I Am Already Changing Modern Society

What would you change about modern society?

I am already holding a mirror in front of society, because my microcosm represents everyone else. People read me because if it’s true for a hundred people (my on the ground reach), it will be true for a thousand. If it’s true for a thousand, it is a good indication that everyone will find something they can relate to written by me. That’s because I’m a bisexual man wrapped in a lesbian’s body, a minority who is trapped in the majority (I’m white), with spirituality and religion weaving themselves into the themes of my life.

I am always spiritual and seeking an audience with God. I am sometimes religious. I enjoy church and miss it, then go back and see why I don’t go anymore. It’s not that I don’t believe in organized religion. I believe in it so much because it has the power to change you if you let it. It’s just different for me because I don’t find God there anymore. I find God in other ways because I know how the sausage is made. It’s like being a musician and a line cook. Everything changes once you’ve been on stage, sat in the orchestra pit, and worked in the kitchen. I enjoyed being a lay preacher of all the jobs I’ve had in church, so I lay out my thoughts here as if I was preaching.

Every entry has a thread of that preacher persona running through it because I’m making connections through a library of images collected from every piece of media I’ve ever consumed. Very few entries are so stream of consciousness that I forget to tie it up at the end. It is short sighted AND impressive that every entry I write is one shot, hit post, go back and fix typos. When I go back and read something from five years ago, I am astounded at how quick I am at writing sentences that will flatten me emotionally and other people say that as well. My marriage entry, the one that was shared all over the world, some of them celebrities? It took about half an hour.

My blog is the very best example I can give you in terms of why I was terrible at school until I got to college. It all looks like the ADHD kid who stayed up all night trying to finish a paper. In college, you can do that because there is no daily homework to be checked. English and Language Arts didn’t eat my lunch, but remembering to turn things in sure did.

Blogging is how I know to use my ADHD superpower. I have been capable of thinking very deep thoughts and writing them down since I was a child. I have not been so capable at remembering the minutiae of life. I can best be summed up by Rhythm of Love by The White Ts, because this is a conversation that makes me laugh in terms of several relationships where I’m this man……..

My head is stuck in the clouds,
She begs me to come down,
Says "boy, quit fooling around."

No one likes a dreamer. Even fewer like what happens when our creativity is cut off or managed. Russian and Chinese TV is an extreme example of it, but it’s the best illustration I can think of at the moment. They are held back by strict standards. I would be lucky to find some.

I tell people I like the view from up here, and their constant quest becomes telling me why I’m wrong. I don’t write because I’m talented. I write because no one will ever understand themselves without being able to read themselves later with a dispassionate eye. Journaling is so important whether you let others read it or not. I am glad that’s the message the church instilled in me that stuck. Praying gets your ego out of the way, but it will creep back in when you think about a situation in retrospect and you can’t fact check anything. If someone tells you you’re being unfair, you have no way to check and see if they’re right. You won’t know when you need to yield, and dollars to donuts you won’t figure it out immediately because it takes so long to convince you that you might, indeed, be fallible.

You develop a more acute sense as to whether people are listening to you, because you have concrete examples of where you did and did not take in love or justified anger. If you grew up in a family that doesn’t fight and you’re terrified of it, that’ll be something I need to know up front, because I know it will make you run from every conflict for all time and to be gentle. Also, to learn when you’re running too much of the time and decide whether I want the relationship to continue. I can stop doing your emotional work for you at any time when you refuse to show up.

I see so much on the Internet about how women are not hospitals for broken men, and yet we are. We so are. Men can’t emote for the most part and you become their entire emotional support system within three months flat. It’s not because they’re not capable of having multiple relationships so they’re not putting everything on you. It’s that they won’t emote in front of anyone but you. The best thing you can do is encourage your partner to go to therapy and get their shit handled. You cannot do anything more. You can only notice when you’re not seeing results and move on. You get to decide how tired you’re going to be from getting your needs constantly ignored while they think nothing of trauma dumping while not being able to take it when they dish.

Men, 99% of the time it’s your fault. Period. End of story. You were not socialized to do anything but be angry all the time and it’s a lifelong battle to be whole again. It is not that you are generally wrong in your beliefs. It means that you are really bad at communication because you fear other people so much. If you open up to a woman and she breaks your heart, then what are you going to do? Who do you tell about those feelings? Why do you need another emotional support person/rebound right away? You can’t handle your emotions on your own. Everything stems from that one issue.

You can’t handle a household, either, because you weren’t taught those skills because why would you ever need them? Your mother’s frustration doesn’t mean shit to you, Holmes. She’s not going to be there forever to wipe your ass, but she loves you enough to do it even though you’re ungrateful because you’re not taught to look around and notice women’s contributions to your life, either.

You need to be able to communicate your needs and wants so that we don’t have to take care of you physically or emotionally. If you want a woman to cook and clean and raise the children and stay home all the time so you can be with others, you are free to be that for someone else. I’m not playing. There are going to be certain times when you’ll submit or I’ll walk away, and you’ll have those dealbreakers as well. It takes a tremendous amount of work to be in any serious relationship, and men are treating all their relationships with women as if they matter so much less. That’s because their way of doing everything is better according to them. I don’t have rights because I shouldn’t need them, etc.

If I wanted to get my tubes tied, in a lot of states I’d have to marry Zac to get my tubes tied, because I need my husband’s permission…. and then we’d have a marriage that didn’t mean anything to either one of us, I just needed health care.

This has no place in society at any time.

My happiness and survival shouldn’t be dependent on whether I’m working, and I don’t mean whether I can be lazy or not. It’s whether I can afford health insurance on my own or walk away from a job with really good benefits because my boss is a walking nightmare.

Proving that you have a disability severe enough not to work is a nightmare for many people. That’s why you have to get a lawyer and it costs money to be different. It is severely ableist and makes people live check to check because it’s not enough to generate savings. The one thing that’s sacred about disability is that they can’t take it away from you and make you dependent on your own money again. In order to live paycheck to paycheck, there cannot be an end in sight. A gap will drown you immediately.

If you have to go to the ER without health insurance, you will almost certainly be fucked for a number of years. You have to pay a lot of money to get Band-Aids and ibuprofen, because women’s pain doesn’t mean as much as men’s to doctors. They’ll think nothing of prescribing another white man enough oxy to down an elephant, but you’re suspicious or needy for being hysterical when you’re in pain.

They need to cut that shit out if they’re going to say Tylenol and Advil are strong enough to compete with narcotics after surgery and/or childbirth. It will work in the days and months after, but never immediately. That’s not your first call when you’ve sliced someone open, ever, unless the patient is an addict and are self-aware enough to know they need nerve blockers instead.

If you can’t get narcotics after a serious injury that all people with eyes can see, your arm’s off, you’ve cut your bleeding leg off, etc., it is not merely a flesh wound. Your doctor’s just an asshole.

Ibuprofen is right out.

I am not pushing for giving out oxy like Tic-Tacs. I am saying that narcotics have a time and place, and that place is in the delivery room, the ER, and the recovery room. It takes more than your hospital stay to heal, and most doctors are very concerned that Karen is going to become a frequent flyer while ignoring Chad’s warning signs. Chad gets what Chad wants. If not, it’s time to call Daddy.

Daddy will think his daughters’ lives are worth less and not with words. It will play out in actions. Boys get condoms and a later curfew because their dad is just as excited about the loss of his son’s virginity as he is, while shaming the women that provide the outlet.

The whore/madonna complex is real and it’s deep.

Either we’re the ones that wipe your asses or the dirty sluts who will actually sleep with you.

It’s why I’ve dated women so long. I don’t have to deal with your bullshit. I can live around it.

Here’s the take home message that really ties the room together:

Modern society is only going to change when men realize that they’re just as emotionally needy as everyone else, while blaming women for being hysterical. This will not change in my lifetime. I can only get more men to see what it’s like for women from an outside perspective.

It’s the difference between getting the ticket to La Boheme and playing in the pit. We’re just “the help.” It’s the same issue with media. You love Succession and Archer while shitting on arts grants. All of it stems from having your creativity and humility quashed.

In order to change society right now, start getting there faster and keep up.

“When my coach said ‘you run like a girl,’ I told him that if he picked up the pace, he could run like a girl, too.”

– a paraphrase of Mia Hamm

Wordless

What is your favorite genre of music?

I am the one that provides the words.

I need music to flow like water around me. I love the word โ€œsoundscape.โ€ I love how composers and writers make love to each other, birthing individual creativity that feeds the other.

Probably one of the reasons the partners Iโ€™ve had havenโ€™t been creative (except Dana). I thought it was a good thing that we were so different, because we were feeding each other. Now, I realize that nearly every relationship Iโ€™ve ever had with a woman became based over time on division of labor. Theyโ€™ll do all the thinking if Iโ€™ll do all the feeling.

I was comfortable with my beautiful girlโ€™s availability because it was no different than any relationship Iโ€™d ever been in with a woman except the relationship I was currently in. That does not mean I choose wrong, or that Iโ€™m a bad person for not getting rid of the Internet relationship. Thereโ€™s several reasons I couldnโ€™t do that, and even when I realized it was necessary, it was too late.

I canโ€™t remember which entry I was reading where it became clear, but I know for sure that I am trauma bonded to this woman and perhaps it just didnโ€™t present for her in the same way. Thatโ€™s fine, and I donโ€™t expect anyone to have my experience. I was just reading over what Iโ€™d written when it hit meโ€ฆ.. โ€œthatโ€™s a trauma bond.โ€ You need her so bad it physically hurts? Thatโ€™s a symptom.

If she doesnโ€™t have an itch on her skin when she thinks about disconnecting from me, then of course we are not the same. I wish Iโ€™d thought about that years ago. I should state for the record that I am not saying she caused trauma. Itโ€™s the opposite. She came into my life while I was experiencing acute trauma, and sat next to me while I took my own medication. No one who sat with me at that time isnโ€™t bonded to me in that way, itโ€™s just not as extremely loud and incredibly close.

I think the itch on my skin is thinking that I am too incomplete within myself to do life without her, but thatโ€™s my trauma talking, not my personality. Even she would be surprised to see how vulnerable I really am, because I donโ€™t write from that place often. It never left my mind that sheโ€™s older and wiser, so be on your A game. Seeing her as younger comes from getting to know her inner voice. I care for that child as much as I care for that adult.

I betrayed everything I believed in because my disease started managing me. I donโ€™t think I came back to myself until I moved to DC and had been here long enough to feel stable. I had to get away from Dana, and I had to get away from Houston. Our relationship looked so much different without those two things, and I was grateful. This is because I moved to Houston with Dana because she wanted to teach, but then when we got there, she didnโ€™t do anything until she had to.

So I was managing my career and all kinds of PTSD triggers everywhere I went. It was unsustainable, especially the day when I learned that my new therapistโ€™s office was a couple streets over fromโ€ฆ. That house.

Getting out of Houston so that I could be myself again might also have been the answer to saving my relationship with Dana, but I donโ€™t think anything could have done that. We got into a pattern where sheโ€™d check out on her phone, Iโ€™d decide she wasnโ€™t interested in interacting, and e-mail my Supergrover. It wasnโ€™t a big series of fights, just more that when we each looked up, the other was busy, so we assumed we could just keep on doing what we were doing. We woke up months later and didnโ€™t have much of a connection anymore. The reason that a straight girl did not and could not have had any culpability in this is that if Dana and I had made more time to be emotionally available to each other, we would have been okay. We just stopped communicating.

Just because Dana was jealous didnโ€™t mean anything my beautiful girl did to contribute had purpose. Dana chose to get angry at the wrong woman.

Actually, she forgot to get mad at two women. She should have destroyed me, and also herselfโ€ฆ. Because I am betting that she does not think of herself as checking out and not caring, and how that might affect my relationship with her.

Because if I tried to engage her and it took more than a few minutes to get her to engage, I gave up. Maybe it was too fast, but I donโ€™t have patience for saying โ€œjust five more minutesโ€ when it comes to a video game and I am offering to take off your clothes.

Gay or straight, Supergrover whooped Danaโ€™s ass, and hereโ€™s how she did it. Dana didnโ€™t start acting like I had serious value until Supergrover noticed I was brilliant.

So, everyone can think Iโ€™m the bad guy until Iโ€™m dead. I donโ€™t care. But the relationship started to fail before I shot it out of its misery.

In a perfect world, I would have seen another woman looking at my brilliance and thought, โ€œoh, thatโ€™s sweet.โ€ Itโ€™s not a perfect world, and sheโ€™s hot as shitโ€ฆ. Therefore I lost mine.

I was the one that tumbled out of reality, because at that time in my life, reality bit (if youโ€™re my age, you wore out that disc. Itโ€™s probably scratched to shit yet still in your parentsโ€™ basement somewhere).

I just wish that Iโ€™d used music to help me more than I did. I wish I could have drowned out both women so that I could hear me more clearly. Perhaps my need would have been filled by something healthier, cleaner.

