Friday, August 31, 2012

my mother's purse

My Mother's Purse




“Is that your man-purse?” 
“Yes. Are those your man boobs?” 
 
Someone stole my man-purse the other day. I was sitting on a red molded fiberglass bench in the subway, and I sat Pursey down beside me as I waited for the next train. I never do that, and must have been particularly distracted that day. There was nothing of value in it, just a faux leopard portable umbrella, a half filled bottle of spring water, and some leaky pens. Thank God the umbrella was faux leopard! Luckily I had my passport, keys, money, and other important documentation stuck up may ass. I only recall one occasion when someone stole some of my belongings from up there, and it was not an entirely unpleasant encounter. 
Within seconds of noticing it was missing, I thought of my mother’s purse. I had no desire to run screaming through a crowded subway, trying to find the assailant. Their disappointment must have been far greater than mine. 
Whenever something unpleasant happens to me that reminds me of my mother I always end up thinking it’s bad karma for giving her a hard time about superficial things. She never had anything of value in her purse, and although it was not fit to eat a meal out of, there were no cockroaches in it. I should have been more sensitive. But it drove me insane.  
Like me, she had many in her lifetime, but the one I remember most was her last purse. It was one of those mid-sized cheap Louis Vuitton knock-offs, and it was presentable on the outside but disgusting on the inside. I would clean it for her every few weeks, but always resented it, and argued with her many times on the state of its interior, and how she should carry it securely over her arm in order to avoid theft, and not like Desdemona’s hand me down handkerchief about to fall daintily into the hands of unprecedented doom. 
My biggest complaint about her purse had nothing to do with hygiene or the way she carried it in public places. It was when we were driving somewhere and she would constantly rummage through looking for the Holy Grail, I assume, because whenever I asked her what she was searching for, she would look at me with a strained, ethereal expression and say, “Nothing.”  
Once I shouted, in a very loud stage whisper, “Nothing? You’re looking for nothing? Well, Nothing will come of Nothing, Mother! Put the god damned purse away before I drive us into a ditch!”  Like some post-modern Cordelia stealing her father’s words from his mouth before he has a chance to speak them, I was a petulant child far too often in my mother’s presence. 
Once I was in a play I had written, and my mother planned to come. Curtain was at eight, and at eight fifteen she still hadn’t arrived. She was never late so I assumed she wasn’t coming. We locked the door to the tiny basement performance space and started the show. Not five minutes into the performance there was a very loud banging on the door.  
Once she had been let in she quietly took her seat in the front row, only a few feet away from the wooden lawn chair I was sitting in, delivering a brief monologue about something vulgar I am sure. Within seconds of taking her seat she picked her purse up off the floor in front of her and began to rifle through it.  
I could have employed any number of unprofessional strategies. I considered getting up out of my seat, walking over to her mid-monologue, kissing her on the cheek, and gently taking her purse away from her, carrying it securely over my arm for the rest of the performance. I am a cross-dressed performance artist after all. It would not have been out of keeping with the general mise en scene of the overall piece. But I didn’t. I ignored her. And I regret that deeply.  In life, and on the stage, I have always found improvised, meta-theatrical gestures very comforting. 
There was one thing of questionable value that she always carried in her purse. It was a copy of my first published solo performance piece entitled What Dreadful Things to Say About Someone who has just Paid for my Lunch. It was dog-eared, falling apart, and filthy. The odd time, she would look at me, and out of the blue, she would say, “How come I never knew about when they hurt you in your book.” The first time she asked, I had no idea what she was talking about, so she gently took her fragile copy out of her purse and turned to a page that she had folded at the corner, and explained. 
“See, here, where they hurt you.” 
I had been beaten up and robbed in a park in Athens in the mid-eighties by two men who befriended me, and asked me to go to a gay nightclub with them. Over the years some casual acquaintances (formerly close friends) have suggested that this was a foolish act. I do not share their opinion, but I try to respect their right to cruelly judge my misfortune. 
Whenever my mother would ask about this incident, I would carefully and gently explain to her that I didn’t tell her until years later, because I thought it would upset her. This was coming from a son who flew into a min-rage whenever she played in her purse, or asked me fifteen times over the course of an hour, how many times we had visited Disney World together. In my most bitter moments my mother’s life strikes me as a terrible distraction that occupied the first forty years of mine. When I am lucid I know that I was blessed by her bumbling presence, and her frequently conditional love, as she was by mine. Wherever the spirit world has taken her, I hope she remembers the good times. There were plenty. But there was also a lot of anger and betrayal on both our parts. Perhaps she is in heaven, looking down at me and saying, “You little bitch! It was just my goddamn purse. Leave me alone!” Or maybe she's in a bar in hell, having a good time, and too happy to care about how I felt about her purse.
She did swear at me many times, and I swore back. I admired her profanity. Once, sitting in an armchair in the lobby of the retirement home she lived in for the last five years of her life, a man came up to her and said, “That’s my chair.” My mother, a tiny, grey haired, sweet looking woman in her seventies, wearing a pale-orange, calve length cotton dress I had bought her at the Sally-Ann, and she hated, looked at him and said, “Fuck off.”  
God Bless her. 
Once, after a performance in a gallery in Ottawa, where I roller skated with a GI Joe Doll sewn into the nether regions of my bright red tights, my mother, after being kept awake during my show by frequent nudges by the curator, walked over to me and said, “Where do you get all your ideas?” I wanted to laugh, and say to her, with light but biting sarcasm, “I am an autobiographical performance artist mother. For the love of God, where on earth do you think I get them?” But I opted for kindness and simply said, “From life.” 
If the subject matter of my performance was a little risqué, and it often was, I would sit her down before a show and we would have a little talk where I would tell her that if she had any questions or concerns she could ask me about them – afterwards. Except for that one general query about where my ideas came from, and the story about my misfortune in Athens, she never did. She was a lifelong fan, and I miss her, fumbling in her purse, driving me insane, and unwittingly foreshadowing all of the things I would become once she was gone. 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Thursday, August 30, 2012

