Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The Usual Suspects: CTA Edition

I don’t really care for public transportation. If I had my way I’d drive in an SUV to work every day while spraying Glade with its CFCs out the window, just because I can. I’m one of those people.

Usually I can grin and bear the train to work every day, but in the past few months, probably due to Chicago’s 25 hours of darkness a day, cold weather, and even colder weather, I’ve become an intolerable humbug on the train. And the bus. And the metra (whatever the hell that is). 

A straight up rant wouldn’t particularly make me feel better, as there are so many particular things that I loathe, it’s best to reduce them to the cast of characters that make me want to jump from the platform into the tracks.

The Hero/The Martyr

The Hero and The Martyr do the same obnoxious thing, just at different speeds. You’ll be behind them moving up the escalator or stairs. Everything is going normally – one step is taken at a time. That is until you get to the top. At this point they feel the need to completely shut down. Stop moving. Stop. Completely. And make you and everyone behind you crash into them. This is often punctuated by a dirty look from the Hero/Martyr as they think they should be rewarded for climbing an entire staircase/riding an entire escalator all by themselves.

The need for two classes is due to the speed of the ascent. The martyr is usually a woman in her mid to late 40s. She wears furs and lumbers up the stairs, her purse splayed to the side so it’s taking up just enough space not for you to not be able to go around her. Why a woman in fur is not taking a cab is beyond comprehension, but she is and she is making everyone miserable. When she gets to the top, she waits until she is exactly ½ a step off the stairs before she bends over and starts panting.

“I did it! I made it! This is just… can you believe I came all that way? I just need – I couldn’t possible take another step – not even to the side to get out of your way, because I did it. I climbed these stairs. See my plight! My struggles! Look what I have done, world!”

The Hero has the exact same problem, although, it is even more annoying because the Hero, gazelle-like, leaps up the stairs, only to come to a complete stop at the top. It’s as if the hero has changed into his spandex, superman suit and sprinted to the scene of the crime, only to discover that the cops and fire department have it under control. This entire realization HAS to occur with only ½ step from climbing the top stair; otherwise….??!! Many a time have I been running to catch a train behind a young, professional twenty-something, only to crash into their back when they stop, stone-cold in the middle of the stairs.

Train Freezes

Train Freezes are similar to Hero/Martyrs, only their idiocy occurs on the train rather than at the top of the stairs. These people, regardless of how many people follow them onto the train, completely stop. Moving. Upon. Entry. To . the. Car.

Cease.

It’s as if their legs lock and they can’t do anything about it. This always creates a weird shuffling, bumping and ramming of people as they try to fit the extra 4500 people behind them onto the train car.

My favorite thing about Train Freezes is that 95% of the time as you ram them trying to get further into the train, they look at you like it’s YOUR fault.

“Gosh, I’m just trying to commute home and this JERK runs into me! Can you believe it?”

YES! Yes, I can because your legs froze on getting on the car and we had to figure out how to get everyone else on!

A nice subset of the Train Freezes are the Panic! At the Discos, these people don’t stop because they are frozen, but rather because the sudden realization that they are on a train is paralyzying to them. Their complete halt of momentum is punctuated by frantic head turns trying to figure which of the 60 empty seats and endless empty aisles that they will take up. It’s hard! It’s hard to figure out which way to walk. It’s a right and a left. What if you choose left…and you should have chose right?! The CHAOS! The AGONY! 

Interior Character: I’m Responsible and Helpful!
Exterior Character: The Jagoff

This person is probably the kid that ran for class president in high school and had to settle for student council or was beat completely and ran for secretary of the FFA. They have a commanding presence and great bluster, but everyone else realizes that they are just commutertarded.

 The scene is usually rush hour. The train is plowing down the track toward one of the main stations downtown. If you have ever commuted in Chicago – even once – on one of the lines, you can assume which these are, because EVERYONE gets off the train. Many mornings the brown and red lines are so packed that you can’t move. If the train even sways slightly, you knock into people, or, in worst-case scenarios, are so packed in that you don’t move at all.

With this as the scene, imagine a person, at the complete back of the train, who picks up their suitcase and yells to everyone:

“Coming out!”

You are about two minutes from arriving at the station, the train is so packed that in order for this person to squeeze out, you would have to all bump, shove, topple, and mash into the seated people and the standing people: toes are stepped on, suitcases crushed, and bruises given.

There is no reason for this.

In two minutes the train will have stopped and the all the cars will empty anyway. But, this person, in their heads thinking, “Ah ha! I’m such a good citizen! I have made everyone aware I’m leaving so that when I leave they will know and have time to move out of the way for me to get to the door!”

Everyone else is thinking: “This jagoff is really going to make us all shove out of his way and move to the door, just so when the train stops, we all pile off anyway.”

One of the best CTA memories I have (only?), was one morning when someone at the complete opposite end of the train from the door yelled, “Coming out!!!”

His response? All fifteen people around him that were standing all stared in unison and shook their heads.

He didn’t go anywhere.

AcKtORs

Away from rush hour there is another breed of obnoxious on the train. These are people who think that they have their own reality show on E!, even though there are no cameras and no one cares what they are saying.