Music definitely would have helped me move on for good, but even that was confusing because I did have a relationship with my beautiful girl. Tenuous, but there. It was a note that grew up to be a symphony, because I love dissonance in the right chords.

Too much had happened for either one of us to feel the same way about each other without work, and we decided for whatever reason that this was a conflict that could be solved by writing. In retrospect, it made things more complicated because neither one of us can read when it comes to the subject matter. How would our conversations be different had she ever put her arm around me? How would kissing each otherโ€™s cheeks and hugging tight have mixed up the equation? I go back and forth.

Itโ€™s not something I think about a lot, because itโ€™s pointless except in determining that I donโ€™t know as much as I thought I did. Itโ€™s just not possible for each of us to feel as much fear in person, because thereโ€™s more to grab onto in terms of context.

Because of what has happened, I am wary of online dating, because I know what a shit show it has become. Iโ€™m getting a taste of my own medicine in terms of not being able to deal with othersโ€™ emotions, because a guy who randomly reached out to me now thinks we are in a much heavier relationship than I do. I just tell him everything sheโ€™s told me and surprise, it works. So obviously I know that we were not on the same page and she was trying to fix it as well. Our approaches were just so different that they prevented us from seeing what the other was doing or even understanding it.

But itโ€™s not the same situation. I did just meet this guy out of nowhere, and he started acting enamored after a couple of conversations that had legit nothing to them. Nothing was said that could have created a trauma bond, because I donโ€™t talk to anyone about that unless Iโ€™m writing on my web site. I feel like people get enough of my problems if theyโ€™re fans, so I wonโ€™t talk about my issues unless people askโ€ฆ.. or with Zac, Iโ€™ll just ramble around until he finds a point. ๐Ÿ˜‰

I am finding out that being bisexual has nothing to do with sex at all, ever. I have learned that I have dated few men not because Iโ€™m not wired that way, but because men legitimately have no clue about what women go through societally and are so damn condescending about it that some dude will say two things wrong and Iโ€™m like โ€œblock.โ€

To be fair, I havenโ€™t specifically started seeking out men or women. I just connect with people. However, I notice how Iโ€™m being treated and overall, men treat me like Iโ€™m little and cute. Boy, I will fuck you up. Respect me as such.

Itโ€™s because men arenโ€™t looking at me like Iโ€™m half a husband, and it is their downfall. I will never be โ€œthe little woman.โ€ I donโ€™t understand most social constructs and step all over them, so expecting that I already understand everything about male/female relationships is a mistake on both our parts.

When a trauma bond snaps, it feels like quitting caffeine cold turkey and then having to deal with the headaches. So, thatโ€™s a lot of fun as I negotiate being a new person. Itโ€™s why I feel like Iโ€™m not good at dating. I go out and Iโ€™m not focusing on them, but about how long itโ€™s been since I had at least a goddamn Diet Coke. My body doesnโ€™t feel right, and the one friend thatโ€™s always been there for me has taken a back seatโ€ฆ. When music could have handled the detox on its own. Music and I have been together since I was born.

My mother was a classically trained pianist with a degree in piano performance and pedagogy. My father played both classical and jazz trumpet, getting 26 full rides for college. Curtis, Juilliard, Oberlin, you name it.

I am what happens with โ€œthe Mozart effect,โ€ but Iโ€™m not sure whether thatโ€™s a ringing endorsement.

Music has a way of focusing me that other things donโ€™t, and Iโ€™m going to have to make a Supergrover playlist as well, because the music I needed to get rid of romantic feelings isnโ€™t the music I need to feel calm. Iโ€™ll start with the color green. She reminds me of new life, new growth, new everything and the music should reflect it. Iโ€™ll have to go through my music apps, but it should start with something like โ€œSheep May Safely Grazeโ€ yet not exactly that because Iโ€™d be whistling it 24/7.

I just need things that are mathematically complicated in a major key.

Actually, that would be a good tagline for her, if there was one. Never have I met anyone with such a range of emotions that centered on light, often shining it into my darkness while I cleaned up. It was easier because I could see.

I listen to classical music a lot while Iโ€™m doing other things, because it relaxes my ADHD mind to have at least one plug filled. One less way for another stream of thought to interrupt.

Thatโ€™s how I think meeting in person would have helped. Talking would have avoided all the traps of going down the wrong road too far before having to figure out an exit strategy, which as you can see is going really well. Obviously Iโ€™m not bothered by the situation because I never write about it. Eyeroll.

The writing prompt today reminded me just how much I cannot separate the music of my life from life itself. I am put together with blood and bones and skin, and yet that doesnโ€™t mean musicโ€™s contribution isnโ€™t there. Music is the invisible fourth wall providing structureโ€ฆ. So thick you donโ€™t even have to have a stud finder. Just decorate it up, itโ€™ll hold. Like concrete, music drips like water into all your softest places and hardens. Music that moves you will call you to you forever, and not everyone is attuned to your beat.

To turn that back on me, my rhythm changed and I didnโ€™t realize how different it had become. I was a basic 4/4, with a new composer who only knew how to write time signatures by subbing in random numbers. Today, itโ€™s a waltz. Tomorrow, itโ€™s a march. Tuesday is experimental jazz odyssey.

I am living my life with the map on the table, knowing thereโ€™s no way to fit it back into the package.

Which ultimately leads me to my favorite song in life, and a story about my ex wife. I thought it was hilarious that the Indigo Girls were on tour, and Kathleen was late to the concertโ€ฆโ€ฆ.for the โ€œGET OUT THE MAPโ€ tourโ€ฆโ€ฆ.. ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜›

The thing that stays with me from the first time I heard it until now is โ€œIโ€™m going to love you good and strong while our love is good and young.โ€ The hope for that love is eternal, knowing a piece of it is in me. I can stop the itch on my skin, I can go back to my life, I can move on. But thereโ€™s never going to be a moment in my life that is bigger than โ€œyou think Iโ€™m smart? You? Really? Are you sure?โ€

The Commute

What notable things happened today?

Bryn sometimes calls me on her way to work, which gives us about 15 minutes to talk (note to Bryn- letโ€™s do this more). Today the notable news is that weโ€™re both obsessed with Starbucks food. The coffee I can take or leave, but no one else has egg bites and Impossible sandwiches. Eggs and cheese are cheating on my vegan diet, but I only eat mostly plants, anyway. Iโ€™m living Michael Pollanโ€™s adviceโ€ฆ. โ€œEat food. Not a lot. Mostly plants.โ€ I was also telling her that I liked Starbucks getting Trente cups because Iโ€™m a sucker for their iced tea. Just shut up and take my money. My favorite flavor is green because itโ€™s a bit minty, but their black tea makes me smell numbers at that quantity. I get a breve, which is black iced tea, no extra water, Splenda, and soy or oat milk. It sounds weird, but you wouldnโ€™t think so if it was a Thai restaurant, now would you? I think theโ€™ve caught on to my idea, because now theyโ€™re selling iced London Fog lattes (Earl Grey and vanilla syrup).

Weโ€™re also working on bringing joy into our lives. That we are responsible for our own suffering because of our rejection sensitivity, but itโ€™s something we can improve about ourselves by relating to each other. When I look at Bryn, my heart floods with gratitude. Sheโ€™s the face I look to for love, because I can. She is also safe in loving me, because sheโ€™s getting me the me that has already made so many mistakes that Iโ€™m not so closed off to her because I see how that isolation affects her. I donโ€™t want to make her think Iโ€™m doing anything thatโ€™s pushing her away, because when I feel sad, itโ€™s not about her. I canโ€™t ignore her needs, and sometimes theyโ€™re more important than mineโ€ฆ.. like not encouraging her to believe that Iโ€™m being distant because of something she did. Thatโ€™s more important to me than taking care of myself, because if I donโ€™t make it more important than I will isolate based on what Iโ€™m going through when the situation isnโ€™t even that badโ€ฆ.. I just think it is.

The story weโ€™re telling ourselves is often skewed, because weโ€™re so unkind to ourselves. We disconnect quickly out of embarrassment or self preservation, because it hurts to think about the ways weโ€™re responsible for contributing to anotherโ€™s behavior, or giving someone else negative consequencesโ€ฆ.. true whether you meant to or not.

We disconnect quickly because weโ€™re so digitally oriented. Think back over the last 10 years. Are you quicker to anger because of the wall of separation between you and another person? That even though this person is close to you in real life, you have a desperate need to fight with people on the Internet, leading the charge into hell and forgetting that you are creating some awkward cocktail partiesโ€ฆโ€ฆ.. because being right over whatever it is has become more important than empathy.

I donโ€™t think this happened in any organized way. It is the nature of becoming digital. Too many relationships go up and down because of Facebook and Twitter, because everyone can see how you interact with everyone else. Youโ€™re not only taking into account how people treat you, but how you observe them treating everyone else. I donโ€™t care if you have me a kidney 20 years ago. I will not let you get away with saying watching two men kiss gives you nauseaโ€ฆ.. and thatโ€™s why youโ€™ll never go to a gay wedding.

Someone from my high school actually said that to me. He apologized and Iโ€™ve moved on permanently. I got an apology, but I want no future contact.

Itโ€™s the same kind of bullying I endured in high school, and itโ€™s just noise. Itโ€™s chatter designed to make me feel awful about myself. Imagine being so certain that God is telling you that you need to tell queer people theyโ€™re going to hell. Imagine that message being preached to a church that has 40,000 members. Imagine that message going to all churches that have 40,000 members. Then imagine going to high school 15 minutes away from that church so its bitchy little mean girls all go there. I canโ€™t think of anything more psychotic than getting into a performing arts high school and being homophobicโ€ฆ.. especially if you were in theater. Even the straight kids are queer.

Probably because actors have to be two-spirited anyway. Itโ€™s the full range of human emotion.

I think itโ€™s notable how fast Iโ€™m putting together what has happened to me over my life and how it is affecting me now. Being gay in Texas is a rough gig, and it always has been. I am not oppressed. WE are oppressed. We did not create the system that hates us, and we canโ€™t really do anything about it due to the 80/20 ruleโ€ฆ. That 20 percent of the population has to convince the 80% theyโ€™re right.

โ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆover things that shouldnโ€™t be legislated.

Thomas Jefferson is rolling over in his grave, because his ideas of conservativism was that the highest government in the land would be the equivalent of a school board. Just as little legislation as possible. He would be incensed that conservatives were trying to parent the whole nation. You donโ€™t get individual freedoms if itโ€™s perfectly acceptable to treat you as if your entire personality is a sin.

Sometimes I wish that the US had lost the Revolutionary war because the Commonwealth countries are so much more progressive than we are. I would deal with Boris Johnson a lot better than Iโ€™d deal with Ron DeSantis (Iโ€™m assuming heโ€™ll be the nominee because more people are being convinced heโ€™s an actual criminal every day. Hiding classified documents near water? Obviously heโ€™s a geniusโ€ฆ.. we knew that when he looked directly at the sun during an eclipse. Donโ€™t get me wrong. Hiding documents in your house is always wrong. But putting them near toilets and sinks is a special kind of stupid.

I also think itโ€™s great he lost the E. Jean Carroll case, because that judicial standard says that it is more likely heโ€™s guilty than not. This is different than a criminal trial, because โ€œbeyond a reasonable doubtโ€ is a higher standard than a โ€œpreponderance of evidence.โ€ The best example I can give of this is FBI and CIA. FBI collects data that has to stand up to scrutiny in a courtroom. CIA has no law enforcement capability. They collect data and return it to Congress and the president. Therefore, their information only has to be analyzed in percentage of sureties on outcomes. To me, that is the difference between judicial standards in American courts as well, because nothing in intelligence is beyond a reasonable doubt. Those issues change like a CNN stock ticker.

Itโ€™s too quiet in here. I put on the soundtrack to Argo The theme in the bass is about to drop, and thatโ€™s the best feeling I get with my headphones. The bass of the stringsโ€ฆ.. omgโ€ฆ. Fabulous. Although my favorite track is โ€œHotel Messages.โ€ Hard to describe, just listen to it. Iโ€™ve been trying to learn the whispered rhythm for years.

Second favorite is The Mission, but Hotel Messages is all you get because I want you to actually watch the movie. ๐Ÿ˜›

I know the score intimately because I had to memorize it to get it out of the way while Iโ€™m writing. I donโ€™t want to think about walking bass, suspended chords, etc. I had to do all that stuff independently, otherwise youโ€™d just get an entry full of bad music theory with my third grade education on the subject. No open fourths. Rules are made to be broken. Thatโ€™s kind of my limit.

I love movies about intelligence set in the Middle East, because that kind of music fills me up. The melodies are haunting because theyโ€™re not using a Western sense of chord structure. Itโ€™s also different hearing Middle Eastern music with a full orchestral arrangement vs. a couple of people.