central park & all that

Tony Kushner, Central Park, and a recent batch of haiku


This recent burst of haiku began in Provincetown last week when I recognized Tony Kushner on the street but was too shy to say hello, ask for his autograph, have a photo taken, and behave like a starstruck tourist. A tanned, scantily clad young man sitting on a street corner, and talking loudly on his cell phone, as I shyly walked along the street toward The Red Inn cocktail bar, with Tony just yards ahead of me, hollered audibly to his phone mate, "and Tony Kushner just walked by!!!" And then the young man, with what appeared to be an open bottle of rum at his side said to Tony, "Oh, I'm sorry. That was probably kind of rude." Tony seemed amused, smiled at the gushing, apologetic fellow, and just kept walking, as he chatted to a friend walking with him.

Later in the week, when I was in Central Park, I took out my map as I wandered toward the Bethesda Fountain, where Tony Kushner sets one of the final scenes in Angels In America. 

                Jed & Greg kissing in front of the Bethesda Fountain - summer of 2011

me and Marie-Claude not kissing in front of the Bethesda Fountain last summer - we like open displays of affection in public, but only when it does not include us

Strolling through the park, as I drew closer to the beautiful iconic fountain I like to visit each time I go to Manhattan, I was suddenly possessed by the spirit of haiku and out came these five new haiku about Tony, Esther, Julie, Tammy and Marilyn. I think Tony is in good company here.

   the Jacqueline Kennedy Reservoir in Central Park

I scribbled them on my map of Central Park, with the first haiku printed in the middle of the Jacqueline Kennedy Reservoir. Here they are, transcribed for your reading pleasure, or lack thereof...

and i must thank my traveling companion Jonathan Chandler (in very small print of course), for contributing his knowledge of the Ukraine to the Julie London haiku, as well as his quick witted construction of the last line of the Kushner haiku (damn, I should have thought of it first!)



synchronized swimming haiku

you have never heard
of Esther Williams? get out
of my pool right now!!!


starstruck name dropping haiku

saw Tony Kushner
in Provincetown, had cocktails
but not with Tony


sex symbol haiku

you think Marilyn
Monroe was over rated
I want a divorce


queen of country music haiku

Tammy Wynette not 
a feminist? you are a 
complete idiot


wishful thinking

Julie London bridge
does not cross the Crimea 
River, wish it did

Friday, August 17, 2012


Crocodile Cock



I remember when my cock was young
me and Joey had so much fun
we beat off to the tune of a distant drum
fondling each others balls
terrified to speak to each other in the high school halls

but the biggest kick I ever got
was looking at photographs of Crocodile Cock
In the National Geographic subscription Mama bought for me
for Christmas in nineteen seventy three

the reptilian hemipenes they really freaked me out
made me wanna scream and shout
I was shrieking and lisping to the sight of Crocodile Cock
but Joey really loved the sight
of a double dicked reptile under the covers with an old flashlight

well Mama!