One night I was on the train reading. It must have been a blue moon because there were two girls across from me and one of them was continuously checking me out. The train was almost empty and there was no need to be yelling, but this girl felt the need to shout everything.

“I KNOW! CAN YOU BELIEVE DEREK? LIKE REALLY? I’M GLAD WE BROKE UP. I’M GLAD” (Throws glance at me, who is diligently trying to read some pretentious book, but is distracted by the twenty-something screaming at the girl one inch away from her.) “LIKE HE TOLD ME THAT HE DIDN’T WANT IT TO GET SERIOUS. SERIOUS! CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?!”

When  I didn’t listen to the drama, the girl – still looking my way – changed gears into a comedy routine.

“SO LIKE MOLLY, RIGHT. SHE TOLD ME THAT SHE AND KURT RAN INTO EACH OTHER THE STREET! LIKE LITERALLY BUMPED INTO EACH OTHER! CAN YOU BELIEVE IT! AHAHAHAHAHAHA!”

It’s not just flirting that motivates people, though, sometimes it’s because they just think other people care what they’re saying.

Another time on the red line home from work, this woman and her boyfriend (?) both middleaged, were making out and talking at loud volumes.

Makeoutmakeoutmakeoutmakeout

“CAN YOU BELIEVE RANDY DIDN’T COME TO DINNER? THE NERVE!”

Makeoutmakeoutmakeout


I don’t know if it’s ageist or something, but the last thing in the world I want to see is two people over forty making out. Like… No. It doesn’t matter if they’re attractive, gay, straight, gorillas, dolphins, et. al. I don’t want to see that. And I don’t want to hear them yell about boring life minutae between periods of tonsil hockey.

I can't wait until it gets a little warmer. Then at least the cast of Suspects will expand to include Dude with Nice Arms in Tanktop.

Minnesota Adventure: Dontcha Know!

A couple weekends ago I went to MN to see a couple groups of friends. One was my old coworker, Harriet, and the other were my friends Peter and Georgia. A couple funny things happened along the way:

Disappointed?

Harriet and I went to a gay bar in the middle of downtown. We were by ourselves, awkwardly dancing together, when these two gay guys came up to us.

“Hey! It’s so refreshing to run into some straight people,” one of them said. “We want to talk to some straight people.”

I felt like we were at the zoo and they just got the chance to pet the goats.

Suddenly, a look of horror crept over one of the gay men’s faces after we didn’t immediately respond to him.

“Wait…,” he said glaring at us, “You mean… You aren’t straight?”

You would have thought we murdered his entire family and then just made him eat a stew that we made from their body parts. He was furious.

Harriet looked between me and the guy and was like, “No… ,” she pointed at me, “he’s gay.”

“C’mon!” The angry gay said to his friend. “We’re getting out of here!”

Harriet and I looked at each other and tried to comprehend what had just happened.  He was mad? Because we weren’t straight? At a gay bar?

B’ohkay, MN.

All the Lonely People

Georgia and Peter had a party for Peter’s bday. A whole bunch of people were there – roughly 11 or 12. We had been drinking and playing games all night, when my friend’s fiancĂ© jumped up.

“Guys! We gotta go out if we’re going to go to Gay 90’s before it closes!”

She immediately sprinted upstairs.

It had been Peter’s idea that if we made it out, we would go to this big, gay dance club called Gay 90’s to party on.

I thought it was really nice of everyone, but I spoke up:

“Guys, we can go to any bar. Don’t feel like just because you have a gay guy here you have to go to the gay bar.”

My friend Sam turned to me and put his hand on my shoulder. “Tedd, you realize that you’re the only one at this whole party that isn’t married or going to be married in the next few months. You’re the only one who can get action.”

I kind of jumped back because I hadn’t even realized it until that moment. Everyone was really friendly and awesome and I had never thought about who was single/married/vegan what have you.

For some reason (most likely the 10 drinks in my system) it hit me weird and I got kind of sad.

“Thanks, Sam. Thanks for pointing that out. I’m going to go upstairs and put a gun in my mouth.”

That’s when one of the guys from the party jumped up.

“Tedd! Don’t worry! We got you!” (Remember I said they were super awesome?) He then proceeds to play “Can You Feel the Love Tonight?” on the Apple TV, causing everyone at the party to get in a circle and sway. The lights were even turned off and people held up their cell phones like lighters.

Single or no, I felt a lot of love in that room.

Catching Fire

Sam and his fiancĂ©, Jenny, were also from out of town and just visiting for Peter’s bday.

The next day, after the party, we all went out and got breakfast. It was at this place that had a bakery and sandwich shop in it. I saw Jenny sneak over and buy this flower thing from a bakery and stuff it in her purse.

I kind of forgot about it until later that afternoon when she pulled it out and brought it into the living room. We had all been watching TV and were pretty mellow.

“Peter! This is for your bday!”

She proceeds to take the flower out of the box and put it on the coffee table in the living room.

“Do you have a lighter?” Sam asked.

At this point I looked over and Georgia’s eyebrows were raised. She didn’t say anything, but I could tell she was wondering what was about to happen.

Peter and Jenny walked over to the flower and got out a match to light it.

Peter, as if hosting a bad 60’s game show, says, “I hope this table’s not flammable!”