Argo was all written by a composer named Alexandre Desplait, and heโ€™s done a lot of movie scoresโ€ฆ. But all middle eastern spy movies have that vibe. The music in Syriana, Beirut, Three Kings, etc. is just so complex. Speaking of which, thereโ€™s a great documentary on Amazon Prime called โ€œThe Sounds of Bondโ€ or something like that, and itโ€™s incredible. I like Bond music, too, but it is secondary to my love of strings moving to the notes you donโ€™t expect.

The one thing you get with American music thatโ€™s not so prevalent in the East is a good Picardy Third. Itโ€™s the term for when a piece is written entirely in a minor key, but switches to major for the final chord of a line or piece. โ€œCoventry Carolโ€ is a great example of this.

Comparing Hotel Messages to Coventry Carol and the difference between how scales are used is apparent.

So, just another reason to love intelligence. The soundtrack to their lives is better than everyone elseโ€™s.

Notable.

Am I Being Punkโ€™d?

When is the last time you took a risk? How did it work out?

I take risks all day long. Up until now, Iโ€™ve been in relationships with women. Iโ€™m genderqueer on the outside, genderfluid on the inside. Stepping out my front door is an act of courage, and not cowing to the demands of what society puts on women is another. I do not owe it to the world to put on makeup.

It might not make me look like a drag queen, but I certainly feel like it sometimes. Iโ€™m just not used to it anymore. It doesnโ€™t feel natural like it used to. It feels like paint. So, Iโ€™ll still wear some (occasionally), but only mascara, eyeliner, and a bit of lip gloss. Jeremy Renner was a makeup artist before he was on camera, and he said something that made sense to me. All you need is to frame your face.

I have cut foundation out entirely, because thatโ€™s where skin problems start. I had horrible systemic acne as a teen, and fixed it with Accutane. Since then, Iโ€™ve just taken care of my skin. I donโ€™t really have to do much- soap and water is just fine, as long as itโ€™s not the cheapest soap you can find. Right now, Iโ€™m using African black soap, which clears up acne naturallyโ€ฆ. And yet, Dove works fine, too. All Iโ€™m saying is that I chose to clear up the problem with pills rather than a multitude of creams that probably wouldnโ€™t have worked, anyway.

After a time, it became impossible to control my acne with just topical applications, and it was a risk taking Accutane at all. There were horrible side effects- bone pain in my back and legs, dry skin (which wasnโ€™t that bad until it was my lips), and my emotions were all over the place. I wasnโ€™t on any psych meds at the time, but it wasnโ€™t unrelated, either. One of the primary warnings is suicidal ideationโ€ฆ.. probably because it makes you feel so bad that if youโ€™ve been on it, you know that some days death would have been a welcome relief rather than trying to stand up fifteen minutes in a row.

In the end, it was worth it and I would do it again. But while youโ€™re going through it, thereโ€™s really no end in sight. It takes six months, at least, and if itโ€™s bad enough, you have to do it twice. Youโ€™re basically trying to kill all the oil glands in your face. It works, but it is a bitch and a half.

It was most embarrassing having to say to people so often, โ€œno, I am not pregnant. I am not planning on becoming pregnant.โ€ No one was being mean to me, the effects on the baby would have been that severe. But of course, it tapped into my worthless feelings because I knew Iโ€™d never have a baby. Thatโ€™s crazy talk. Keep in mind, I was like 19. I finally just started saying I was a lesbian, and it stopped coldโ€ฆ. And then lesbians just HAD to have kids and make it normalโ€ฆ.. God, you guys. ๐Ÿ˜›

I was completely obsessed with myself, but not in terms of vanity. I hurt all over, from constant headaches to backaches to period cramps being ten times as bad. That kind of constant pain wears on you, and I was waiting tables at the time. Just pain on top of pain.

When I think of that time in my life, the pain resurfaces, but itโ€™s filtered through the fact that I only had to endure it for a short whileโ€ฆ. Maybe a year. But I know chemo patients who have had it less rough than that.

Now, I have really good skin, but other problems with my health that need addressingโ€ฆ. And that is a risk, too, just because I donโ€™t like going to the doctor. I think I know everything. But as Iโ€™ve said before, being the best doctor youโ€™ve got isnโ€™t a ringing endorsement.

And the truth is that I hate going to the doctor because no one knows me in Maryland. Outside my little Texas bubble, I donโ€™t have any connection to a medical family and doctors get pedantic with me right awayโ€ฆ. Even when I say things like โ€œI have Aleve at home and itโ€™s not working. Could I try Celebrex?โ€ Then the doctor will say something like how I donโ€™t need anything that strong and Iโ€™ll say โ€œI donโ€™t need a stronger dose of anything. I need both the Cox-1 and Cox-2 inhibitorsโ€ and all of the sudden a light dawns AND I CAN SEE IT HAPPENING. โ€œOh, she wasnโ€™t kidding when she said she came from a medical family. Maybe she does know something.โ€

I am not here to give medical advice to anyone. I know my own bodyโ€ฆ and I am perfectly fine with OTC pain meds 90% of the time. If I was asking for Tylenol #3 or Vicoprofen, I could understand a doctorโ€™s hesitation. No one is trying to scam you for narcotics, dude. I have enough issues. I donโ€™t want addiction to be one of them.

Plus, Iโ€™m an introvert, and I donโ€™t like dealing with people. It is a necessary evil. So, if I am not in any danger and I already know whatโ€™s going on, I can treat myself within limits. I donโ€™t need to go to the doctor for bad allergies or a cold. I donโ€™t need to go to the ER because dollars to donuts my pain wonโ€™t be taken seriously and Iโ€™ll be given a prescription for 600mg ibuprofen when I CAN COUNT, thanks (regular is 200mg). The one thing I wonโ€™t do is argue, because I donโ€™t want to be accused of drug seeking behavior. That means even when youโ€™re *really* bad off, no one will pay attention to you. Itโ€™s The Boy Who Cried Wolfโ€ฆ. Even when itโ€™s not.

Itโ€™s a risk to see a doctor because youโ€™re working off a thousand assumptions that have nothing to do with you. The doctor is running heuristics on my pain as easily as I do with emotional situations. However, I have never had a doctor be compassionate enough to see that I needed more than over the counter medications and Iโ€™m not dumb enough to insist thatโ€™s what they should do. I grit my teeth a lot.

In fact, the one doctor who did think I was in that much pain didnโ€™t go to medical school in the United States, and therefore, could hold my hand and do little else. I had a housemate from Nigeria, Franklin, and one night I was cooking for us. I managed to slice into my finger while cutting a raw sweet potato, and the knife came down on my finger with forceโ€ฆ. To the point I was scared to cook for a while. Franklin said later that he should have taken me to the ER because I needed stitches. I told him he was right, but that I had enough experience in a professional kitchen that it wasnโ€™t an emergency. It was Tuesday.

It took forever for the finger to heal, but luckily, no nerve damage. The only nerve damage is from before I was a cook. I was 16 and still living in the parsonage when I sliced my thumb while cutting a lime for my Diet Coke (yes, I was 100% That Bitch). Iโ€™m 45, and thereโ€™s still a dead spot on the palm side.

Learning to cook professionally was a risk because I knew I wouldnโ€™t be spectacular at it, Iโ€™d just have a ton of fun. And I did. Even when I was injured, it was fineโ€ฆ. Most of the time. I wonโ€™t lie and say I was always Mamaโ€™s brave little soldier, but in that kind of pressure cooker, losing your shit has to be in very small increments. Thereโ€™s no time for anything else.

The job that came with the best perks was working in a restaurant at the Portland airport, because I had a badge that let me walk directly onto the tarmac. It was refreshing to go and take a break and watch the planes, which you can do in an airport restaurant because you can look at the loads for the day and tell when the pops are going to be.

Itโ€™s also a big risk to take a kitchen job, because thereโ€™s always a definite start time. Good luck finding the end.

I had a love-hate relationship being the last one out, because the last one out is the first to get blamed in the morning. Part of it was petty day crew/night crew bullshit. Part of it is that Iโ€™m physically weak and forget a lot. So whose fault it actually was in each instance isnโ€™t important. Whatโ€™s important is that it was relentless. I couldnโ€™t win either way. So, whether you believe I am the best cook or the worst, it still sucked to walk in to a laundry list of my failuresโ€ฆ. Particularly when another cook told management that I was the one who left something out, and he did. I took the fall for his raw chicken sins.

Being a writer is a risk. People think I flippantly post things, and I sweat blood. I had to get into the habit of hitting post as soon as I was done with an entry, because to wait was to let imposter syndrome set in. Nothing would ever be good enoughโ€ฆ. And it still isnโ€™t, but you people are too kind.

I would like to take a risk and go sit with the bees, but I canโ€™t today. They donโ€™t like rain, and today it is big, fat drops. Iโ€™m not sure I would love it out there, either. But Magda has grown lavender in the side yard or at least a year, and the bees love it more than life itself. I just wanted to clear it up that we do not have a hive. I have not had an audience with my queen. I just know all her loyal subjects, who listen to me as if they have nothing else to do because theyโ€™re better at multitasking than I am.

If I wear my blue hoodie, I am more attractive to them. I canโ€™t decide whether I like that or not. Theyโ€™re never aggressive, not ever. I just have to decide how comfortable I am with bees on meโ€ฆ because if I make a bad move and it is misinterpreted, there is no โ€œUndoโ€ feature.

Iโ€™m just glad that we have a safe space for bees in our yard, because I feel emotionally connected to them in more ways than one. Claire talks to her bees in โ€œOutlander,โ€ which makes me feel like less of a crazy person for doing the same. And Iโ€™m a cook. The plight of the bees is mine as well. Incidentally, my favorite version of โ€œFlight of the Bumblebeeโ€ is twofold. The first was hearing Wynton Marsalis on a recording. The second was hearing Clark Terry do it live in a master class.

Speaking of which, I love meeting famous people. Itโ€™s always a risk, but it pays off. I come away with an interesting story, some of them interesting enough where the famous person will remember me, some not so much.

I could tell that I tickled the hell out of Wynton Marsalis when I told him Iโ€™d been waiting my whole life to meet himโ€ฆ. Just stifling his laughter at how long that must have been in all of my 15 years.

Itโ€™s kind of fun being able to say that I met so many people at HSPVA before they were famous, because the part of them thatโ€™s not famous is what I like best.

One of my favorite random conversations happened at the pub where I worked before the pandemic. I sat down at the bar for an ice water and a shift drink, and asked the guy next to me what he did. He said, โ€œIโ€™m a sound engineer for NPR.โ€ He said, โ€œwhat do you do?โ€ I said, โ€œI sling hash for a living.โ€ The fucking bartender said, โ€œI thought you worked here. You didnโ€™t tell me you were a drug dealer.โ€ The NPR sound engineer laughed until he cried.

I couldnโ€™t even breathe I was laughing so hard, because this bartender was young enough to be my son. โ€œSlinging hashโ€ had a different meaning in his world.

Moving to DC was a big risk, but it paid off because I get to have these conversations all the time. I am permanently stuck at the smart kidsโ€™ table, right where I need to be just to soak up informationโ€ฆ. And not filling my ears with hot air. So much more interesting to talk to people who make the news than watching it at night or listening on the radio.

Also, not going to lieโ€ฆ. Pretty great standing in front of a gaggle of groupies and talking to Robert Glasper when he says, โ€œSHIT! You from the cribโ€ฆโ€ Grabbed me and hugged me like Mr. Hattoxโ€™s history class was yesterday and not 30 years ago. We didnโ€™t take a selfie that time, but I think I got one on the next tour. By the time I got to talk to Robert after the first time I saw him, we were both exhausted and I didnโ€™t think either of us would look good, anyway.โ€ฆ nothing to put on the refrigerator, anyway. I prefer it. I didnโ€™t capture the look on Robertโ€™s face when he saw a high school friend. That look was just for me.

I think Iโ€™ve said this before, but I knew Jason Moran back in the day better than I knew Robert Glasper, but yet still a risk to go and talk to him because I wasnโ€™t sure if heโ€™d remember me or not. He absolutely did, and I felt silly for wondering. I told him that Iโ€™d written to one of his albums, Ten, for a year. He turned around to the whole band and said, โ€œhey guysโ€ฆ she wrote to Ten for a year.โ€ I was so honored, because it meant something to him that his music fueled me, and meant something to me that he thought it was important enough to tell the band.

One of the big risks I took in high school was attending Summer Jazz Workshop, where I got integrated into the Houston jazz scene. My one claim to fame is that I was the trumpet soloist when my band was on a local television show called โ€œBlack Voices.โ€ It was hilarious because the โ€œBlack Voicesโ€ logo appeared, and then my big white face with even bigger glasses.

Donโ€™t get me wrong. I wasnโ€™t a prodigy at trumpet or anything else. I just decided to take a risk, because getting to be in the band at all was the point. I remember Doc Morgan, my jazz director at HSPVA, saying that he was going to miss me getting to do the traditional โ€œsenior tune,โ€ where every graduating member of the band gets their own solo. I told him not to worry, that heโ€™d featured me so much as a ninth grader that I felt like I already had mineโ€ฆ and it was true. I remember one solo that went extraordinarily well, and he said, โ€œLeslie Lanaganโ€ฆ Ninth grade, ladies and gentlemenโ€ฆ NINTH GRADE.โ€

I peaked too soon, but it was worth it. I got the experience of a lifetime before being thrown to the wolves in marching band. That was its own special kind of riskโ€ฆ. But at least I only fell in rehearsal once. That is because I was marching backwards and either I ran into a bass drummer or he ran into meโ€ฆ. Unclear.

