Category Archives: Personal Bits

Just things from my personal life

Wake Up!

Personal Bits

What an odd Saturday I’ve had. I attended my step-father’s wake in Brockvegas, populated with people whose average age was 70+, mostly rich white folks living in 750K codos overlooking the St Lawrence Seaway (Step-dad was a busy realtor in Brockvegas). Pepper in the odd via-marriage cousin, “son of so and so”, “brother of his uncle” and you had a room full of Italian/Irish/Brits all being nice and simmering emotionally over a free bar.

As I am generally a nervous wreck these kinds of social situations (and I don’t drink), I put my foot into my mouth so many times that Dr Scholls is considering teaming up with Crest to market directly to me. I had one particular gaffe that was done with such elan and flair I am certain I deserve a prize of some sort: We were clearing the party room after the service and I had just brought in the guest book and various framed photos into Mum’s condo. I look around and wonder where “the urn” is. Earlier, there was some debate as to whether Ian’s ashes were to be divided or placed into the St Lawrence. I turn to Mum and ask deadpan: “Where is Ian?”

Of course I mean Ian’s remains. Or Ian’s ashes. I didnt want to reduce him to that… level… so I stopped short of adding those two words to the end of my sentence. Plus I firmly believe that we never actually “leave” and that through memory and voodoo hocus pocus, we remain with our loved ones forever.

Anyhoo, back to the moment.

Mum’s face looks like I had just slapped her. My oldest brother, standing behind her, eyes the size of Grandma Perini’s largest stock pot lids, has a face that looks like I just uttered the most heinous swear word. Mum bursts into tears. She had been holding up well all day and only had a few blubbery moments during her comments at the service. Now, she’s full on crying. I hug her and try to explain myself. Over Mum’s head, I can see daggers shooting towards me from my brother’s eyes. After a time, she pulls back composed, cups my face in the way I love so much and says “Thank you.” It was the release she needed for the day and as if no error in my choice of words had happened, she explains to me that he’s in the same box, given to her from the funeral home, not an urn, over there on the piano.

I am of course, mortified.

The debate over what is to be done with the ashes still continues. I don’t want to ask and will wait ’til someone tells me.

Teach me ABBA

Favorite, Personal Bits

When I was a kid, we had a series of maids parade through our house while Dad and Mum were with their respective boyfriends. At this point in our family history, the two oldest sibs were living in Toronto and the youngest, three teens are doing their own thing, racing through the house unsupervised, were starved of some kind of parental unit. So our parents provided us with someone to cook, clean (light duties…dont touch the kid’s rooms) and laundry. Loads of laundry. I think one of them left because of the stinky pile of cotton that awaited her every other day.

There was Olga. That wasnt really her name but she was Scandinavian for sure. She would take a moment out of her vacuuming to give us kids a back rub while we mushed our faces down on the “good” couch in the living room. She wasnt much of a cook, as far as I can remember, despite her size. Massive. Man hands too. She didnt talk much but I think she genuinely liked her work, but hated kids.

Frau Fraubissenau was tight. She was skinny, high strung and didnt last long. I remember she got into a fight with my Mum about how to feed us. Mum was happy to have her make meals and freeze the next day’s dinner so that we could heat it up in the tiny toaster oven (precursor to a microwave, you under 30somethings). Frau didnt want to freeze her dinners, Mum didnt want to pay her for being at the house more than 3 days. Bye Frau.

Then there was Alice. She stayed on the longest. The same age as my long-moved-out sister, she was gaining extra cash before her university departure. I would come home and sit and watch her in the kitchen, in which she had no skill whatso ever. Many was the meatloaf, coached by my Dad. But she worked hard and put up with my millions of questions: Do you have a boyfriend? Why do you wear your hair like that? Whats for dinner? Can you find my Yoda t-shirt? What are you making? That again? What’s a tampon?

One day I came home from school and there she was doing dishes, her butt swaying side to side in time with the music that was coming out of the speakers (we were a progressive techy family, we had a sound system in the living room with satellite speakers in the kitchen. The wires were loose somewhere and the pressboard speakers would crackle and die every so often and a quick punch to the front of them would reset them). She couldnt sing too but that didnt stop her:

“take it easy
Take it easy!
try to cool it girl
take it nice and slow,
does your mother know”

The music was… disco and it was melodic and it had a beat…! The beat snagged my logic gland and I fell in love with the simplistic yet metred timing.