He then proceeds to light the flower. Perhaps light is too gentle a word, he ignited the flower blaze.

A shot of sparks and flame about three feet high shot out of the flower. Both Sam and Jenny leapt back and fell on the floor.

I was laughing so hard I was crying. This wasn’t helped by looking over at Georgia, who had this complete look of, “Dear God, if anything is ruined because of this I’ll murder you” mixed with, “It’s Sam doing this, of course he almost burned the house down.”

In the end the thing was pretty awesome. After the sparkler flame went out, the flower burst open into like 10 tiny flames. It was supposed to play “Happy Birthday”, but it hadn’t been lit properly.

Jenny grabbed Sam’s arm. “Light the wire! It will play “Happy Birthday!” she said.

“NO!” Peter and Georgia wanted nothing more to do with that thing.


Of course, there’s a video of this thing on YouTube for reference:


Saturday, January 18, 2014

The Horcrux

The Horcrux

This post is specifically directed at Mr. Fluffer, since he is my only faithful blog reader without opposable thumbs and a Facebook account. He wouldn't have seen on his non-existent newsfeed that I recently published my MFA thesis/first “book” on Amazon. The book is okay. I would highly recommend saving real opinions for private interactions and suggesting you give the book 5 stars on Amazon and say it's the greatest thing you've ever read. I promise I'll buy you a cup of coffee with the royalties your promotion causes. Please don't expect anything fancy. It may be week-old Folger's that I reheat on my stove.

I decided that I was just going to bite the bullet and publish it on my bday. I thought it would symbolize...something? I figured if I had momentum and got it done by that date then my year would be a year of progress and movement toward... I don't know. During this whole process I've kind of let myself be okay with the fact that I won't have a big publisher and my writing is for me and a few people who read it. Publishing was more of an act of exposing myself as a writer, an artist. It's “coming out” again and letting people know who I really am and what goes on inside of my head. And people will/may find that offensive or worthy of mocking. But I did it. And it's out there.

While doing my final round of edits, I was reading through a passage and read some of my own vulnerability in a scene. It was kind of shocking to read through this artifact of my life, three-ish years in progress. Because part of it is definitely me, a piece of my history, my thoughts and ideas at a certain time in my life. But part of it's alien. These characters that I made up surprise me and make me laugh as if I had no part in their creation. The manuscript is a piece of me, but also has a life of its own. The only thing I could liken it to was a Horcrux from Harry Potter. In the book, these objects are repositories for pieces of the soul; granted, in the book it's so the Dark Lord can live forever by scattering his soul so it can't be destroyed. Which...isn't quite what I'm doing. But I think in all my writing, a piece of soul escapes into it. It may be a transitory idea or image, but it's part of me that exists on paper. It's part of me that has to escape for the whole to survive.

All that being said, please don't stab your Kindle with a Basilisk fang. It's just awkward for all of us.

So, yeah, real talk for a change. But here's the first part of the book for your perusal.

Book available here:

http://www.amazon.com/Faggit-Tedd-Hawks-ebook/dp/B00HUMETSU/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1390068576&sr=8-1&keywords=faggit

Prologue


That whole week I went over a lot of things. The most important one was figuring out if it was for sure. Like, I was 98.45346% sure that I was really gay, but I didn’t want there to be any confusion about it. This one website recommended writing your coming out story, the moment or time where you realize that you’re gay, so you have it and it’s real, a moment you can hold and say, “This is me. This is how I know who I am, and I am proud to be this way.”
I started writing like 100 times, but it always felt weird. One story was about how I wore my mom’s high heels when I was five, and another one was about Kyle, but all of those felt off. They were part of the story, but they weren’t the story.
The one thing I did keep coming back to, over and over, was this scene from my favorite old movie called An Evening with the Asherfields. Cal always made me watch old movies, but this was my favorite because of this one part. It’s in black and white and the main guy, Douglas, is moving through this big, fancy party. He is really excited about something, because he’s pushing his way through all these people. Finally, he stops outside a set of French doors; he stands there for a minute and takes a deep breath. The camera shoots through gauzy curtains and reveals a woman standing outside. You can’t see all of her, just her silhouette, but she’s standing with one hand on her hip, the other hand extended clutching a long, old-fashioned cigarette holder. Douglas opens the door and sees her looking really elegant staring at the moon. The camera moves in closer, and she turns with a halo of light around her head and says, “Hello, Douglas.”
When I was thinking about my own story that scene always popped into my mind. Because for me that’s what it was, a moment when you think the world should stop moving, and you feel something you’ve never felt before. It’s not sex, but a sort of calm in the middle of something wild – like the eye of a tornado. Your heart is racing, and you have a million feelings going through your head, but in the middle of it all, you have this joyful feeling of peace. It’s beyond lust and all that, a realization that you have an amazing connection with another person. And for me that other person was a boy.
Part One