It was physical and alien, made torturous by the Texas heat. I do not regret the risk of staying in, of feeling embarrassed until I didnโ€™t, allowing myself to suck at something until I didnโ€™t. Being in the marching band was required to stay in the symphonic band, and came with a free trip to San Antonio, where we were presented The Sudler Flag, honoring the best of Texas music educationโ€ฆ. And since my mom was a music teacher, she was already at the (Texas Music Educators Association, or TMEA) convention and got to hear me.

The last huge risk (huge) was preaching at Bridgeport, and I didnโ€™t even do that until I was asked. No one really knew me, didnโ€™t know where Iโ€™d come from, and didnโ€™t expect anything. Sometimes, I was on fire (according to me) and sometimes I sucked (also according to me). But the thrill was becoming experienced at something Iโ€™d only watched from a distanceโ€ฆ. And as it turns out, Iโ€™m like every preacher in the world. The sermon you think sucks is what everyone remembers, and the sermon you thought was gold is straight trash.

So thatโ€™s how I view this web site, too. Itโ€™s a risk, but I know that the very worst entry I write, someone will absolutely adore. Something I like will languish, because people donโ€™t think the way I do, and thank God for that. Otherwise, I would be preaching to an echo chamber.

A risk all its own, and one that never pays off.

I Amโ€ฆ

Describe something you learned in high school.

Hereโ€™s the link to the audio. You might have to download it into your own media player or the Mega app. SoundCloud wants me to pay because I โ€œupload a lot,โ€ and I get it. I just didnโ€™t know the space limit was so incredibly low. Iโ€™m searching around for options, and most of them rely on using my desktop, of which I am not a fanโ€ฆ mostly because Iโ€™m not really using SoudCloud to increase the popularity of my blog. The audio is just a convenience.


High school is divided up for me in two segments. The first is that I spent my freshman and sophomore years at High School for Performing and Visual Arts as a trumpet player. The second is that my junior and senior years, I didnโ€™t. I went to a regular American high school. I was still in the music program, though. My junior year I was in varsity choir and varsity band at the same time, the first in the history of the school to do so. I learned how to be in a marching band. My symphonic band was better than the one at โ€˜PVA (no judgment, itโ€™s just true).

Then, my counselor suggested that I drop one of my music classes because if I took Microcomputer Applications, I could get what was called an โ€œAdvanced Diploma.โ€ The band was gearing up to go on all these trips my family couldnโ€™t afford, and it was an easy out to drop band because I knew I couldnโ€™t sell enough fertilizer to pay my own way. Yes. Really. They asked us to sell shit to people.

I dropped choir because I didnโ€™t like the new director coming in, because I knew other people that had her and it wasnโ€™t my bag. I was not a โ€œshow choirโ€ person. I do not think that if you can sing, you should automatically be capable of dance as well. I liked great repertory, and pop music wasnโ€™t it (for me). If that sounds persnickety for a teenager, remember that I was a classically trained singer from being in an adult church choir since I was 13.

I didnโ€™t care about Britney Spears. I loved Bach and it showed.

For the record, I care about Britney as a listener. Sheโ€™s great. I just wouldnโ€™t sing her stuff unless I was doing it as a joke, because I couldnโ€™t pull it off where people would take it seriously. Itโ€™s a totally different type of training.

I think Iโ€™ve said before that Beyoncรฉ left HSPVA because she didnโ€™t want to be classically trained, and that I continue to be devastated that it did not work out for her. But same vibe, weโ€™re just opposite. She didnโ€™t want to learn everything Iโ€™d been taught about being able to blend into a choir, breath control specific to that kind of music, etc. Itโ€™s a lot. By the same token, I didnโ€™t want to learn the proper breath control to sing whatever it is the Star Spangled Banner is now in professional football. Whitney Houston doing it in four was the high point. ::looks pointedly at other pop stars:: No one will ever be her, and I knew that Iโ€™d only be a cheap imitation. I donโ€™t want that for me, or anyone else. Do what you do and make it count.

Since my dad had left the church, I also got a job in hopes of getting my own spending money. I was 16, so no one thought anything of screwing me over to save themselves, like making me pay things back when I was short on the register when theyโ€™d been stealing from the drawer. Iโ€™m bad at math, so of course it was all my fault when the drawer was missing $50 at the end of the night. Of course it should come out of my paycheck. Itโ€™s what a teenager owes a national corporation, right?

I would never sue them over lost wages, but I would get a kick out of it if they sent me a product and swag box if someone is reading who thinks such a thing could happen at the company. I once proposed to Zyrtec on Twitter and told them they were paying. Then, they later kidded me about forgetting our anniversary and I said, โ€œhow do you think I feel? You didnโ€™t get me anything.โ€ The proposal rocked, thoughโ€ฆ.. that I had 99 problems but a itch ainโ€™t one.

I worked for SuperCuts, and in this instance I am not talking about the company. I am talking about the sleight of hand with my own team, not every employee who ever worked there. I mean, I was great at my job in retrospect. They had me, so youโ€™re definitely safe in giving them as much money as you want. I still look back on my time as magical because things that are commonplace today were introduced while I was an employee, most notably, American Crew (for which I am gratefulโ€ฆ white people pomade). I think the Paul Mitchell Tea Tree line came out then, too, a total game changer. It was also amazing learning the jargon of how to tell people I want my hair cut so that thereโ€™s less room for a mistake.

It doesnโ€™t always work, but it helps.

By the time I graduated from high school, I had set myself up for life in terms of my opinions on everything that is still true about me today. The only thing thatโ€™s changed is that I call myself out as I am, bisexual, instead of telling the world Iโ€™m a lesbian while not thinking that way, because that label wasnโ€™t something I gave myself. I just have to be louder about being bisexual in a heterosexual relationship than I would if I was actively partnered with a woman, because you can see it with every kiss.

The one thing I didnโ€™t see coming that I didnโ€™t know I needed was dating a bisexual man. That way, we still have all the same cultural references, though Iโ€™m older and have more insurance. He doesnโ€™t care whether I look high femme or butch because in one outing, weโ€™d look depressingly heterosexual and in another, itโ€™s a whole bear/twink mood without all the lights, drum & bass, and Ecstasy.

To stop joking, weโ€™ve both been bullied for being queer. That trauma for him is a different playing field, because mine is rooted in embarrassment. Iโ€™m either gross and wrong or a plaything given to men, because why wouldnโ€™t women being with women be nothing but a male fantasy? Why would women have agency in this society? Straight women donโ€™t even have it.

Men harass me by seeing me with my then-wife (Kat, in this example) and asking us to kiss in front of them, or come home with us, or any number of things that hurt way more than they would have if it was original. Those examples arenโ€™t all Kat, when it was 2000, or even Meag, when it was 1996. Itโ€™s all picking at the same scar every day of my life, because I heard about it before I experienced it. Being an empath made me experience that trauma before it was direct. I felt it on my skin when it happened to my friends.

For men, itโ€™s horrible that they want to be female, their tormentorsโ€™ perception and not realityโ€ฆ.. but seriouslyโ€ฆ. As if being female was the worst thing that could happen to a personโ€ฆโ€ฆ helloโ€ฆ. All connected. Except men donโ€™t stop with horrible comments with other men. It often leads to outright violence and death. I only say this because it happens to men more frequently, but violence against lesbians exists.

Itโ€™s a shared understanding, a shared library of images that create empathy. To me, it is especially important because the one thing I really hated about dating Matthew had nothing to do with him at all. It was gaining heterosexual privilege for the first time and rebelling against it hardcore. I remember one instance weโ€™d gone to meet some of his friends, and someone did that thing where they looked around before they told a gay joke, and I wasnโ€™t the picture of volatility you see here.

I said nothing, and just felt all of it. I know now that I should have ripped the dude a new one, but I didnโ€™t want to upset the apple cart when I was meeting my boyโ€™s friends the very first time. I was also like, 24, maybe 25. I was older than Matt, but still a child in my eyes now. I didnโ€™t know what to do, and I was scared.

So now I can look at that and say Iโ€™m in a better place because Zac has probably been there. Heโ€™s just as out and proud as me. On Wednesday, I noticed right off that his nails were painted teal and he was wearing flowy pants. Heโ€™s the head of the queer group at his intelligence agency. I donโ€™t know how he sees himself, but I see him as George Smiley if he had grown up like us. (Smiley is the protagonist in John Le Carreโ€™s most famous series about MI-6.) I showed up in a black t-shirt, jeans, and tie-dyed pattern Crocs. I later put on a navy hoodie and my CIA baseball cap- some of you will remember that was a gift from Zac because he has the badge that allows you into Langley, but not the capability to escort visitors. I wear it almost every day like Iโ€™m pitching the afternoon game. Now do you see how weโ€™ve inverted the binary? From the outside, Iโ€™m the butch and heโ€™s the femmeโ€ฆ. And no one would ever guess that we were into each other unless we werenโ€™t holding hands or being cute to the point of nausea (our MO most of the time).

Editorโ€™s Note: I learned that it was important on the train Thursday, when a young girl at the Franconia Springfield Metro said, โ€œI want to be CIA, too.โ€ I told her that I wasnโ€™t CIA, I just had cool friends, and to call me when she got there. ๐Ÿ˜›

โ€œGrown up like usโ€ is emotional shorthand for Zac and I having to deal with the perils of being queer from a very, very young age. Zac entered the military under โ€œDonโ€™t Ask, Donโ€™t Tell.โ€ At the same time, Iโ€™m not dating a gay man and heโ€™s not dating a lesbian just for kicks. Weโ€™re not playing at anything, just being the most authentic versions of ourselves.

I have always been that in some capacity, but I have graduated. You donโ€™t learn that you are brave and unique until someone tells you. In the moment, youโ€™re just doing what you have to do to survive.

In high school, I learned that I would HAVE TO be unique.

My freshman year, I told one person I was gay and by the end of the day, everyone knew. In retrospect, it was the best decision I ever made, because any bullying that came my way was tiresome. They couldnโ€™t blackmail me anymore, and they couldnโ€™t get away with anything more original because they werenโ€™t that clever.

Because I was moving out of the gay neighborhood in Houston to a suburb where everyone knew each other, I went back in the closetโ€ฆ. To save my fatherโ€™s job according to my mother. My father didnโ€™t care. He knew me. Weโ€™d met. But guess which message I heard?

Being in the closet for a school year was amazing and gave me the worst panic attack of my life. Both of those things were true. I would not have wanted to miss the chance of being in marching band, would not have traded my conductors (Mr. Matysiak and Mrs. Bueller [really]) for anything in the world. I would never have wanted to miss learning that I was not only a singer, I was damn good at it. I stood on the shoulders of giants, and my mother accompanied me through it all, literally.

She played the piano for my solos no matter what she was doing, and in seventh and eighth grade, she played for all my friends, too. This was not a small feat, as most piano accompaniments for solos are orchestra reductions. So, my mom hurt me a lot, and she also came through in equal measure. Not only was the piano our lighthouse when we were ships passing in the night, she left it to me in her will. She didnโ€™t give me a setting. She gave me the main character.

In terms of hurting me, all of the panic Iโ€™d been feeling that year came to a head when my senior best friend asked me to come with him to his prom. He was literally on the way to pick me up, my hair and makeup done to perfection, when I melted down physically. It caused a monster reaction, a rash, shortness of breath, everything- so the doc came over and gave me a shot of Depomedrol and off we went.

That was the first time that I learned everything can be fixed before school, youโ€™re going. It only backfired once. I had the flu, and Tamiflu was YEARS ahead in the making. If it had, I would have been going to school without spreading it. To be perfectly fair, Iโ€™d woken up feeling a little miserable and bloomed at school. It wasnโ€™t a big deal right up until it was.

Actually, that leads to a really funny story. One of our parishioners while I was at HSPVA was a Republican judge, so I went to their convention in like, โ€˜92, before they were complete nut jobs. While I was there, I bought a button down that was made of real American flag material, and the colors were very dark. It looked sharpโ€ฆ. Or so I thought. I was really sick on my birthday, and nothing would have stopped me from going to school that day in my new threads. I get there and first period was bandโ€ฆ. And if Jack Lucas had been there, he would have been SO PROUD OF HIS STUDENTS.

Editorโ€™s Note: I also went to St. Martinโ€™s Episcopal as a teen, where I was unimpressed with President George H.W. Bushโ€ฆ.. and thrilled to meet a former Director of CIA (of course). Therefore, it always thrills me that Jonna Mendez managed to fool him, because of course now I know we have mutual friendsโ€ฆ. And I am laughing so hard that I canโ€™t even breathe right now.