Crocodile Cock is something shocking
you open the centerfold and you just keep gawking
I never knew me a weirder time and I guess I never will
I didn’t like it much but it gave Joey a perverse thrill

oh Mama! 

those Friday nights
when all the other kids were reaching teenaged heights
Crocodile Cock, and Joey’s single penis, was my only sight
lying back with Joe on that old settee
eating popcorn, drinking Coke, and leafing through National Geographic

but the years went by and Joey’s cock just strayed
he went and left me for some sugar daddy 
who fed him gin and lemonade
but they'll never kill the thrills I got
cuddling up to Joey and wincing at photos of Crocodile Cock

learning fast as the weeks went past
we really thought that Crocodile Cock would last

thanks Mama! 
for the magazines

thanks God! 
for the hemipenes...

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

2 destabilized haikus

if there's a kind of 
hush, all over the world
why can't you shut up



if money grows on
trees, why don't you leaf me be
you greedy bastard

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

“constant reader” - a list from a semi- found review 
of a collection of semi-autobiographical 
short stories

1/         adorned and imprecise

2/         humourless and sentimental

3/         banal psychological imprecision

4/         familial stories filled with a total
            dearth of expectation

5/         empty fidelities of the body, mind, and conscience

6/         small ultimately meaningless victories
        
         that allow us to barely withstand 
         the dull thud of this collection
         as it drops from our sleepy, disinterested hands
         from the face to the floor

         thank god it was paperback       or
         it might have broken my nose

Monday, August 13, 2012



Wandering through the distillery district the other night I stopped to look at some large aerial photos on display outdoors along one of the cobblestone lanes. I was attracted to two particular photographs, one of the Euphrates River and one of the Caspian Sea. All the way home on my bicycle I kept thinking of the names of those incredible bodies of water, and I sat down and typed this story, a fictional story about love and the way it rambles.

The river flowed both ways. The current moved from north to south, but the wind usually came from the south, rippling the bronze-green water in the opposite direction. This apparently impossible contradiction, made apparent and possible, still fascinated Morag, even after the years of river-watching.
                                                                                                                           The Diviners, Margaret Laurence

river & sea 
Caspian                Euphrates
I knew there was something wrong when he changed the names of our twin cats from Tabby and Puss to Caspian and Euphrates. They were both sixteen at the time and I tried to explain to him that they were too old to change and they would never be able to learn to respond to such exotic new names. He got angry with me and shouted something about those names not being at all exotic to people who lived in Syria, Iraq, Russia or Kazakhstan. I'd like to go to those places some day, and learn how to love them.

I don’t know how he did it but he proved me wrong within a day of the sudden movement from classic cat names to the names of a river and a sea. They both began to respond within hours of the change, and as much as it pains me to admit it, they immediately struck me as twin cats who should have always had the names of huge, exotic bodies of water.

The fact that I had told him over a decade and a half ago that a cat can’t have a twin didn’t deter him from calling them twins when he brought them home from the shelter, so whatever possessed me to think he would reconsider a name change so late in their lives I will never know.

Boy, was I ever embarrassed, at the age of fifty-five, only minutes before dumping me, when he told me that cats can in fact be twins. I just assumed, all my life, until the breakup, that because litters were usually more than two, the concept of twins just didn’t exist in the cat world. That was so like him, to secretly keep vital information from me. Information that might have alleviated my status as an idiot savant just a little - just enough to make me feel just a little bit less like some pseudo-intelligent asshole. Silly me. An egg is an egg and when a single egg produces two offspring, well, that would be twins, whether they’re kittens or human babies. Who knew? Apparently I didn’t…