Chapter 1: Orientation


Cal told me the last thing in the world I should tell anyone was that I was a Princi-Pal. I tended to agree with him, but there were much worse things to be. For instance, Tommy Capella showed chickens at the Kaplan County Fair, which to me seems much more embarrassing than being in Principal Rothchild’s little student group.
One of the responsibilities of the Pals was helping out the day of freshman orientation. My sophomore year I was in the cafeteria behind the welcome table handing out nametags. Another Pal was helping Principal Rothchild stack the student planners on a table, and the junior president of the Princi-Pals, SRC, was wandering around, surveying everything with her cold, grey eyes.
SRC’s name was actually Sally Rae Chilton, but no one ever called her that. SRC sounded like a kind of bomb, which fit her perfectly. Everything about her reminded you of the Cold War or something, from her square haircut, big, round glasses and thick bangs, to her clothes, which only came in black, grey, and black again.
“I think you should reorganize these, Jack.” SRC glared at me as she brushed her finger over the nametags. “This looks,” she paused and adjusted her glasses, “cluttered.”
Principal Rothchild appeared behind SRC and put a hand on her shoulder. “I think they’re fine, Sally Rae. Is the projector ready for the assembly?”
“Yes.”
“Check it over again, just to make sure.”
SRC gave a little bow. As she turned, she almost knocked down a girl and her mom, who had just entered the cafeteria. Principal R. looked at her watch and almost crapped herself.
“It’s almost 1:30! Will you all be ready?” she asked, looking at the rest of the Pals and the few teachers gathered.
We all nodded.
“Good. I’m going to finish things up in the office. I’ll be back in a minute.”
Principal R. had this weird sort of waddle that took her out of the room. She was a tiny, chubby woman, and when she moved too fast, she bobbed back and forth like an angry penguin.
As she left the room, the girl and her mom moved up to the table. The mom was a tiny, petite woman, but her daughter was a whole lot bigger, not fat or anything, but big and thick. I’m kind of short and scrawny anyway, but this girl made me look like a chimp standing next to a gorilla.
“Hi,” the mother said.
“Hello, there!” Mr. Arnold, a science teacher, said. “New freshman?”
“No,” the mother shook her head, “Mary is actually going to be a sophomore this year. We’re moving in from Clarksburg.”
“Well, Jack here is a sophomore!”
I think Mr. Arnold saying that was supposed to make me and this Mary girl talk or something, but I just nodded. It got really weird when no one said anything for a whole second, so I brushed the hair out of my eyes and started organizing the nametags again.
“Mary’s nervous about starting, but this school seems nice.”
“Mom.” Mary’s voice was sharp. Her face was beat red. “I’m not nervous.”
The mother smiled one of those mom smiles – my mom does it when she’s trying to make me happy, but also acknowledge to everyone else that I’m being a stupid kid. After the smile, the mom gently stroked Mary’s hair. I held in a laugh when Mary’s face grew redder. She swatted her mom’s hand and stalked off across the cafeteria. Her mother politely nodded and then hurried after her.
The cafeteria started to fill up with kids and their parents. Mr. Arnold and I were really busy handing out the nametags and keeping the line moving. Most of the kids I already knew – it was hard not to know everyone when you went to a tiny high school in the middle of a corn field. It only took about two weeks after I moved in from the junior high before I could match up faces with names and understood who was cool and who wasn’t.
When the cafeteria was filled, Principal R made everyone shut up and then gave a welcome speech. I think it was the same one she used for my class the year before, but with some of the inspirational adjectives moved around.
“Welcome … blah blah blah … We’re excited to see you … blah blah blah … You are the future … blah … exciting year … blah blah blah … new friendships and challenges … blah …”
I probably should have been paying attention, but I let my mind wander during the blah-blahs and was looking at all the new kids. There were several that I thought would be great for a make out. Not that I had ever made out with anyone, but there were plenty of people I'd want to have a movie make out with, preferably in the rain or a mild snowstorm. When I looked into the sea of faces and saw the new girl, Mary, looking at me, I almost jumped out of my chair. She awkwardly looked away and tucked some hair behind her ear.
After a few more blah-de-blahs one of the student council kids stood up and started separating the kids into their tour groups. I slipped out of my chair and was getting ready to go to the gym to help SRC, when Principal R. grabbed me. She said, “Jack, would you mind leading a tour today?”
“What?” I asked. “I mean, don’t you have enough student council kids?”
“We have enough for the new freshmen, but I hoped you’d take around the older students? We have three new kids that are sophomores and juniors. If you take them around separately, they won’t feel like babies.”
“What about SRC?” I asked.
I wanted to get out of it more than anything. I don’t really like being in charge of stuff. I mean, I lost sleep for a week because my neighbor, Mr. Hurley, asked me to feed his cat while he was on vacation. I was sure I was going to stumble in on the cat right as it was dying.
“Meow meow meow!”
[Cat subtitle: Forsooth! Why didn’t you take care of me!]
Most of the Pals, including SRC, had leadership experience, so this job was right up their alley. I was only in the Princi-Pals because I won a regional math contest the year before. I bombed out at the state finals in Spring Falls, but for about three seconds before the big contest, everyone at school was cheering me on.
“Sally Rae has her hands full,” Principal R. said.
Over in the corner I saw SRC and Bobby, another Pal, at the student planner table. She was swatting Bobby’s hands because he was taking a planner from the wrong stack.
“So you’ll do it? Perfect!” Mrs. R was already waddling away before I could say anything.