Big deal, you say, a closeted kid discovers disco. Tell us another, Armistead Maupin!

Well I can say that it was a life defining moment, however I went on to listen to New Wave and Punk. But it was Alice’s record that made me dance about and laugh and experience myself in a different way. A week or two later she brought me a 45rpm (thats a small record, to you 20somethings) of “Does Your Mother Know?” which my brother promptly snapped in half upon my 1000th playing of it.

Alice started to bring in all her ABBA records to work. I demanded it. We would talk ABBA and she told me the secrets of the anagram name and talked of their concerts and fans (a new concept to me… many people liking one group? Fame?) and where they were from (“Norway? Where the hell is that?” Alice didnt know, bless her heart.) Her last purchase was Arrival and she handled the record like it was made of snowflake and ricepaper.

Her final summer, Alice accompanied the family to the cottage for an overnight once a week so she could do laundry there, I guess. I never knew what she was doing for us at the cottage other than dishes. But Mum thought she was smoking pot out behind the sailboat/garbage pile (I suspect it was either Dan or John, my older brothers) and she was let go promptly. I remember Michele trying to reason with Mum that she was crazy and it might have been American cigarettes.

So I say thank you for the music, Alice.

The Ring

Hobbies, Personal Bits

Today I am going to get a 6g ring for my Prince Albert. Step back people.

Why did I do it? you non-PA people ask? Why have a small woman who proudly displayed drawings from her 4 yr old in her piercing room at Passages, shove a spike through the underside of the head of my dick and pay her for it? Why am I moving down the scale of rings to get to my coveted size of 2g (or possibly 0g…we shall see)?

Because.

Because I dont have a foreskin to care for. Call it surrogate penis care. Nothing beats the feeling of sex with a PA. Okay you can get the same results if you tape a washer to your dink and play with it but its the status of the jewelrey that says “I toughed it out”. I guess if you were an actor you would liken it to doing Hamlet with a marble in your mouth so you could boast that you did Hamelt with a marble in your mouth.

Its also worth the look on guys faces when you drop trow and see their reaction. Their eyes light up with shock at first and then a shadow of either lust or disgust crosses their face. Ive had a few guys turn tail when they see it or when I mention it in presex conversation. Well I guess they could be running because Im hideous or my peener is ugly but Im pretty sure that its all about the ring…

No it didnt hurt. A quick pinch sort of like a vaccination shot and it was done. Yes it bled a bit but it stopped suddenly and I was playing with it within 48hrs of having it done. No I didnt stick it into anyone’s orafice for just over 6 weeks. Yes. Yes it was worth it.

Richard

Personal Bits, Queer stuff

I open the closet door. Inside are 50 Calvin Klien Y-front briefs and row upon row of white socks, all perfectly folded like I was observing a robot clothes folding machine that worked at Holt Renfrew. More like a obsessive compulsive Holtzys robot. I swear I could eat a bowl of soup off those socks and underwear and not tip it at all.

Just below is row upon row of VHS porn. More than I have ever seen in my life.

The breadmaker dings. I’m babysitting Richard’s apartment.

Its the spring of ’92 and I have just broken up with my reason for moving to Ottawa. I troll the clubs (all one of them) like some zombie homo, adrift and lonely, angry from the breakup, angry at the move. If any of you have spent more than a weekend in Ottawa you will know what I mean. There are two types of homos that reside in Ottawa: The bar trolling, angry bitter queen that wont talk to anyone they havent known over a year and the Government Employee who would not be caught dead in a gay bar. Both are extremely tight in their cliques and like all exclusive social clubs, entrance was by introduction. After I had spent a couple months of not speaking to anyone in the bar, Richard suddenly appears at my side and starts making low level jokes.

It was sort of like being Tom Hanks in Castaway. At first I didnt realize he was coming on to me, I had been so pick-up starved that his advances were alien. I was dumbfounded. Suspicious. Then I realized he wasnt going to kill/steal/make fun of me and he was actually talking to me, I warmed up to him.