*

The day he changed their names was the same day he kicked me out. So, understandably, I was in no mood to consider the huge emotional strain of not only losing custody of my beloved kitties, but also having them lose their identities to some misplaced notion of aquatic exoticism - that was too much to bear. So I sat him down and forced him to explain to me - why now? Why, after all these years, did he feel the need to pull the rug out from under all of us, kicking me out and changing their names? It just didn’t seem fair, not to mention sudden, traumatic, and completely uncalled for. It wasn’t like I had cheated on him with someone he didn’t know, or, now that we’re on the topic, someone he hadn’t already cheated on me with. But he didn’t know that I knew about that, and I couldn’t tell him or he would find out how I found out, and that would just open a whole can of worms that would make me look far worse than I could ever make him look. So I just accepted his explanation that he needed a complete break due to my infidelity and the cats had to seem different somehow - and then I moved out the next morning after terrific breakup sex, and finally persuaded him after a couple of months to let me have some feline visiting rights. I missed Caspian and Euphrates so much it made me lose ten pounds in a month. I could stand to lose some weight but I couldn’t stand to lose complete contact with those two gorgeous fucking cats.

He did send me a beautiful card though. It was a sympathy card, and he said he was sorry I was such a prick. But I saw beauty in it, especially the part where he told me that rivers and seas run into each other whether they like it or not, like we did sixteen years ago, like Tabby and Puss did in their mother’s womb, surrounded by a bunch of other kittens who weren’t even twins, and that he was just feeling worn out by the banal inevitability of life and love.

It rained the day I finally lost it, mid-August, six months to the day after he dumped me. It had been a very humid morning and afternoon, filled with sunshine, turning grey by dusk when thunderstorms gradually burst through a huge, menacing sky. I just packed up my gear around nine and set myself up in the backyard, in the midst of a relentless downpour, behind the garage so he wouldn’t notice that I was there right away. I just couldn’t stand spending an elegant night filled with beautifully designed rain and thunder and the sharp explosive cut of lightning sheets so far away from the three creatures I had loved more than anything else in the world. More than Iraq or Kazakhstan or any place where strange names seemed normal. 

And there he was, standing on his back porch - formerly known as our back porch - calling their new names at the top of his lungs. He was old and radiant in the pouring rain, and if I hadn’t seen him, through the window, pacing the kitchen floor a few minutes earlier, I never would have known that he was crying. When he came out into the rain, his taupe tank top glistening, his perky little pink nipples erect and drowning, his lovely little swollen tummy protruding, I knew it was the right time. So I made him cry harder by luring his de-familiarized cats under the cover of my sagging pup tent. And there I sat, with them both purring in my lap as I dried their soaking backs, paying no attention to their own brand new names, and thanking some feline deity from the bottoms of their twin souls for giving them two people who loved them equally and hated each other with such fearless and sudden abandon.

It turns out that I would wait until morning to return the cats and decide whether or not to take the stolen handgun from my backpack and kill him for being such a callous ex-lover, almost as callous as I had been, but not quite. He should have known better. We were meant to be together, like a river and a sea, whether we liked it or not.

                                                                                                                      





Sunday, August 12, 2012


Sunday, August 12, 2012





a hawk, a raven
or the 13th giant blackbird
or a crow

too faraway to know

blushing, wanting robins, daffodils, and sparrows
uneven petaled daisies in a field 
of sentimental hoeing down
among the gay’ish signifying cornfields of his youth

but he saw a hawk, a raven
or a blackbird or a crow
close enough for kinship
too faraway to know


my MEDS on the roof at the MET

similes

beau fleuve (like a buffalo)

the first person he ever loved
was a Canadian expatriate
living in Buffalo
and working at a Ford Motor plant - shift work
transferred from Brantford Ontario
in the early 1960’s

one wife, two daughters
his wife had a twin sister
it was a perfect transnational
border-crossing life
shot through with the conflict
of being a gay man trapped in a straight man’s body

like wallpaper in a pup tent
like pillows in a rock garden
like swag lamps hung from cliffs
like diamonds in the mud
like caterpillar soup
like rust on a crinoline

like children in a smoky room
like cigarette butts in a piece of half-eaten birthday cake
like clowns at a funeral
like promiscuity at a wedding
like chastity at an orgy
like sex in a chapel

like nuns in a speakeasy
like sequins in the war
like boas in the rain
like mink stoles at the zoo
like monkey’s in a rage
like ferrets in a huff

like lemmings gone astray
like fire and hay
like a stack of closed bibles holding open doors
like a party girl in a room full of bores
like crystal bulls in china shops
like vegetarian matadors