Those motherfuckers broke out in four part harmony, because they were musicians. They could sing their parts blind. Then, they get to โ€œfree,โ€ and Dan Kovaly hits the fucking *cymbals.* I was just as self-deprecating then as I am now, so I thought it was absolutely hilarious while still mortifying. Later, my mom and dad brought me my favorite food, cherry chicken from Ruggles. We got to eat lunch together in the commons, and it was sad that there wasnโ€™t a Happening that day.

Happenings at HSPVA are code for what would now be called a flash mob, probably. You never knew when they were coming, and it was always unique no matter which art area was on showcase. Itโ€™s one of the core memories that made me who I am.

Back in high school.

I Havenโ€™t

How have you adapted to the changes brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic?

I never needed to do anything for the pandemic. Iโ€™m an introvert homebody by nature. I also didnโ€™t like wearing masks, so staying home was more comfortable, anyway. Everyone in my family has had it but me, and I still donโ€™t have the last booster because it was too much energy to schedule when my risk factor was so damn low. I have the first three, though, and they did come in handy when my friend Robert Glasper (sat behind me in history in high school) came to DC and played โ€œThe Reachโ€ (an addition to the Kennedy Center that focuses on hip-hop). Itโ€™s so fabulous. If I were to plan the perfect date, Iโ€™d want to go see Robert. Romantic, platonic, whatever. Itโ€™s a great place to sit outside and have a drink before or after the show, because the garden patio is just as much fun as looking at the art indoors. My last trip was incredible because it was one of my favorite artists on my actual birthday.

I also really, really like seeing Robert alone so that no one talks to me and I can just take pictures of him and the band. Last time he was on tour with Yasiin Bey. It was funny, I told Robert to tell him he was my favorite alien (he played Ford Prefect in Hitchhikerโ€™s Guide to the Galaxy), then walked away and thought, โ€œIโ€™m a frigginโ€™ Doctor Who fan. Iโ€™m an idiot.โ€ The only person that he plays with that Iโ€™m desperate to see is Jason Moran, because I was actually closer to Jason than Robert. I get to see Jason more because he actually works here (still lives in NYC, but is also jazz director at the KenCen). Iโ€™ve just never seen both my guys outside of the High School for Performing and Visual Arts bubble.

I would even get the last booster for that one.

Seeing Robert was definitely the highlight interruption in my otherwise quiet existence, because Iโ€™d rather play with my characters or talk to all yโ€™all than do much else. If you knew the main characters I was working with, youโ€™d spend time with them, too, and there are only five people on earth who know the answer to that question. If any one of them talks, it will do an enormous amount of damage. This is it. This is my magnum opus, and I canโ€™t think of anyone who would figure it out faster than my chef of an ex-wife. Iโ€™ve left breadcrumbs all through this frigginโ€™ web site in hopes that she gets the hint. She just looms so large in my memory that if I succeed here, Iโ€™ll be able to trace it all the way back to โ€œhi, Iโ€™m Dana.โ€

God, donโ€™t you wish you knew which breadcrumbs were only for her? I bet you do. Maybe in 20 years, because I swear to Christ if the idea is executed properly, itโ€™s worth millions. I can take that check to the bank and cash it, because three of the five are subject matter experts. Dana could guess all three with only three guesses given if she picks up what Iโ€™m putting down.

Iโ€™ve already put it in writing to The Five that if I get rich, so do they. So does Dana. So does pretty much everyone I ever knew because thereโ€™s no such thing as a self-made millionaire, even if it was just sacrificing giving gifts to your friends even when you really, really want to because theyโ€™ve been so kind to you.

For instance, one of the huge gifts that Zac has given me is his time. Weโ€™ve been dating casually for months (I only see him every few weeks and thatโ€™s fine with me because again, characters.), and his gift is not only his time, but his house as well. If I need a different office once in a while because Iโ€™m going stir crazy, heโ€™ll leave for his office and โ€œleave me in mine.โ€ Iโ€™m not sure he sees it as a gift, but itโ€™s more precious than gold. I think the one true thing Iโ€™ve said about this novel over and over is โ€œitโ€™s got spies in it.โ€

Zac is an SME because he works in a smaller agency than CIA, but collects raw data from all the intelligence bureaus we have. Heโ€™s not a spy, but spy adjacent (I thinkโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ.. you never frigginโ€™ know in this town). That way, he can at least teach me unclassified jargon, because if he doesnโ€™t know it, he can at least point me in the right direction. Neither one of my characters *start* as intelligence officers or assets/agents. Iโ€™m borrowing structure from Steve Martinโ€™s Picasso at the Lapin Agile, an alternate history in which Picasso and Einstein meet at the Lapin Agile, a cafe in Paris. The book is their conversation.

It opens up all kinds of possibilities for me as a writer, because my story actually does start in Paris. As Iโ€™ve been telling Daniel, Iโ€™ll go with you everywhere, itโ€™s just that the only places I have to live for a while are Paris and Ho Chi Minh City. The majority of the story takes place in Viet Nam, so I want to go there first on a 90 day visa. Iโ€™ve found a range of apartments, and there are huge ones in the middle of the city for $4-600/mo. I could get by on a studio for $200, but itโ€™s better for me to have a separate office. If Iโ€™m going to have a work in progress thatโ€™s worth this much, I want a frigginโ€™ door that locks when people come over. If you think Iโ€™m being paranoid, ideas are my currency. Iโ€™m the product. If this isnโ€™t the right idea for me, itโ€™s the right idea for someone, and Joe Hack is not going to decide to take a stab at it.

Iโ€™d sell it to โ€œThe Danielsโ€ rather than keep it on my home computer if it was unsecured (speaking of which, theyโ€™re one of the few directors Iโ€™d even attempt to trust). Yes, I know that Daniel and Daniel are separate people, but if I can live with being โ€œthe girlsโ€ for almost a decade, they can roll with it or donโ€™t).

Now do you see why the pandemic didnโ€™t affect me at all? Iโ€™ve just rambled on for like 15 minutes and not even looked up.

And for my Ted Lasso fans, I didnโ€™t even know I wanted Trent Crimm, Independent to be a Diamond Dog until he wasnโ€™t. And yes, Iโ€™m just as much of a train wreck as Ted, and Iโ€™m proud of him because heโ€™s doing the work.

We kept each other company during the pandemic, Ted doing work at his house and me doing work in mine.

Music and Silence

Hereโ€™s a SoundCloud link so you can listen rather than read.

One of my favorite pieces of music is โ€œ4โ€™33โ€ by John Cage. People think that it is four minutes and 33 seconds of silence, and thatโ€™s minimizing its power. It probably doesnโ€™t make sense on a recording, but live, itโ€™s incredible. The piece is not written so that the silence is the point. No. The music is the environment of the room in which itโ€™s being performed. Every time itโ€™s programmed, it looks a little different.

It also puts classical music on its head. Other pieces require you to be quiet. You still shouldnโ€™t talk, but the music is in movement- dropped pens, unwrapping a cough drop, patting a toddler on the back. Iโ€™m generally cold, so my contribution is generally rubbing my hands like itโ€™s the start of Totoโ€™s โ€œAfrica.โ€ Admittedly, it is โ€œcheating,โ€ because I am the rhythm section of something thatโ€™s supposed to be completely random. I feel like the ringer in the crowd. Again, silence is not the point. I have had people tell me to stop. The problem is that I am not a ringer on purpose. I really am that cold. More than once have I been called โ€œLeslie No-Blood.โ€

Cold, though, is relative.

I will take being physically cold a lot better than someone being emotionally cold to me. For instance, caring about your reaction to my feelings more than you care that what youโ€™re doing is hurting me. At that point, I donโ€™t care what anyone thinks. It isnโ€™t right for me to keep saying Iโ€™ll go along with thinking that your feelings are more important than mine. Then, itโ€™s not a relationship. Healthy ones mean that sometimes my problem is more important than yours, and sometimes your problem is more important than mineโ€ฆ but no matter, weโ€™ll attack either and itโ€™s easier when both minds are on it.

However, if one person puts the other in the position of โ€œyour feelings donโ€™t matter,โ€ the relationship doesnโ€™t deserve to survive. Until now, I have been the person who already thinks her feelings donโ€™t matter. I will never again let it be reinforced by another. I have let people (particularly women) emotionally vampire me for years. They use me as their dumping ground because Iโ€™m willing to listen. I seemingly have a jackass magnet on my forehead, because nearly everyone Iโ€™ve ever met has wanted to tell me their life story whether I was interested or not.

One of my friends told me that I should be CIA because I was good at gleaning information. Iโ€™m really not. Iโ€™m just empathetic to the point of losing myself and people naturally let it spill because they feel safe. I donโ€™t create an environment to be The Little Gray Man. Iโ€™m just capable of saying โ€œthere, there.โ€ I have a feeling that if I *was* CIA, it would be under Napoleonโ€™s instructions: โ€œnever interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.โ€ Why go out of my way to get information out of people when theyโ€™ll just give it to me?

20-30% of the time, itโ€™s great. The rest of the time, people are quite invasive of my space and have no problem stealing my emotional energy without thinking I might want it back. People allow me to refill when I can talk to them in the same way. Itโ€™s just that most of the people who have talked to me (generally on the bus or train when Iโ€™m in public, anyway) have no idea that itโ€™s been 20 minutes and I havenโ€™t said a word. Not only that, they havenโ€™t even taken a breath long enough to give me an opening. Itโ€™s โ€œhello,โ€ big emotional dump, walk away. I allowed it because thatโ€™s what Iโ€™ve always been taught. Being good was not needing anything. Taking up so little space was a bad thing.

Now, I feel like there have been some instances of overcorrection, but I have learned something important. Extremely important. The only people that will test you on needing anything are the people who have benefitted from your silence. If they were getting something out of you being a friend, yet never speaking up, theyโ€™ll be so mad. Let them be mad. Theyโ€™ll either get over it or they wonโ€™t, and thatโ€™s not up to you.

Brene Brown says that vulnerability is showing up to a conversation without being able to control the outcome. I havenโ€™t allowed many of those people in my life because I didnโ€™t think I deserved them. It was natural for my feelings not to matter, so why wouldnโ€™t I let people steamroll over me as if I donโ€™t exist?

I โ€œall of the suddenโ€ seem very selfish for needing anything at all. Itโ€™s not that. Itโ€™s that when you ignore me, Iโ€™ll get louder because your ears are clogged. If you donโ€™t listen even then, itโ€™s time to pack up. I can only do what I can do. The one thing I have never been able to do before now is stop the bleeding. I would just let other people use up every emotional resource I needed to use for myself because obviously, they were more deserving of it.

I am not saying that I am always blameless for everything. Itโ€™s impossible. At times, Iโ€™m excellent at being the worldโ€™s biggest asshole with a God complex. My only point here is that I come by it honestly. If I tell you in plain voice how Iโ€™m feeling and itโ€™s ignored, if you donโ€™t mean anything to me, Iโ€™ll walk away. If you do, I will repeat what I said until you acknowledge. At this point, no matter how much I care about you, Iโ€™m out. If I am putting myself out there as someone who is taking care of you, I will go to extraordinary lengths to make sure we have equal airtime. If your idea of equal airtime is that we both spend the majority of the time thinking about you, I will call it early.

Before, I would just stuff everything down. I would spend years being unhappy because thatโ€™s what I thought I deserved. With the set of relationships Iโ€™ve been talking about in the last few entries, they are all people to whom I have spilled my guts. It wasnโ€™t that I didnโ€™t have a place to go with my feelings. The entire problem with all of them is that when I expressed the fact that there was a problem in our relationship, they wanted to minimize, move past it, or institute a monster avoidance policy.

Itโ€™s just not worth it to go into the minutiae of who did what to whom, but I will say that all of them benefitted from me listening to their problems, but when I spilled mine, there couldnโ€™t be a discussion. All the time they spent talking about their problems was good and wanting them to talk about our problems was bad.

All of the music would get sucked out of the room, leaving me in absolute quiet. I could think about our problems on my own. Laying them out was also problematic. Most people are intimidated by the depths to which I feel emotion. Most people donโ€™t know how they feel as easily as I do, and are not capable of putting it into words off the cuff. I have compassion for that, because INFJ personalities are only 9-15% of the worldโ€™s population. Very few people deal in emotions the way I doโ€ฆ. Meaning I am not arrogant enough to think that I am more emotionally intelligent than others. I can bring the receipts, but you wouldnโ€™t know it unless youโ€™re asking for them. People do think Iโ€™m arrogant, though, just for being me. I know how I feel and express it well. I am also female, which lends itself to my arrogant reputation whether it is true or not.

โ€ฆ.because men are visionaries whether they have the letters to prove it or not. I just have resting bitch face. Best not interrupt a man who canโ€™t tell shit from Shinola. He needs all the brainpower he can get.