Richard was from the East Coast. The kind of East Coast that was always ready with a smile, slow in speaking as if he was choosing his words carefully, correctly. And hairy. He had the hairiest back of anyone I have ever dated. He actually introduced me into the world of Bears the hard way. He always had a tuft of dark brown hair coming out of the top of his collar, even if he was wearing a turtleneck. He made me shave his neck once, which I found disturbing and erotic.

Richard had quirks. He could drink one can of Coke and be jolted awake in seconds. He was obsessive about his undergear. I think he owned only one pair of black socks and a bazillion all-white sport socks. He had a massive two bedroom condo overlooking the Ottawa river that must have cost him a bit. He created and managed databases for some boring division of the government and was good at what he did. In his spare time, he catagorized and catalogued his porn.

From my diary, Sept 8th, 94:

Richard says: 1) Dont be judgmental too soon. 2) Never give out your number unless asked and you want to. 3) have a pie on hand.

He was smarter than I ever realized at the time. When Richard and I stopped going out but yet were friends (friends that would cuddle naked but not do anything?) we would stand in Ottawa’s only gay club and make fun of people. Richard would tell me stories of people that would walk by and I would comment on their clothes. After the bitterfest, we would go to the 24hr grocery store and get a pie, go back to his and eat the whole thing with plenty of milk.

From my diary I remember that after we became friends I confessed to Richard I loved him and he confessed to going on Prozac. We continued to eat pie. I moved back to Toronto Jan ’94 and Richard would visit a couple times. He’s since moved to Maurin County, Calif. We drifted.

My last good memory of Richard, was coming out of the LeatherBall alone at 5am, suddenly find him and his new found friend running up behind me, shirts in hand, hair everywhere, wanting to share a cab. I look at them and point at their knees. They’re black. Richard is mortified as only an O/C could be.

Old Bosses

Personal Bits, Work

Scott: bla bla bla blaaah bla bla bla bla

Good lord, he does go on doesnt he? Didnt he say this to me…what…three times since Ive started to work here? Scott has mentioned his management style every time we have these one on one meetings. Yes I get that you are a good manager, if not too informative in some areas. Ive heard this “open door policy” thing of his so many times I should get a $1 for every time he mentions it. Then I could go to Disney. And not have to stay at the cut rate resorts, either. No Parliament House for me, no sir.

Scott: Bla bla bla bla bla bla blaaa bla.

I guess it could be worse. Scott is the kind of boss that tells you exactly what he needs and then walks away. Trusting. Precise. Respectful. And always a smile. Ive had worse. Like managing that kitchen gadget store for those three gay guys. Three guys that at one point or another were dating each other and lived together while they ran that shop. That was like working for Sybil herself. You never knew which one was in a bad mood or which one was going to go off on the other in the middle of the store. When their tantrums started filtering into the store I had this routine down: smile nicely at the customer, roll your eyes in a conspiratory manner, bag their purchase and get them out that door as quickly as possible.

Scott: Bleh bla bla bla blllah…

Or the boss who would drink. That was tough too. One day he’s giving me a full length leather overcoat for recognizing the hard work I’ve done and the next he’s crying on my shoulder and making bizzare hockey-pant-wearing flirtatious moves on me. He was well dressed, though. Even if he did like to get pissed on in those hockey pants.

Scratch scratch

Scott: Bla bla bla bla

I wonder if any of my staff remember me from when I was working in that converted old jail International Hostel in Ottawa. I think of Wendy often lately. I wonder if she married into that military family from Trenton. And John. I wonder if he’s kissed Stevie Ray Vaughn’s boots yet. I think I was a good and fair boss. I certainly knew when to turn a blind eye, especially managing a staff of 5 just-over-twenty-somethings, all of us living together under one roof. Ha. Just remembered gluing all those condoms over Wendy’s door when her boyfriend came to town for a weekend visit. Why is my forehead so itchy? Its not full on winter yet, not dry skin season…maybe it was those weird devil horns I had on for halloween. I should get those pictures up to my blog soon. Did I just miss something? He’s looking at me. What the hell is on my forehead?

Scott: Bla bla bla bla

Scratch! Scratch!
*Plink*

Oh sweet jesus titty fucking christ…look at that size of skin flake that just fell off from between my eyebrows. Right there on my notes. Sweep it off! Sweep it off…slowly.