It was time to panic then. Sweating was the main thing that happened to me when I started to feel uncomfortable. It was like the pores in my armpits popped open at once and rained all over, which was awful, because then I had pit stains on my shirt and couldn’t lift my arms up. If I did lift them up, then I got embarrassed by all the sweating, so the pits would sweat some more. I carried around an extra shirt in my backpack, just in case I got nervous for some stupid reason at school.
It was really quite terrible.
I was taking deep breaths when Mary, a tall guy with dark hair, and this other girl with a really tight shirt, who still had her sunglasses on, approached me.
Principal R. was following them and gave a wave as she passed by. “Have fun!” she said. “Just bring them to the gym for the presentation with their parents when you’re done.”
She angry-penguined away, and I was left staring at this group of kids. I was sure that my pit stains were visible, so I kept my arms down to my side like a robot.
“Uhhh, hey,” I said.
No one said anything. Mary and the tall guy looked nice enough, so my sweat started to slow down. The girl with sunglasses was typing on her phone faster than any human being I had ever seen.
I really had no idea what to say until the tour started, so I kept watching the front of the cafeteria to see when the other groups left. Finally, the silence was broken when the tall guy spoke up. He said, “Do you like this school?”
He had on a shirt with a skull on it and the band name “Death Flavor.” His eyes were big, round, and brown. They were staring right at me. His nametag read “Kyle.”
“I guess,” I said. “Where did you guys come from? Which school?”
“Clarksburg,” Mary said.
“Holbrook,” Kyle said. “It’s in Kentucky.”
The girl with her sunglasses on, whose nametag read “Delilah,” smacked her gum twice before saying, “I used to go to Brentwood Academy.”
“Brentwood?” Mary asked. “What are you doing in this dump?”
“Whatever,” Delilah said furiously texting.
When the last tour group left, I led us out of the cafeteria and into the band room.
“This is the band room,” I said. “I don’t play an instrument, but I hear it’s pretty fun. The teacher makes everyone call him Keith, instead of Mr. Cockrell. I think he’s a hippie.”
“I play piano,” said Kyle.
“Like Amadeus?” I asked. Being best friends with Cal inevitably meant watching almost every movie ever made. I didn’t even think about how most people just call him Mozart.
“Who?” asked Kyle.
“Mozart,” said Mary. She smiled at me.
“I’m not that good,” said Kyle. “I’m in a band and just play basic stuff.”
“You’re in a band?” Delilah said without looking up from her phone.
“Yeah,” Kyle said.
“Coowl.” Delilah turned her phone sideways and slid her finger across the screen.
The school tour was really dull because our high school was designed by the same guy who architected the county prison. It’s a pair of big cement blocks in the middle of a cornfield. One of them is the school gym and the other is for all the classrooms. The walls are all cement blocks with white paint on them, and the carpets are this weird teal and purple color with diamond patterns. Every once in a while you’d see a poster on the wall that sounded like Principal R.’s speech. “Blah blah blah … Teamwork!” or “Excellence … blah blah …!!”
I took them around the first level of the school and showed them the gym, the fine arts wing, and the freshman hallway. After that we went upstairs and ventured down the junior wing. At the very end of the junior hallway there is a row of beat up lockers. They were taken out of our original high school building that was demolished in the 80s.
Delilah noticed them first. “Those are ugly,” she said.
“I know,” I said. They were pretty terrible. It was like someone purposefully dragged them around in a demolition derby. “Those are part of the original high school and are supposed to be part of our history.”
“I hate history. I don’t get why we have to learn about dead people,” Delilah said.
Mary looked at Delilah like she was full of some disease.
“No one actually uses them,” I said, “but they’re really famous around school. That’s where you pick up Cutty Sark every month.”
“The shark?” asked Kyle.
“No, it’s this thing…” It was weird that someone wouldn’t know about Cutty Sark. Not knowing our gossip paper was like being in India and not knowing cows are a big deal. “Every Thursday students write up this unofficial newspaper with stuff that happened over the week. A lot of times it’s just gossip or news that they won’t let us print in the school newspaper, like who broke up with who and why, or who was caught making out under the bleachers. It’s called Cutty Sark, I guess it’s the name of rum and a boat or something.”
“Oh my god,” Delilah said. “It’s like Gossip Girl.”
Cutty Sark wasn’t nearly as great as it sounds. Once in a while there would be a juicy story, but mostly it was about stuff everyone already knew about. The best story my freshman year was when everyone found out that Micah Herron and Becky Georgestein were caught having sex in Micah’s neighbor’s front yard. The neighbor happened to be Principal R.
I told this story to Kyle, Mary, and Delilah and they thought it was hilarious.
After leading them back downstairs I said, “That’s about it guys. You can head into the gym for the presentation.”
“Coowl.” Delilah turned away and, distracted by her phone, slammed into the trophy case. For the first time that afternoon, I saw her show some emotion, as she scrambled to shove the battery back in her phone and adjust her sunglasses.
“Thanks for the tour, man,” Kyle was looking at me again with his brown eyes. It felt like we were both saying something, even though there weren’t any words.
“Jack?” Mary said.
I turned away from Kyle. “Yeah?”
“This was really cool. Where do you live?”
“Oh, I live on the north side of town.”
“I live close to there!” Mary was grinning ear to ear. “Would you want to hang out some day or something?”
“Oh,” I said. “Sure. We’ll probably have some classes together.”
Mary was looking at me. With that look look. It reminded me so much of Susie Hamilton, this girl I used to date, I felt my stomach start to churn.
It would have made sense to tell her then that I was gay, rather than have it all blow up like it did later. It would have made a lot of sense to have told everyone at that point.