Speaking of my arrogant reputation, it is non-existent to everyone except the people Iโ€™ve let have power over me and now want to be an equalโ€ฆ. Especially those who donโ€™t feel thereโ€™s a balance of power issue at all. Why would there be? If you already have it all, why would you give it up? Why would you complain when thereโ€™s not a problem for you. Both of us love you to pieces.

Women taking back their power always looks like arrogance, even to other women, because theyโ€™ve all been programmed to think we shouldnโ€™t need anything. Someone breaking out of that mold is not to be trusted. I think itโ€™s a large part of the problem in female leadership. Men arenโ€™t used to women demanding things, especially when their performance is poor. Theyโ€™re not bad at their jobs, you are a threat. Itโ€™s amazing how often HR thinks the same way.

I think the reason women in lesbian relationships are less willing to play is that they donโ€™t have to deal with menโ€™s shit at home. They are all at once the problem and woefully unprepared to deal with it on two levels. The first is that they donโ€™t understand why things are the way they are. The second is that they are powerless to do anything about it.

Even if I was the CEO, some of my male employees would think I was worthless at it because I got it through some type of nepotism, whether from my husband or the collection of men I had to sleep with to get the job. I like the second option better, because Iโ€™ve had so many relationships with women that the idea of โ€œsleeping my way to the topโ€ is just too ridiculous not to laugh. They donโ€™t put enough women loving women in power for that to be an achievable goal whether I was interested or not (Iโ€™m not).

Speaking of women loving women, someone called me out on my straight girl crush when I said, โ€œdonโ€™t think I donโ€™t know what I lostโ€ by saying, โ€œsheโ€™s straight. You were never in the game.โ€ Iโ€™m glad they called me out, because thatโ€™s not what I meant. I didnโ€™t mean that I lost a romantic relationship, because it was clear from the start that was never going to happen. I meant the complete idiocy it was to lay it out there in the first place, because then I was an untrusted entity and all the work weโ€™d done previously was down the drain. You would have to know how important friendship is to me to know how seriously I mean that. My platonic relationships arenโ€™t less important than my romantic ones. I feel deeply no matter what, which is why I only have two or three friends. I donโ€™t have the emotional capacity to lay out that kind of energy for everyone, so I donโ€™t.

What happens is, in effect, putting on a recording of 4โ€™33 and grabbing onto the music in the room. Itโ€™s always there, humming, pulsating, rhythm on fireโ€ฆ. But fire is quiet when couched between music and silence. I have to find it, though. Else Iโ€™ll just rub my hands in the cold.

Texas Questionnaire

Notes on Being a Texan According to Me

BBQ brisket or ribs:

Neither. Turkey and sausage with white bread, pickles, raw onion, and an iced tea on the side because I like the spicy barbecue sauce best. Now that I live in another part of the south, I hate to say it, but I like this barbecue better. Pork and vinegar are such good friends.

Big Red or Dr. Pepper:

Neither. Diet Wild Red from HEB. Why is Big Red even on this? Wild Red is the GOAT. I am positive that HEB would like to hear this. Please tell them the next time you shop.

Tacos or Tamales:

Combination plate. Let’s not get stupid.

I like all kinds of tamales, but the green chile chicken at Pappasitos is my go-to. I also have said for years that “I like crunchy tacos because chips are a part of the meal.” You only lose points with me if the chicken is too clean. I want it to look like it’s been in the oven for hours and just prepped (pulled)…. And if you’re wondering what I mean by “clean,” it’s stuffing canned chicken with no seasoning into anything that’s supposed to be Mexican food.

Texans or Cowboys:

I don’t watch American football much. I am likely to be seen at a Dynamo or a Dash game. Watching sports on TV is kind of boring to me, but I do like going on YouTube to see 30 second clips of really elite golf shots, points on goal, etc. I used to have two friends that were obsessed with golf, and thanks to them, I got a free beer. Jordan Spieth was the answer to a question at pub trivia, and I never would have pulled out that answer unless I’d heard someone else talking about it.

UT or A&M:

Texas, because nobody is trying to upset Matt McConaughey here.

Sixth Street or Riverwalk:

I have never been to Sixth Street, so I can’t really say. What I can say is that my favorite restaurant on the Riverwalk is “Paloma del Rio.” Keep in mind it’s been a long time, so it might not be there. If it is, give it a shot and tell me if it’s still good. ๐Ÿ˜›

Houston or Dallas:

I don’t know Dallas well enough to really have an opinion here. I just hate Dallas because I’m from Houston and that’s what we do.

Ever drove across TX:

East to West a few times, but not South to North.

Been to the Alamo:

Yes. It’s basically the only field trip that anyone likes. The IMAX movie is also amazing, and it’s near the mission.

Crossed the border:

Several times. I went with a group from my church and attempted to preach in Spanish. Hilarity ensued.

Floated the Frio:

I don’t know. Is it near San Marcos? I’ve done most of them.

Been to the State Fair:

Yes. It’s one of my favorite childhood memories. One year we also saw “Cats,” which is much better if you’re seven.

Killed a snake:

No, but my dad has. We came home to a huge snake in our garage when I was a kid. We didn’t stop to check if it was venomous or not. My experience with Texas wildlife is limited to trash pandas (raccoons).

Saw a rodeo:

So many, yes. The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo is one of the most famous in the world. I know I’ve been to a couple of cool concerts as well, but I’ve slept since then and can’t remember the acts.

Two stepped at a dance hall:

Very, very poorly.

Rode a mechanical bull:

Absolutely not. Have fun tho.

Own boots and cowboy hat:

I have owned boots, but I just don’t like those kinds of hats on my own head. It’s not that they don’t look great on other people.

Drove a tractor:

I would, but no one has ever asked me.

Shot something:

Yes, but I wasn’t living in Texas at the time. I went to an outdoor range in Estacada, Oregon and proceded to waste a trashed Dell computer. As an “IT Guy” it was cathartic in a way I didn’t know I needed.

Willie or George

Neither. Chicks for life…. although I would like to meet Willie.

Stories That Are Factually Accurate

Here’s my “blog entry” for today. I am sick, so this is what you get. I know, I know. You’re terribly grateful….. ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜›

Listen to Stories That are Literally True and Actually Happened by Leslie D. Lanagan

I talk about a lot of stuff, mostly meeting my favorite authors- Anne Lamott, David Sedaris, and Jonna Mendez. I have told all of these stories before, but not in my own voice.

I finally broke open to let some light in, and it feels good. Like, dragonfly in the sun, you know what I mean.

You get it.

You’ll see why I’m telling you this joke. Altos and basses live on cigars and vodka. Sopranos and tenors live on shoes and compliments.

Jesus Comes Up a Lot

Link to Audio Version

It’s always great when a memory from your childhood comes up and makes you laugh. This is from a Facebook status earlier today:

I’m staying in a hotel this weekend because we’re having our wooden floors refinished at the house. Two things about that. Apparently, there is a hockey tournament for littles going on, because it is crazygonuts loud when they’re awake. Luckily, I have three pairs of headphones that all go up to DEFCON OMFG. #SamSmith #Unholy Aaaaand, I forgot my good razor. I managed to get smooth legs from a twin blade without making it look like I have poison ivy. Ryan Darlington would be so proud. Ask him about it. I’m certain he remembers the story, it’s our “meetcute.” What I remember most of all is that my dad turned it into a sermon illustration. ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜› ๐Ÿ˜› I don’t remember what scripture it was “enlightening,” because I don’t remember a story in the Bible where Jesus shaved his legs.

Here’s the story since most of you can’t actually ask Ryan. I know that some of you can, but this is for the rest of you.

Editor’s Note: Shout out to Ireland, who beat the United States in my stats yesterday. It means a lot to me because I’m not Irish, but that’s where my family originally began. Also another shout out to the Irish. I say editor’s notes because of Diane (Jennings), who divides herself into her YouTube personality and who she calls “Editor Diane,” and those clips are even funnier.

When I was in 7th grade, I was a trumpet player. I was not a prodigy, but I was good for my age because my dad is a trumpet player and he was able to help me until I got a private teacher. So, in the summer between seventh and eighth grade, I went to band camp at UT Austin. All of the other girls were shaving their legs, and I had never done it before. I didn’t even have a razor. So another girl lent me one, and it was already dull. I had gashes under both knees.

This beautiful boy with curly blonde hair walked up to me and said, “Hi. I’m Ryan Darlington. You look like you could use a Band-Aid.” I laughed and he stole my heart. We were an unusual couple for kids- together for over a year. His parents are just as important to me as my own, even after thirty years.

I don’t want to write about the funny part without writing about the serious part, too. Another instance in which I chose someone to love that didn’t deserve it over him, when he was The One. I wore his promise ring for years, long after we broke up, because I liked the thought that he was with me even when he wasn’t in the room.

I was stupid enough to tell him I was gay, but not out of malice. Out of idiocy. If I had known then what I know now, I would have done things so much differently. I would have explained to him that I’m bisexual, but that doesn’t mean I need two partners. That means I need you to understand that my identity as a person is different than yours, and we’re going to have to hash it out over what’s acceptable behavior and what’s not, because my words tend to get me in troubleโ€ฆ.. “Sometimes you are very funny. Sometimes you are very not.” Tis true. I was a line cook for a long time, and sometimes it doesn’t occur to me that other people have never worked in a kitchen and have no context as to why I’m so outlandish and often don’t think of the consequences of what I say. It generally clicks in my brain that I am in kitchen mode when someone says, “WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU?”

The one friend I’ve lost to that disease that surprised me was a woman who owned a bar. Because of that one fact, the one I call “I didn’t choose the pub life, the pub life chose me,” I really began to look at the difference between indoor voice and outdoor voice. That I was actually hurting women and not joking with them like it came across to me.

It’s an experience I’ll never forget, because even though I lost that friendship, I will never in a million years stop loving her for what she gave me, which was new insight into my own behavior. It allowed me to do the homework. I have no idea if she still reads me or not, and it’s been so long that I don’t care. But it would make me happy to know that she knows I didn’t just tell her I was sorry, I changed my behavior for the better.

I can say that I’ve been changed for good without it being a double entendre.

I’ll sing that one line in the audio just to her, yet not to try and make amends to get something out of it for myself. I just want to tell her my truth. You did change me for the better, and it is permanent.

I continue to make mistakes and step over the line when it’s unwelcome, and all I can do is apologize profusely. But now it’s not a constant struggle between the language I use with coworkers and the language I use with friends.

It makes me happy to make other people laugh, and devastated when I’ve hurt them. I don’t want to be that person, ever. I’m also human and ADHD. Having your impulse control that fast and loose with everything and putting kitchen language on top of it is not new or interesting, because most of us are like that. ADHD, addict, misitโ€ฆ a kitchen is a tribe that will have you no matter what you’ve done or who you are. Believe me, that is a good thing. We all bust our non-neurotypical asses and have a great time doing it.

But speaking of impulse control, my rage went off once when I was a dishwasher. I verbally went for blood when my chef left both chef’s and bread knives in the bottom of the sink with dirty water on top so you couldn’t see them. You know what’s worse than being cut by a knife? Being cut by a knife that is soaking in bacteria. If I’d cut myself on a chef’s knife, it wouldn’t have been great. The serrated edge on the bread knife could have done so much more damage than that.

You really haven’t seen anything like a dishwasher dressing down a chef, but at least he had the humility to look embarrassed. He almost really, really hurt me, and he knew it. He stood there and just took it because he didn’t break a rule, he broke one of the biggest. In a kitchen, it doesn’t matter if it’s idiocy or malice if I end up in the hospital trying to get rid of whatever was in all that used food.

Like I’ve said before, when I don’t love someone, I don’t say anything. It’s not important. Every chef I’ve ever had earned my respect, but I didn’t like all of them. I’m only still in touch with two, the cream of the crop.

But that’s not the whole story. Cooking doesn’t drain my energy. I am excited and overwhelmed with possibility every single day, even if it’s just making the same shit. My nickname has been either “SpongeBob” or “Bob Esponja” in three kitchens running. The only time I’ve ever wavered in that kind of bubbly excitement was the day I had to go to work at 3pm when Anthony Bourdain had died that morning.

My chef/line cook friends leveled me with their posts, and I was in so much painโ€ฆ. and so much more when I got to my kitchen and no one really knew who he wasโ€ฆ and then Chef got there, and we looked at each other. We’d both been crying. No words, just a nod. Trying to talk was too much. By then it was 4:30 PM, when all the stations are mostly prepped and the dinner rush is trickling in before the “pop.”

Cooks live for “the pop.” We’re not cooks. We’re fucking gladiators doing ballet in front of a stove, an oven, an open flame grill, fryersโ€ฆ Picture Bikram yoga but for people under so much pressure they can’t breathe. That’s what makes the end of the night, when you’re breaking down the cardboard boxes and taking out the trash, feel like you’ve just won or lost a war.

You live for the W. Anything else is unacceptable, and we all know it. If we got in the weeds and ticket times were slow, we beat ourselves up over itโ€ฆ. or, we do at first. Over time, you learn that you can’t win them all.