Scott: Bla bla bla Ted…?

Ted: Yes Scott?

Scott: Moisturize .

Ted: Yes Scott.

Rob

Personal Bits, Queer stuff

Continuing with dredging up men from my diary:


27 Dec 97
Working at the Eagle is an eye opener. What an odd mentality the leather community is.

Rob comes into the bar and we went out onto the patio where he proceeded to do K. The bar was empty and I was working and here it was a Tuesday night and he was putting that crap into his body. I didnt know what to do or say. I did nothing and vowed not to continue our friendship. I hate the guys he’s hanging around with – pretentious circuit party queens. I am mostly upset because I always thought Rob was a stronger man.

Rob was a ex-gymnast, aerobics instructor I met when I was working as a catering/restaurant manager who’s kitchen was located in a health club. He use to sit at my bar and made me make weird smoothie concoctions and dare each other to drink them (“now put cayenne pepper in it!”). He was the strongest A-type personality I have ever known who spiraled down into this guy who would do K on a dead Tuesday night. I think he was primarily bored with life after doing so much in his youth: competed in the Olympics, bought and sold trendy 60s antiques in a prosperous Toronto market, owned a loft conversion years before they were popular, personal trained some of the hottest men at the best health clubs. I think I wandered into his life just as he started to get a bit reckless with his partying. I was very attracted to him, but who wasnt? I was the ramora fish beside the sleek sexy shark when we went out. One time, while playing pool at Pegasus, Rob was approached by a photographer to pose for a gay men’s chat line ad. I stood there feeling like crusty pate left out on the counter, the day after some disasterous summer party.

I was the small dog asking the big bulldog “What are we going to do today, Spike?” and I didnt mind a bit. It was attention by association.

Oct 4 96
Rob got shot last night. We were walking down Jarvis after leaving the gym and making jokes about shooting Cocaine Andrew (only to wound, so it could heal and we could shoot him again) when *POP* and Rob crumples to the ground. Some asshole kids with a C02 gun got Rob in the ribs. He was wearing that neoprene one piece he tools around in all the time and that stopped the pellet from entering his skin but it tore the Nike shirt he had on *under* the neoprene. We spent some time at Wellesley General and met up with one other victim of the same drive by kids and talked to some cops. Rob bottled up his emotions well until the next day when he went into a rage directed at all “kids”. All I could think of was “It could have been me!”

The last I saw of Rob was outside his half mil house in Cabbagetown that he bought with his boyfriend. He was outside doing yard work with very little on. “Disturbs the lesbians next door,” he offered. He had that way of getting under your skin.

Randy

Personal Bits, Queer stuff

Growing up, we had a cottage an hour outside Brockville, nestled into a nice wooded inlet on Graham Lake. Actually the structure of the cottage was built not on the land we owned, but next to it on a municipal road that went into the lake. My parents thought they were getting a deal and took the risk in purchasing the land and “the cottage” hoping that Athens Township would never build a road right into Graham Lake. They got away with it. To this day I cant fathom how someone could sell real estate like that. Truthfully, we were squatting in some house beside our land.

The almost A-frame building had three bedrooms, floor to ceiling windowed front, press-board for internal walls (which I would poke away at like a mouse, creating peek holes into the older kids rooms), a dodgy septic tank with a creative National Geographic collage created by my talented gay brother, reminding us that you should not flush for just pee. And that the 5 men should lift the lid as courtesy for the two women in the family. Your typical cottage.

The Cottage was where I had my first TV memory. When I was 4, I can remember my sister and dad yelling at me exictedly to see something on TV. Shaky and grainy, there was Buzz Aldrin jumping down off the LEM. I dont recall being overly excited until my sister actually explained what was going on. Later she would give me my first novel to read: Have Spacesuit, Will Travel by Robert A Heinlien.

I had big rubber boots to “swim” with (actually I never learned to swim, I wore the boots so I could play in the water without getting leeches, which I still loathe), and a constant supply of plastic boats to play with in the sandy lagoon we created for the Lazer sailboat launch.

I had a pet frog in a jar. I couldnt be a more typical “kid” if I tried.