 But I hadn’t even told Cal yet, and he was my best friend. My dad knew, but he hadn’t told anyone else. I probably wouldn’t have either, though, if I walked in on my son watching two guys in wrestling singlets getting naked on YouTube.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

#ahneeahnubar

Wasted

This past weekend I went to a comedy show with one of my friends, James. We drank some drinks, don't get me wrong, but I was by no means incapacitated or crazy. After the show we went to Holiday Club, the most awesomest place in Chicago, for dancing and some more drinks. The Club is this bar that's a perfect mix of hipster pool haul and weird divey dance bar. The back room is pretty tiny, but they play sweet 80's music on Friday and 90's music on Saturday.

James and I roll into (henceforward referred to as) Da Club and meet up with a bunch of his friends. All the friends kind of give me the eye. I'm not sure why. Then they start playing Footloose and I immediately head to the dance floor.

I like dancing.

Like.. a lot.

I don't have to be drunk to cut a rug, but when alcohol is involved it goes from an 8 to a 10 real quick. I can get low and like to shake my white, non-existent booty. I think I'm pretty good, because I have, on multiple occasions been complimented by African Americans on my dance skills. I hope that doesn't sound racist, it's just a general acknowledgment that black people are better at dancing and most things than white people.

Speaking of ethnic call outs...

SIDEBAR:

So I was at this New Year's Eve party with a bunch of my friends. After midnight the party was going full force. Most people were drinking a lot and the atmosphere was really jovial. I went up to the bar and this thick, farm boy just grabbed my arm.

“Hey there! I was looking for somewhere white and awkward to hang out with! Looks like it's going to be you!”

I was not in the mood, so I turned to the bartender and ordered another drink for me and my friend.

“Yeah, this is a great party. Where you from?!” The guy continues.

“Chicago.”

“Wow! Well, let me introduce you to my girlfriend...” Guy grabs girlfriend. “Hey, hon, this is my new friend...”

“Tedd.”

“Tedd! I told him I was looking for awkward white people to hang out with...”

“Have a good night!”

I promptly disappeared. And yes, I'm awkward and white. But not quite as much as that guy.

RETURN:

So I'm shaking it and dancing with James, when a girl runs through the crowd.

“TEDD!”

She reaches out to hug me and I'm like, “Oh my gosh... Erin?” Because in the dark of the club with a running female, I briefly thought it was another friend that had just moved to Chicago.

I was wrong.

“No. It's Janet.”

“AHHH!” I hadn't seen Janet in forever and so we were super excited. We chit chatted a bit and talked about a mutual friend. Then Janet's like, “Let's take a picture – not like you'll even remember this tomorrow...”

“Wait..what?”

So we take a picture and I realize that everyone thinks I'm completely wasted because I'm dancing and in a good mood, including James's friends who had given me the side eye.

After the picture James and I go back to the table where another one of his friends had joined up.

James goes, “Hey, this is Tedd.”

I stick out my hand and, as we shake, the guy I'm shaking hands with gives the girl next to him THE BIGGEST GAY SIDE EYE IN THE WORLD. Like, “Ohmigawd this blond guy is totally a trainwreck.”

I could tell not only by the BIGGEST GAY SIDE EYE IN THE WORLD but also because he and all of the other friends promptly turned away from me as soon as the greeting was over. We passed a few more awkward moments before I went out and started dancing again. After a few more songs I realized that it was getting late and I needed to get home because my Saturday event schedule started at 8 a.m. The next day.

As I'm leaving, I go to pick up my coat. I'm reaching for it when I realize that the booth it was laid on is actually elevated about 6 inches off the floor. So I literally trip and fall into the pile of coats. Guess who was there watching all this happen: THE BIGGEST GAY SIDE EYE IN THE WORLD. My face turned about 10 shades redder as even more side eye was thrown around. I climbed up to the train platform and immediately texted Janet with perfect punctuation and big words, to prove I wasn't wasted.

Dearest Janet, what an absolutely divine pleasure it 'twas meeting you in that establishment. I hope when our paths intersect again that we shall be able to spend more time in conversation about the ebbs and flows in our lives this past year. Until that time - Master Teddwick

#ahneeahnubar

A few months ago I met a group of friends out at a bar. I hadn't seen them in a while, but it was someone's birthday, so everyone was pretty gone when I arrived. I had brought a guy I was seeing at the time. Something happened at the bar and the guy just stormed out leaving me alone. This left me pretty bummed, so I grabbed a drink and sat in the corner by my lonesome. One of my friends, Patty, saw me alone and pointed at me.

“We should get summa air,” she said staggering in heels.

She grabbed my hand and led me outside. Her balance was a bit off, so she was kind of doing the blurry-eyed half-lean against the wall of the bar.

“Whatssa matter?” she asked fixing the strap on her dress.

“That guy,” I said. “It's nothing.”

“Yeah,” Patty said. “You know what? Ahneeahnubar.”