like a postcard of a buffalo

with words printed on the back
claiming that the word buffalo was a mispronunciation
by aboriginals when French settlers
looked at the Niagara River and said “beau fleuve”
and natives thought they had said buffalo

a city borne of something that it isn’t
a marriage born of something that it couldn’t be
a beautiful river that drops suddenly
into the butt end of an overflowing escarpment
like his mother’s twin sister
married to the first man he ever loved

a Canadian expatriate - a beautiful river of misidentified love flowing between borders, like too many similes caught in a windstorm…

like a white buffalo in a china shop 



Origin of the name Buffalo

It is believed that the City of Buffalo received its name from the creek of the same name[citation needed]; however, there are several unproven theories as to the origin of the name of the creek. Early French explorers reported the abundance of buffalo on the south shore of Lake Erie, but their presence on the banks of Buffalo Creek is still a matter of debate, so the origin of the name of the creek is still uncertain. Neither the Native American name ("Place of the Basswoods") or the French name ("River of Horses") survived so the current name likely dates to the British occupation which began with the capture of Fort Niagara in 1759. The British engineer John Montresor mentions the name Buffalo Creek four times in his journal of 1764, indicating that the name was in common use at that time. Another argument is that the creek is named after a Native American who once lived on the bank of the river, but there is no evidence to support this theory. The claim that the name is an Anglicized form of the name Beau Fleuve (beautiful river), which was supposedly an exclamation uttered by Louis Hennepin when he first saw the stream, is the least likely explanation. 
                                                                                           wikipedia

Saturday, August 11, 2012

men around the house



 HAND SPLINT FOR LIMP WRIST












haiku on why Charlie Sheen can never love me 







there are men who smoke
like there is no tomorrow
i am tomorrow






dress author car 

Vera            Wang
Virginia     Woolf

Volkswagen



                                         a man around the house


his dreams of having men around the house
rose to realizations that all he held were
houses around men

awake he saw his lifelong love of dwellings
belonging to a dearth of love for people
preferring things to ideals of disorder

sprung form drowsy visions
of pre-recorded bliss
among the relics - broken schemes

now he walks alone
along the sleepy tiles
of spare nuclear array

familial shadows
dusted from the surfaces
of sleek intransitory spleen

            - armoires, sideboards, under-populated shelves -

chapters, spines, objects
culled from presents passing
his cheeks decry

nostalgia for the crocodile tears
he never spent
the alligator belt he bought online

            - fountains, youth, eternal pubic lairs -

rather tiny infantile droplets
feigned remorse
for knowing stolid pretense

            - inertia polished

will find the ways to comfort
away from terrifying blows
of what once posed as real

            - alive, undreamt -







flight

some men fly on Scrotum Airlines
to islands cast in semen
they memorize the land

the curvature of self taught testicles
wrought from gilded fleece
hung gracelessly by gawds of wit and wisdom

in their laps he mimes some blithe pudendic pilot

            -   poet wary of his sternum, bough
                        pimply sacs of gauze -

he flies to islands to abandon land
forgetting earth that claims him as fey folly
dismissing toxic dirt

floats on terra firma mounds
these watery orbs descending into torpid pools
but we digress  -

                        he soars




growth
 body hair: (paraphrased, then embroidered, from ancient Wikipedian folklore)

first a few sparse hairs
along upper base
of scrotal pines

next spare numerous tuft-lessness around the shank
then a thicker darker field
of apotheotic lilies - scrawny, crammed 

now the thighs and lower tummy
flustered by the sudden onset of such stuff
where dreams are shaded

later having reigned among umbilicus
through abdominal fears
other areas become aloof but crowded

sequences of sensitivity
these sociopathic androgens - their androgenic fare -
armpits (axillae), upper lip, (sideburns) preauricular regions

nipples (areolic halo of follicular debris)
mid-chest, neck, beneath the chin
beard, limbs, shoulders - dreaded back and buttocks!

a distinct pubarche’ian process
divorced from testicular maturation
leading to sexual fertility and fun

as a footnote to all this play
of strand and sternum
lock and thigh

pubic tresses may allow themselves to grow
among defective ovals, balls
signifying very little difference

between responses to the growth
of adrenal androgens
by men and women

obvious sex-dimorphic dissimilarities in distribution
primarily result from levels of androgen-eity
as maturity happens

as life and death occur