Thankfully, I’ve won so much more than I’ve lost in every area of my life except cooking. I’m not sure that anyone understands my grief except other chefs, because I had so much trouble at work and it never occurred to me that I had too many physical limitations to work in a restaurant because I didn’t know I had them. I just felt incompetent all the time.

In another entry, I talked about the landscape smoothing over. It was the blessing of my life to learn that I hadn’t screwed anyone over on purpose in the kitchen, not even once in my lifetime.

The curse is knowing I can’t go back.

I wish I had listened to myself when I was young and been better about telling myself over and again that I could find a job in intelligence. I didn’t know that there were more options than C/DIA, because Foster was a helicopter pilot for both. And interestingly enough, I am learning about spycraft for a novel I’m writing. My interest in being CIA is equal to working for State, because it’s not about the spycraft. It’s about being able to travel. I think I would have been happy just about anywhere, but because theology is another great love of my life, I would have tried to walk every inch of MENA, State’s designation for Middle East North Africa.

Interestingly enough, one of my friends who works for the government told me that, and then a day later Lindsay said that her first boyfriend, Saeed, was from MENAโ€ฆ which I knew, but it was just interesting that I’d never heard a term before and it came up twice in two daysโ€ฆ.. But anyway, if I could find a safe place anywhere in MENA, I’d stay. I have too much to see before either I die or the Israelis and the Palestinians try to kill each other so hardcore that they also ruin everything important to Christians. I’m not hating. Both sides do shady shit all the time, I just feel ike it’s more justified for the Palestinians because they aren’t a recognized state and don’t have an actual military. Israel also has tons of American money pouring into it because of the Christian contingent in Congress. Jesus CHRIST this is not our fight, literally. Israel is not the one that needs help right now. If you think that the Russian army is overbearing and Israel is not, it might be a question you’d want to ponder further.

I know I do. I do not believe in Evangelical White Jesus. I believe in the historical brown Jesus posited by Marcus Borg, because it is absolutely insane to think that Jesus was the only baby born IN THE MIDDLE EAST and yet has French features. I’m bipolar. I know from crazy. This is it. There are stories out there about Jesus’s family escaping to France after the crucifixion, because Joseph of Arimethea had a shipping company. That’s how he was rich and powerful enough to get Jesus’ body back from the Roman government.

What would it be like to experience stories that are all true, and some of them actually happened in person? (Now you know how I picked the title of the blogโ€ฆ.)

What would it have been like to sneak away for a weekend in Turkey to actually stand on Mt. Tabor? What would it be like to sit on the shores of Lake Kinnaret (in the Bible, the Sea of Galilee)? My mom went once, my dad has been twice. When he came home, he made us an Israeli recipe for broiled fish with lemon, and it is one of the strongest food memories I have, one of the things that made me fall in love with it. Indirectly, Jesus made me a cook. So you can thank him or yell at him. Choose your own adventure.

Because of my focus on travel, none of my interest in spycraft started as recently as it seems. It started with a dream about my great uncle, Foster Fort. I was an older kid when I learned what happened to him, but he died in a helicopter crash in Somalia. The dream was wondering what it would be like to talk to a real spy. Ask him where he’d been, what he’d done (UNCLASS).

In 2008, when Argo came out, that was all she wrote. The movie was fantastic, and Tony Mendez divined that there would be people who’d want to know the rest of the story, so a companion book that told the real story was greenlit by George Tenet. The funniest thing is that the movie focuses on CIA and not the Canadians who helped us, so I have it on good authority because I’ve read it at least six times that it says “thank you Canada” about every five pages.

Then I thought Tony and Jonna walked on water because Argo was so good, and I’ve read every single thing they’ve ever published, and Jonna has a memoir coming out sometime this year. I’m so excited, because there needs to be a “sequel” to Master of Disguiseโ€ฆ. and I’m going to say it that way because Jonna had the exact same job as Tony 10 years later.

Which gets me thinkingโ€ฆ..

What’s my sequel? Where is it going to come from? I can only control so much, but I’m vulnerable enough to just let people and opportunities show up.

Like a blonde curly-haired boy who thinks I could use a Band-Aid.

The Surprise of Music in the Morning

I have no idea why all of the sudden SoundCloud isn’t embedding correctly. Probably some IT voodoo shit or something. I was going to write, and then I realized the story would sound better off the cuff. Also, Sam Smith is going to get an OBE. Bet.

Paschendale, by The War Daniel

I am going to be writing about very real experiences that ended tragically in suicide in many, not all, but many cases. Donโ€™t read this if that is going to trigger the darkness to rise within you. We donโ€™t need to lose anyone else.

I listen to Iron Maiden A LOT. Almost obsessively, some would argue. And much of that has to do with a quote I heard a long time ago about how music has the ability to take simple words to places that mere words cant go. When you record a song, itโ€™s chordal movement, melody, inflection, tonality, and most importantly the emotion evoked by going from E minor to C to A minor to D minor. Godโ€™s saddest chord progression, I always call it. Obviously I learned it from an Iron Maiden song. And so many of their songs, somehow, capture the aesthetic, the horror and the harsh realities of the things weโ€™re asked to do. Take this verse from โ€œAfraid to Shoot Strangers:โ€

Trying to justify to ourselves the reasons to go
should we live and let live
forget or forgive
But how can we let them go on this way?
A reign of terror, corruption must end
And we know deep down thereโ€™s no other way
No trust, no reasoning no more to say.โ€
Itโ€™s a total โ€œwhat the fuck are we even doing here anyway?โ€

From โ€œThese Colours Donโ€™t Run:โ€

Far away from the land of our birth
we fly our flag in some foreign earth
we sailed away like our fathers before
These colours donโ€™t run from cold bloody war.โ€

โ€œI guess weโ€™re doing it for โ€˜Murka but I donโ€™t know why I’m mad at these people.โ€

The one that hits me the hardest goes as follows, itโ€™s called โ€œThe Longest Day.โ€

In the gloom, the gathering storm abates
In the ships, gimlet eyes await
The call to arms to hammer at the gates
To blow them wide, throw evil to its fate

All summers long, the drills to build the machine
To turn men from flesh and blood to steel
From paper soldiers to bodies on the beach
From summer sands to Armageddonยดs reach
Overlord, your master, not your God
The enemy coast dawning grey with scud
These wretched souls, puking, shaking fear
To take a bullet for those who sent them here

The world’s alight
The cliffs erupt in flame
No escape, remorseless shrapnel rains
Drowning men, no chance for a warrior’s fate
A choking death, enter Hell’s gates

Sliding we go
Only fear on our side
To the edge of the wire
And we rush with the tide
Oh, the water is red
With the blood of the dead
But I’m still alive
Pray to God I survive


How long, on this longest day
‘Til we finally make it through?

Steve Harris, who is a trusted student of the history of war and observer of the human condition couldnโ€™t have written it better if I was sitting there dictating to him.

The anxiety of the training โ€œall summers long.โ€ I can still see my dumbass Marines fucking with a western diamond back rattlesnake and letting them get bitten because I knew it would be a dry bite and I hoped they would learn to be 5% less stupid.

โ€œFrom paper soldiers to bodies on the beachโ€ฆโ€ Weโ€™re a volunteer military now. The โ€œpaper soldiersโ€ Steve is referring to is those poor sods that were drafted into the War. Our paper soldiers now are a reclamation of the phrase to mean those of us to have the guts to sign the line when we werenโ€™t forced. All our choice. And then โ€œArmageddonโ€™s reachโ€ whatever middle eastern hell fate directed us. Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan. Somalia. Yemen.


I donโ€™t have the space to do a full analysis of these lyrics and the experiences they capture here, but trust me when I say that Steve captured the raw feelings and fears and resolve that you feel.

And perhaps most poignantly, from Paschendale:

Cruelty has a human heart
Every man does play his part
Terror of the men we kill
The human heart is hungry still

I stand my ground for the very last time
Gun is ready as I stand in line
Nervous wait for the whistle to blow
Rush of blood and over we go

You canโ€™t understand war unless youโ€™ve lived it. And it isnโ€™t your fault. We are a volunteer force. This isnโ€™t WWII where my grandfather was drafted, and was eventually discharged for telling his higher ups at one of the prisons why he didnโ€™t shoot someone running for freedom by saying โ€œthereโ€™s been enough killing.โ€

And that was during a time when, even if its war, people were playing by the rules.

Now itโ€™s like Fuck Yo Rules. A box of Lindt chocolates could be an IED. In my time on the ground it wasnโ€™t the guys on fireteams that were the most exposed. It was the logistics guys in their vehicles transporting supplies and such from point A to point B. The enemy did everything it could to blow those vehicles and the brothers and sisters in them to oblivion.

We had a POA for every evolution with a dossier of who would be involved from the turret gunner on down the line. And when those guys got to our side of the world it was a party, because we had thwarted the cocksmokers one more time.

Objectively, I had it easy on the ground. I was almost always in the BAS treating nagging things like back strains and hamstring pulls and the sports medicine like injuries that come from carrying almost your own weight hour after hour. And as such, I donโ€™t have many of the โ€œdid you see actionโ€ stories.

But you know what I did see? The payoff.

I saw what happened when we got back home and knew we were safe and had time to finally process everything that did, didnโ€™t and almost happened.

We went to our post-deployment screenings 3, 6, and 12 months after we got home. Well that is the ones of us that were home that long. Despite rules to the contrary, a lot of guys were sent back with 9 months of coming back home.
And donโ€™t get me wrong, some of these guys didnโ€™t want to be back home. Because the stereotype of the military wife that just waits on her husband to leave so she can cheatโ€”thatโ€™s real and fuck those bitches in the very worst way for it. I hope they get a UTI, Herpes and bitten by a copperhead all at the same time.

The names in my phone are funny. If youโ€™re a person I talk to often and are my closest people, the suffix -hausen is added to your name, i.e. Fuckingstirlhausen, Jennyhausen, Mistihausen, mommyhausen. Princesshausen (for my bestie heather). You get the picture. Itโ€™s added because my favorite comedy wrestler Donavan Danhausen adds it to the end of almost everything that is deemed to be cool. Also Iโ€™m told its an actual German thing.

Thereโ€™s also a contingency of people in my phone with โ€œGoddammitโ€ in front of their names. They know precisely who they are. Because for a while it was just constant bad news of our guys winning the fight over there only to come back here and lose the war in the most heart breaking way. It got to a point where my lady at the time wanted my buddies to stop calling me because she knew I was going to be crushed to find out that weโ€™d lost someone else. Because she knew I was going to feel like a steaming pile of triceratops shit because I didnโ€™t reach out. I didnโ€™t take that nagging clue to call them to see what was what. I didnโ€™t call when their marriages ultimately failed.

You may say that this is borrowing grief for its own sake. And to that I humbly suggest you do the following in this order:

Leave my yard by taking a right out of the driveway.

Take the curve around to the main street, making sure to stop at said curve and pay the Molly toll by tossing a dog biscuit to an especially, erm, โ€œheftyโ€ Australian Cattle Dog.

When you get to the stop sign, take another right. Go down to hwy 2744 where the turn off is for that cattle sifter.

Go past that pasture about ยพ of a mile until you get to the pasture where the Santa Gertrudis bulls with their horns in tact still are.

Jump the fence.

Smack a bull on its nose.

When the bull goes to toss you, take the horns up the ass and FUCK OFF.

When someone dies in country, or on the ship or even in the hospital, thereโ€™s a suddenness that is almost easier to take, because you know their suffering was minimal. When you lose someone to suicide it is the most gut wrenching passing that can befall your brothers and sisters. Because they lost the hardest war of all: the one at home.

And here is something I havenโ€™t told very many people.

Every single time we lose someone to suicide, I start getting the texts and phone calls that โ€œ(youโ€™d) better not be next!
And heretofore I have maintained that promise, for here I am, dear reader, laying myself bare for you on this page.
It is no secret I struggle with alcoholism, depression, anxiety, PTSD, and probably some mental illnesses that donโ€™t have names yet.

There was a time when I called the veteranโ€™s suicide hotline, because I had tried and failed for over 3 months to find a job and just nothing good was coming of it. Because the harsh reality is that so much of what we do in the military that should 1 to 1 translate just doesnโ€™t. Its like weโ€™re speaking not just a foreign language but a dead language.

The biggest challenge Iโ€™ve faced since I came home is the struggle to answer the question โ€œwho am I now that Iโ€™m not HM2 (FMF) Williams the Grumpy Cat anymore?โ€

Identity.