“What?”

ahneeahnubar \ah nee ah nu bar\ drunk white girl speak for “I need a new bar.”

“Yeah,” Patty went on, “I jusssa ruhly think-ahneeahnubar.” Then she turned at me, her drunk eyes focusing for a shining moment: “Imma think we-neeahnubar.”

“Yeah, I think we do.”

What followed could only be described as a version of Hamlet's To Be or Not To Be soliloquy had it been written by a drunk, middle-class white girl who had too much to drink at a gay bar:

“You know issa like like when you
ya know – guyz! - like guyz are always
they are so dumb and they are like the -
But really we jussa neeha get out uh herr.
It's like we jus' neeahnubar. We can go out
And we can have fun and forgiddabout da
guyz – you know? Like issa what friendz
r furr. You know when it gets tough you
jus' neeahnubar.”

We were kind of having a moment and so I was like, “Yeah, the guy and I just started dating. I don't know what happened, really, but it was weird -”

At that moment I looked up and realized that Patty was gone. She'd gone back inside. Luckily the bouncer hadn't heard my monologue to myself about this guy I had been dating for a week. When I went back in I didn't really feel like doing much, so I thought about leaving. Patty evidently forgetting about our entire conversation, was grinding on some gay guys in a conga line.

I thought about leaving then I realized that ahneeahnubar isn't about finding a new bar, literally. It's about locating that new bar inside of yourself when things are tough – when you feel like the world has got you down and -

Wait, sorry that wasn't what I was thinking. It was, “Imma get another drink and join that conga line!”


That would do Patty proud.

Grindr Chronicles

I'm always surprised by how many people don't know what Grindr is. To put it euphemistically, it's a gay “social application” for you to locate gay men that are close to you. It says how far someone is away and then you can put up a profile of what you are looking for. The best possible description is a billboard that use to hang in Boystown. In it, two hunky men are about to kiss and it says, “He's less than a foot away...”

The ellipses means a lot more than a kiss and dinner... If you know what I mean.

But I have actually found really great guys to date through the app. I actually do use it for the “social” purpose instead of the “bang it and slang it” direction others take it in. But there has definitely been some interesting interactions.

I. Synechdoche

I thought this one interaction basically encapsulates everything awkward about me dating online.

A guy messaged me and said, “Hi.” This is pretty standard for Grindr. You can get good convos going from there, but it's generally pretty tough. I only respond to simple, “Hi”s if the guy is really attractive... because I'm classy. So this guy says, “Hi” and because I'm a normal human being, I looked into his profile and found that he likes video games. So my response was:

“Nice! A gamer. What are you into?”

So I sent it.

And then thought about it.

It is common in the gay community for people looking for a sleeping partner (there will be lots of euphemisms in this entry) will simply put “Lookin?” in a message. This means: “Want to come over and engage in sexual activity?” “Lookin?” is by far the most popular, but there are derivatives of this that mean similar things, like “What are you looking for?” or “Why are you on this?”

My response of “What are you into?” definitely fell into the gray category of possibly meaning “Want to come over and do more than make out?” Even though I was talking about video games, it could easily be misconstrued to mean, “Nice! I'm randomly calling out an interest! Now would you mind if I tied you up and smelled your dirty socks?”

The guy, as previously mentioned, was cute, so I didn't want to seem like I just wanted to... you know... so, being awkward, I send another message:

“Hey! That last message wasn't supposed to be about video games, like what games are you into? Haha.”

Smooth, right? So I sent it.

Then thought about it.

And I think that maybe he thinks that I don't think he's attractive and am ONLY interested in video games and not an EVENTUAL...you know... But at this point I thought a third message of:

“Hey! I am interested in video games, but also like, you know.... so, like, I just think you're cute and am also interested in getting to know about your interests... :)”

Something like that may make me look NUTS. So I didn't send it.

For some reason this guy and I didn't work out.

II. You're Not a Trucker

A few weekends ago I got a message from a guy. In his picture he is in a flannel shirt wearing a John Deere hat. He was super nice, and he said he was spending his New Year's in a cabin going snowshoeing. It was nice to get a picture on Grindr that wasn't someone shirtless or a picture of some other unmentionables, but just an outdoor scene with the caption, “It's really nice up here!”

Right?

So, I thought regardless of anything this guy was nice and we had good conversation. He was older than me and there was none of the ambiguous crap that comes with talking to guys online. (See next section). He was like, “I'll be back in the city next week. We should get together!”

So we did.

I happened to be working from home all that week. It had been pretty laid back, but as we came out of the New Year, we started to get SLAMMED (caps are a thing in this entry...evidently...). I had expected a Friday of playing Mario 3D World and occasionally checking email. I got 6 new applications, new set ups, merchant questions, and a bunch of pings from my boss about outstanding files.

Fun.

I had set up a coffee date with John Deere guy and it was approaching time. I was swamped and barely had time to stuff a sandwich in my face, shower and throw on a hoodie and some dirty jeans before heading out the door.

I'm not super vain, but I like to at least look like I care. Usually I do my hair, an activity that takes roughly 3 minutes – rubbing some pomade in it, then a rapid hairspray job.

