eating tacos, and breaking a sweat in the Texas sun–comfortably–in my own skin.

Yesterday Bonnie and I window shopped for Annie’s Pilates studio. We got a lot done, but we spent as much time goofing off as anything else. We’re probably the exact reason that some stores tell you not to take pictures, not to touch the pretty things, not to sit on the furniture. Take the picture of me and the cactus at the top of the blog, for instance. (We come as a set–wouldn’t the two of us look great in your living room?) Or take this picture (like Bonnie did).

On a related note–I don’t know if I’ve ever said this–I’d like to thank my parents for spending all that money for braces to fix my teeth. I’m sure you could have used the cash to–I don’t know–pay the mortgage. But I want you to know it makes a difference every day, and I’m especially thankful for my straight teeth every time I hold a giant magnifying glass in front of my mouth.

Here’s a picture we took at Pier 1. It’s sexy, I know. Very Pinocchio meets Mardi Gras.

After Pier 1, we went to Target, and we found the most amazing thing. We were in the home decor section, and there were a ton of individual block letters–the kind with multiple light bulbs inside each one. My first thought was to rearrange them, maybe spell my name. But then Bonnie and I noticed that someone had already done that. Well, they didn’t spell my name. Rather, on the first row they had spelled DICK, and on the second, MALL.

DICK MALL.

First, how creative–and naughty–is that? Second, where is this place? I mean, I love to shop, but I didn’t realize this was a thing you could shop for. (If it is, I wonder if they ever have a Buy One, Get One sale.) Anyway, it gets better. The picture doesn’t show it, but the third row spelled OOOH. So put those three words together–DICK MALL, OOOH–and you really have endless hours of entertainment if you just play around with how low, high, fast, or slow you say OOOH. I realize it may not be everyone’s sense of humor (maybe you would have had to have been there), but try it sometime.

After a hard day of window shopping (at the Dick Mall–see how this works?), we went to Torchy’s Tacos. Apparently it was good enough for President Obama, and it was good enough for me too. I’m pretty sure the taco on the left was called The Democrat. I know one of them was, but the left would make more sense.

When tacos were over, we checked out a used clothing store. I didn’t buy anything, but I had fun trying stuff on. My favorite items were a shirt that said Texas with a picture of the Lonestar, and a pair of polka-dotted pants that were so tight I had to sit down on the floor to get them over my heels. They might seem pretty loud, but I guarantee you that no one in Austin would have even noticed them unless they were on fire, and had they fit, I’d be wearing them right now.

And no, I’m not sure they weren’t women’s pants, but I did find them in the men’s section. I swear. As a thirteen-year-old boy told me once at summer camp, “Boys, girls–what’s the difference these days?”

This afternoon Bonnie and I went for breakfast tacos at an iconic Austin restaurant called Maria’s. I was too busy eating to take many pictures, but I did take this one. It says, “No zapatos [no shoes]–no tacos. No pants–no problem!”

No pants, no problem! I mean, this is my kind of town. Bonnie and I just looked at each other and said–

DICK MALL.

This afternoon was more window shopping, more window shopping. In anticipation of blogging on the road tonight, I left my phone, which I use as a hotspot, at the apartment to charge. So I didn’t take a picture of any of the amazing mid-century modern furniture we saw, or the crumbled beer can I saw in a lamp store that said, “I got smashed in Las Vegas.”

Our last meal in Austin was at a place called Gourdough’s, and it was perfect. Most of their items include donuts, and all their items have fun names, like Saussy Cock, Boss Hog, and Drunken Hunk. My meal was called Mother Clucker, and it was friend chicken–on a doughnut!–with melted honey butter. I took one look at it and told the waitress, “I’m going to need a side of insulin.”

You can be weird here. You can be yourself.

Now it’s ten-thirty, and the sky is dark. My laptop illuminates my side of the car. In addition to writing, I’ve been thinking about what I love about Austin. At least for a while, the saying there was, “Keep Austin Weird,” a priority that seems obvious whenever you look around and see a hand-knitted blanket that’s been hung on an overpass as art, a sign that says, “Please remove your spurs before dancing on the table,” or a bathroom door that says, “Whichever.” You look at the people and see a thousand tattoos, bodies of every shape and size, skin exposed, proud and confident. All of it seems to say–you can be weird here–you can be yourself.

In truth I think you can be yourself anywhere, but maybe some places make it easier, give you more space to grow. I’m terrible with plants (they always die), but I’ve seen my aunt move a budding plant from one pot to another because it needed more room. So maybe it’s like that for people too.

There’s a spiritual teacher, Don Miguel Ruiz, who says, “Change as fast as God.” The way I see it, that’s another way of saying, “Be here, now,” or don’t spend so much time thinking about the fact that you’re not in Austin that you forget to enjoy where you actually are. So as I leave Austin and head back to Arkansas, I intend to soak up every bit of good that life has to offer me there. Still, even now, it’s as if Austin’s calling, “Come back. Come back real soon. And stay. We’re weird here. You’ll fit right in.”

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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None of us is ever really lost. At least we're never really alone. For always there is someone to help point your ship in the right direction, someone who sees you when you can't see yourself.

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