Life was good.

Life was even better when Randy was around. He was the next door kid who made me realize I was queer. Randy always said he was one year older than myself but I suspect it was more like 4 years older because he was full-on into puberty while I was a smooth scrawny pre-pube kid. Randy was my first glimse at what was to come, bodily, for myself. He was covered in a fine blond hair except for his crotch and nutsack. My lack of development was made painfully obvious to me when we skinny-dipped, watched racey movies on late night tv, played in the woods or crouched down to look at something, prompting hairy things to fall out of his Addidas shorts. To this day, I have a peener-out-the-shorts fetish and swoon when I see boxers. I would desperately try to get him to sunbathe or swim or look at some bug on the ground so I could get a glimpse of his hairy nuts. It went beyond sex, into the realm of obsessive fascination. When would my bag become shaggy? When would hair thickly “pahf!” out of my underwear like his did. I would drill Randy as to the exact date he got body hair, as if I could mark it on MY calendar. Like I was going to hold a party or something. “Hi Welcome to my Hairy Nutsack Cotillion! Make sure you have punch because we’re going to start soon!”

Randy would take my questions in stride. He wasnt gay and he wasnt shy about his body. But he wasnt a queermo either. He would rebuff my deceitful acts of show and tell-me-again-about-your-pubes machinations. Eventually when I hit 13, he wasnt coming up to the cottage as much during the summer. The last time I saw him was our last fall as owners of the cottage. Both our families were winterizing our cottages and as his family (mom, drunken boorish stepdad) were packing away things, Randy waved across to me and went back to stapling plastic over their windows.

Now, into the present: exerpt from my Diary, marked Sept 11, 1997:

Dad told me that Randy’s wife killed herself and their child. I wonder why she did that?

Man. I feel I owe him something.

Robert

Personal Bits, Queer stuff

I found my diary from 10 yrs ago in the basement today:

Nov 4th, 1996

I met Robert at my brother’s U of T Intelligencia party. 14yrs ago he and my brother goofed about for a while and ended it abruptly. Robert stumbles into this party – I’m stoned + kinda drunk and munching out at the snacks when he enters. I will never forget it – all bluster and cyclone like. I’m enchanted.

He’s a comedian, though I have never seen him on TV. Cool outlook. His attention turns on me like car headlights and his off the cuff remark to me makes me feel like a fool. I clam up. He says I seem detached. I’m actually paranoid from the pot and I am worried I’ll say something wrong. He’s beefy. I find him very attractive. His eyes crinkle when he smiles. He’s observant: he reads me like a book. He suspects I can’t be monogamous (try me!), he thinks I’m a bottom (try me!)…he thinks…I don’t really know. He offers to have me over for a sleep over because he feels comfortable around me.

Nov 25 1996

Robert and I still date. But no sex yet. Last night, as we lay beside each other, I read to him from “Kewtee, Santa’s Helper” as he groped my crotch.

It was all in fun. I think.

I will never forget him. I remember after he left with my phone number in his pocket, I couldn’t stop talking about him. He was the kind of person I wanted to be: gregarious, funny, commanding, likable. We broke up on the steps of the community centre where he taught improv acting classes.

The first night I slept over he handed me a pair of flannel pjs and I laughed. This, however, was not a joke. He expected me in them if I wanted to sleep over. I wore them. Once. After that it was t shirt and underwear. I never found out why.

Robert had the best apartment ever. Located in a 4 storey sprawling post-war lowrise, nothing in it was created before 1960. Couches, paintings, working stereo, curtains…all of it in pristine condition. The greatest thing about the apartment was the bathroom: from floor to ceiling were articles, lobby shots, pictures, figurines of Joan Crawford. Complete with JC toilet scrub and Ajax on a shelf by itself. I thought it the most decadent bathroom ever.

He use to call me by my last name. Never by Ted. I could never win an argument with him. He was a wordsmith and a master debater.

We never had sex once in the 7 weeks we went out. Yes I was monogamous.

I saw Robert on TV last year in a PSA. He played a doctor who joyously flipped his pen as The Comforting Government Voice said that health care was in good shape.

Weirdly enough I now work steps away from his old apartment and wonder if he’s still there, living in his shrine to all things 50s.