Because it was cold and I had to wear a hat, I didn't bother doing my hair. Usually going on a first date/meeting, I would definitely do this. A large part of my judgment in this particular case was the fact that the guy looked really dressed down. He's wearing a John Deere hat. He went snowshoeing. I was picturing a kind of burly guy in a Carhart jacket and a stubble beard.

I was like, “He's laid back; he won't mind that I'm dressed down for this.”

SIDEBAR:

I had told this guy to meet me at a coffee shop in Wrigleyville. It's this kind of cute place that has nicer coffee options and a cozy atmosphere.

So I thought.

I get in there to meet the guy and it turns out to be some sort of hipster library on Friday afternoons. It was DEAD SILENT. The only sound was people tapping on keyboards and the occasional clink of silverware on plates.

They served me a coffee and I sat down and just stared at everyone. I couldn't imagine having a first date in there. Can you imagine. EVERYONE would hear everything that we said. Every awkward thing we discussed: family, jobs, the kind of truck this guy drives, etc. would all be public record.

Luckily the guy texted me, “Hey running a little late!”

My response:

“Omg. You saved us. I'm going to chug this coffee and we can go somewhere else. It's so awkward in here.”

So I pounded an Americano in about three minutes, burned my tongue and sprinted out of that place.

Ain't no hipsters going to here my awkward first date conversations.

RETURN:

I get out of the coffee shop and am standing on the sidewalk waiting for this guy. About two minutes later I see a cab pull out and a guy gets out.

I just kind of stared.

He was not a trucker.

This guy was dressed to the nines in a long trench coat, scarf, designer shoes and had well-quaffed salt-n-pepper hair.

My thought process was something like:

  1. Wow. This is some kind of Grindr miracle. He's actually better looking than his picture.
  2. He looks like he walked out of a fashion magazine, and I look like I walked out of a trailer park.

So he gets up to the curb and we shake hands. We go get coffee.

It turns out that he has a ballin' job and hob nobs with New Yorkers.

That's right! Hob nobs!

So we get to the end of the meeting and part ways. It only lasted like 30 minutes because I had to get back to work and he had been running a little late.

I got on the train and was thinking, “What a disaster. I'm not even going to text him. Why bother? He's probably going to a cocktail party to tell everyone about the blond schlub that he met for coffee.”

To my surprise he texted me:

“Had fun! I can understand if you're not interested, but if you want to meet up again, that would be great!”

We did meet up again. We were getting drinks and he says, “You know I was shocked you wanted to get together again. When I got out of the cab I thought you shit your pants. You had this awful expression on your face. I thought it was my gray hair.”

This taught me two things (bullet numbers are also a thing in this entry):

  1. We never know what someone else is thinking. We both thought we were train wrecks.
  2. My “you're attractive” face is also my “I shit my pants” face. This may explain why no one ever hits on me at bars.

“I was going to talk to that blond guy, but I think he's actually having a bowel movement at the bar.”

So, if you see me at a bar and instead of a “come hither” look you see something more like a “my bowels are going thither” look, just know that's all I got. I'll try to incorporate a wink so it's a bit more obvious.

III. Synechode Part Two: I Don't Make Plans on Sundays

Another great feature of online dating is that it allows people to be as flaky and weird as they want! One more great interaction I had that serves as a reference point for all online gay interactions was a recent conversation string I had with a dude.

He sent me some pictures and we started chatting. It's worth noting that I don't really pull punches online. If you engage me in conversation you're going to get bad jokes and (what I believe are) witticisms. I don't filter. I R Who I R.

Well this guy and I had a great back and forth. He responded to my weird jokes like:

Him: It says you're 3 miles away. That's farther than usual.
Me: I'm in a hot air balloon. I'm actually directly overhead.

I actually tried to meet up with him twice. Once I said, “It'd be nice to meet up. What are you doing Sunday?”

Him: “I don't make plans on Sundays.”

I figured this was a blow off, but then he sent me some messages a bit later. We had more good back and forth and then he happened to mention that he had some friends who play volleyball. If you'll remember from previous postings, I play volleyball and am terrible. It turns out that if I had gone out after our volleyball game on Sunday, we probably would have run into each other.

More conversations.

Then this week I, again, was like, “You crack me up. It'd be fun to meet up sometime.”
Him: “Yeah. Maybe if you wouldn't avoid me on Sundays.”
Me: “Haha. It wasn't on purpose. But it'd be fun to grab a drink. You're fun to chat with.”
Him: “As are you, Mr. Hawks.”

Wait... What? I never tell people my last name on Grindr. If we meet up, then yes. But I don't even have my first name or any part of it in my profile. This isn't for any reason other than I was too lazy to create a profile, but it was still odd that he knew my last name somehow.

Remembering that he knew some volleyball people, I just assumed that he had figured it out from them. Although, why he was talking to them about me is weird also...

So, I just write back: “Haha. How do you know my last name?”

His response: ;)

A day later his profile was completely deleted. Gone.

What?! Like... Whuuutttt?!

I actually hadn't been creeped out when he knew my last name. Boystown is small. People know each other, but... why would he delete everything? Was that because of me? I hope not.

But now I have a fear that I'm going to be murdered and a hot air balloon is going to be carved into my chest.

People are weird. Grindr allows these freak flags to fly at full mast.


#ahneeahnuapp