HM2 Grumpy always had or could find an answer. HM2 Grumpy could anticipate his Flight Surgeons concerns before they ever happened. HM2 Grumpy made sure no one fucked with his Jr guys for things they couldnโ€™t help. HM2 Grumpy knew that he couldnโ€™t pay them more, give them more leave, but we he could do is give them time. So Iโ€™m not saying I ever told someone โ€œYou need to go to your squadron RIGHT (insert bug eyed meaningful look here) โ€œYeah Grumps, I think I need to go talk to my Sgt Major about whether I should get a boxer or a pit bull.โ€

โ€œGood fuck off and donโ€™t come back until tomorrow.โ€

Now I, like a lot of you reading, am just a guy trying to navigate a world that isnโ€™t sure what to do with us. Sure thereโ€™s a fuck ton of forward facing โ€œsupport for our troops,โ€ but yo, my snake needs rats and my guitars need strings, and my car needs an oil changeโ€”help brothas and sistas out. Because thatโ€™s what ends up getting us. Itโ€™s not even the trauma endured over seasโ€”you can anticipate that. Itโ€™s coming home to a largely insouciant audience that gives lip service to being โ€œveteran friendlyโ€ but that doesnโ€™t end up translating into anything tangible. And thatโ€™s when it happens. When that last vestige of hope falls away. When that guy that was a cousin of an uncle was going to be hiring preferably a veteran welder. And it just doesnโ€™t happen for long enough that you cant take one more drink, or take one more Ambien. You take ALL of the fentanyl and dilauded and whatever else so that the embarrassment and feelings of being a burden will go quiet.

It doesnโ€™t have to be this way.

Remember my dears, These Colours Donโ€™t Run. If you can do something for just one or two of our siblings, you will earn their love for life and then who knows how far your one act of kindness can go.

Hopefully far enough for the next graduation, prom, drivers license, one act play, football playoff, singing competitionโ€”that one more step down the hill that makes life worth living.

Cruelty has a human heart. But kindness does too.

I would love to take a lot more calls lauding the great works of our brothers and sisters than that gut wrenching call to find out we lost someone else.

Show Tunes

Working on My House

I believe that most things are a house of cards. Humans aren’t strong enough to build everything right the first time… even me. I am glad that I have the strength to go back into the basement, and have so many stories that have gone through countless revisions over time based on telling them again and again (sometimes over and over to one person….. sorry about that, all y’all). Today I discovered a new level of dark. Luckily, I had a friend to guide me down, and then back up again.

We went to high school together. They were there. Leaving even their gender out because they wouldn’t want it to be known that they noticed.

They didn’t know it, but they were doing guided meditation. I closed my eyes and saw Carrie, my partner in that woman’s class. It was a health class, and we were “married” and caring for our egg child. I got lucky. All the boys were taken. Carrie was (and probably still is) a gorgeous girl. I knew she was straight. It wasn’t about that. For an hour a day, she was my arm candy. ๐Ÿ™‚ James, Alex…. don’t tell her.

(note to my French Horn brassholes- I just made it up. Tell the others.)

As an aside, I am DYING thinking about how hard Sam will laugh at “brassholes.” She should know. She had a near miss in terms of almost marrying one. I absolutely thought she was the love of my life, and if you didn’t think I mourned that relationship, she hit me harder and deeper than she will ever know. That’s because I didn’t tell her what she did wrong. I didn’t care. Let’s just say that I got the thing I wanted, and in return, she hit and run. Take that phrase and run with it.

She absolutely devastated me. To get over it, I had to cut off all my emotions and pretend that she meant nothing to me, because she made for damn sure I knew I meant nothing to her. I blocked her on everything. E-mail, phone number, all social media. I was crushed. It was my first real relationship in seven years. Why wouldn’t that kind of thing destroy me? Do you have any concept of how long that is? I didn’t even get Leah while I was waiting for Rebekah. I was completely alone. Touch starved except for a few hugs along the way. Depressed. Down and out.

Sam and her kids were balm to a soul that needed them, and I can only say that now, when the outcome of that relationship no longer matters to me. She could have had me for multiple lifetimes, and she threw me away like the bird shit on a newspaper after one day in the cage.

Yet, the only way she’ll ever know how I feel is if she comes up in my yard. My dog bites, motherfucker. I reserve the right to be angry at any time. I also reserve the right to not.

That relationship still confounds me, I just don’t care enough to find out why. She didn’t want to get together to figure our stuff out, it was just over by text message. Why are you guys more concerned that I started dating Daniel so quickly when it wasn’t me that wanted to separate? Why are you guys on me about Daniel at all? Isn’t he a logical successor to be my partner after realizing what Dana had done?

On my very first date with Sam (sorry if I’ve told this story before, but it’s a card that needs to fall), she texts me to tell me that she’s sitting on my front porch. I run downstairs to meet her, and she’s adorable. My heart didn’t even take five seconds to assess the situation. Just a seductive, take your breath away fantasy from the moment I said “yes.” She matched me feeling for feeling, or so it seemed. I saw so much of myself in her. I thought that we’d be together so much longer than three weeks, but I did something. I just don’t care what it was, because it might not have anything to o with me at all. And since she’s not going to marry me, I don’t really care what it was that I did. I would correct my behavior if it mattered.

Back to why Dana even matters. She definitely shouldn’t, but she does. When she hit me, she installed a trigger. Sam’s fist coming at my face whether I wanted it to or not. I realized that I might never get rid of he tripwire, because Sam had fixed hers, but what about the next woman?

Just another reason why I trauma bonded to The War Daniel. He’s huge. He’s weapons trained. No one would ever fuck with me ever again. I have had enough of the bullshit in life and not enough enjoyment. So “noping out” to a different country and trying to make a life there is attractive to me whether Daniel comes or not. My top choices are Aberdeen and Phnom Penh. Two completely different cities, two completely different cultures. It’s just that I have friends in both places. Suzanne has known me for somewhere between 10 and 15 years. I don’t remember, but I do know that she was friends with both Dana and me. It’s not that she remembers Dana, it’s that she’s familiar with the story of my life so far.

My friend in Cambodia has known *of* me for a long time, but we’ve recently connected because I was brave enough to ask him if I could come and visit. I know I will go there first, just not when. The attraction to him is that he’s the exact opposite of Suzanne’s story. He’s only just finding out who I am. So obviously I need six months a year in both.

I have listened to all the sad music. It’s enough that I have to deal with idiots who think that I move really fast in dating. What in the actual fuck? Am I supposed to mourn people longer than the relationship actually lasted?

I broke up with Theresa because I had spent *weeks* planning the perfect first date and she told me that she was backing out and just wanted to talk on the phone “this trip.” No, baby. That’s not happening. We have done too much to go backward and reassess. It’s too hard and it’s too much. We’ve been talking for three weeks. If you can’t have a drink with me, it’s not happening.

That relationship was weird, too, because we were off to such a good start, and then I probably ran my mouth too much or something, because lots of people have no idea how INFJ people operate. They make plans, then contingencies, thn more contingencies. For instance, here was the process of cleaning my room this week. It was hell.

I’d been trying to organize little by little when the house caught fire and I needed to get it ogether immediately. I reserved maids over the Internet. First mistake. Two appointments. Two companies. Two no-shows. Finally, I contacted Hayat (landlady for those just joining us) and asked her to get her own handymen out here and I’d pay them. Even that tuned into a nightmare.

It’s all done now, except for the cleaning and designing. The paint cans and drop cloths are still all over everywhere. It’s painted bright white, like the marina where I wish I lived in Beirut. I’ll include a photo because it’s hanging in my living room. I want my room to feel the same way… that when I’m dreaming, I’m not in my own bed. I’m there.

While I am working on my ugly house of cards, I can dream of what it will look like when I am finished. I want a welcoming space, full of that same pure energy of white and teal and waves and sailboats…. though it isn’t for everyone, Beirut is my happy place. I have been Lebanese for almost eight years now. When I see it for real, I will fall.

….just like a house of cards.

Beirut, Lebanon

Standing Up and Owning My Birthright

I just told my work in progress idea to the most perfect person I could have imagined, because he was a teacher at HSPVA. When you know people that are HSPVA quality students, when they come at you with a creative idea, they don’t say “where’s the money?” Matt Mullenweg created WordPress. Justin Simien created “Dear White People.” Mireille Enos starred in “The Killing,” and has had roles in “Good Omens” and “Big Love.” She won a friggin’ TONY for an Edward Albee where she played drunk. She won a friggin’ TONY and SHE GREW UP MORMON. Today I stood up an owned my birthright. This book is going to be fantastic. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something. I auditioned to the same school they did and I got in. Sit on that.

This was my Facebook post yesterday that got me going.

I feel like I should lay out a full analysis of what I’m currently dealing with and why…. not for you. For me. It’s my thing and you’re invited, because I’ll need it later. I’ve been delving into past writing to figure out where I’m going, and how the information about my gargantuan leaps in emotional growth that I see on these pages is informing my direction.

Romance is fine. I’m settled in myself. You can read all about it just by scrolling the home page for a few days’ timestamps. Sam was a loss, but everything else surrounding her departure prospered me. It wasn’t a good relationship, but it produced good content. I am never trying to be more popular and writing in that direction. I can’t. People aren’t logical enough to predict what’s going to be hot and what’s not. They’re emotional. If something grabs them, they’re going to share it. If it doesn’t, they won’t. There is no point in time at which I want to take on the burden of caring whether this web site gets a huge, international audience.

If I don’t keep my head down and be absolutely indolent about my need for validation, I won’t get successful. There is a direct line between caring how much people think and willing to be vulnerable enough to get people to read a blog in the first place. Most of my friends do not understand this, but strangers do. If you’re already here, I can guess some things about you that will resonate. But again, I’m just talking about likelihood, not fact.

If you’re into reading blogs, you have been since 2003. You are familiar with Mrs. Kennedy, Anil Dash, Heather Armstrong (and Jon by proxy), Jenny Lawson, Nadia Bolz-Weber, Gordon Atkinson, and most importantly, Ernie Hsuing. little. yellow. different. took off like a rocket. Oh, and how could I forget Wil Wheaton? My friend Chason and I have known about and interacted with Wil as a blogger since Jesus had our pager numbers. I wish I had taken a screenshot of his comment on Clever Title Goes Here, my old blog that was equally popular. I was talking about auditions or juries when singing, that they fill me up because when I’m singing hard rep and doing well, it feels like flying over the mountains. He said he felt the exact same way with acting. It made my day.

Later on, we met up at a book signing for “Just a Geek.” I introduced myself and when he put a name to a face, this is what he wrote in my book…… “Dear Leslie, Clever Inscription Goes Here. Love, Wil.”

To back up in time a little bit, I went to the High School for Performing and Visual Arts. I have known about Matt Mullenweg for years because back in the day, we were both in the Houston jazz community. That boy who went to my high school created WordPress, and here we are.

I went to high school with stars like Jason Moran, Robert Glasper, Chandra Evans, Debbie Allen, Mireille Enos, Justin Furstenfeld, and Beyonce was three years behind me. I’ve met her once, but I’ve never paid attention to her because back then, we were in high school. Seniors don’t normally take freshmen seriously, and the day I met her I had ditched school at Clements to take my girlfriend, Meagan, back to PVA to have lunch. There was a Happening (lunchtime concerts in which different Art Areas took over the common area to showcase).

So, we were all in the cafeteria and mingling. You think it was cool in retrospect for me? I haven’t talked to Meag in years. Wait until she reads this web site and finds out she met Beyonce and didn’t even know it.

Though Beyonce is cool and everything, I was in love with Miranda Bailey the moment I found out everyone called her “The Nazi.” Then Shonda Rimes gutted me emotionally by stretching the Hippocratic Oath to its limits and having to watch her wrestle with those decisions. She had to save a white supremacist, an ACTUAL Nazi.

The fact that Chandra Evans and I went to the same high school is way more important to me than Beyonce, and remember since Beyonce wasn’t Beyonce back then, she probably feels the same way about Chandra that I do. In terms of HSPVA legends, she’s always going to be starstruck at her birthright rather than promoting herself…. she’s just projecting that she’s hot shit as a marketing strategy, because the real girl is as quiet as me.

Starstruck at her birthright.

Yesterday, I stepped outside The Matrix and owned it. I nearly blacked out when I thought about the fact that I auditioned for the same school they did.

AND I GOT IN, TOO.

I am editing this entry to add something important. Here’s what HSPVA did to inspire this level of confidence. I listen to the Argo soundtrack on repeat every single day when I write so that I can tell you where every single note goes, along with chord structures because I took music theory. That music teacher was an anti-vaxxer and I lost someone crucial to my development to COVID. I got the idea to start doing that from another HSPVA student, the creator of WordPress, Matt Mullenweg, during his interview with Tim Ferris. He was a tenor sax player and had the same jazz director I did. I borrow structure from Jason Moran, the jazz pianist, all the time, because I wrote to “Ten” for a year. He was stunned and told his entire band that in front of me when we were laughing and joking after one of his concerts at The Kennedy Center. He had the same jazz director I did. Robert Glasper nearly came unglued the last time I saw him at The Reach, because back in the day he was just the goofy dude who sat behind me in history. He had the same jazz director as I did. I am addicted to “The Suffers.” Jon Durbin sat next to me in Jazz Band for two years. Moral of the story? Dr. Robert Morgan is directly responsible for making me a drooling fangirl over all of them, and he owes me money because it’s getting expensive.