Tuesday, January 24, 2023

1983 to 2023

 

Not Cookie. But, oh, what fun we had in your youth

On January 21, 1983, I came out to myself.  And over the next many months, to every one else.

It was a long process. Oh, I had long been having sex with men, lusting after them, and dreaming about men.  Why, when I was five, watching the original Batman on TV, I kept hoping that Adam West's costume would rip open.  I had no idea, but it made me feel all warm inside. 

But on that night in 1983, I understood that gay men really were humans and not just people driven by sex. 

That was the night that the light (Disco Ball, if you will) went off in my head and I realized that they had lived like everyone else, had hobbies and interests like everyone else, played cards, laughed at movies, and were concerned about their futures.  And at the climax of the night, they could hold each other after sex, sex that was good, satisfying, and felt natural. 

I know that may sound odd but back then, society still treated you like a joke, as something less than, nothing more than a punch line on a TV, or doomed to a life of fulfillment, and worse still, someone people really rejected. 

And I also came to understand that the older generation in 1983 had had it far worse than what I thought was our current situation.  Those who came before us had it much worse when it came to law and to relationships with their families. 

In 1983, I never thought that I could one day marry a man and be happy.  In 1983 I thought we had to be content with calling our other half my lover, a term that connoted only sex. 

One by one, the people who knew me told me they knew all about it, and for a long time.  My mother kicked me out of the house but came around once I showed some backbone.  My father never came around, which is no surprise, because he was unable to admit he was ever wrong about anything.  His loss, not mine.

What a difference 40 years makes in many ways.  I am now happily married to a man I have been with for decades, someone who is my very best friend and someone I thought would have rejected me in 1983.  On the contrary, he was in his own closet trying to keep his head down, and not be identified. 

We all make different journeys.

Now Cookie is the older generation.  And sometimes it feels damn lonely here. If the joke is Gay Life ends at thirty, try sixty.  I always deferred to my gay elders, but I really feel that younger gay men have become so callous as to see us as their brethren. 

I have been called "Troll" "dead man walking" and "Boomer". I have always found safety in the company of men who are older, but here I am with at best maybe 20 years left.   My friends are varied, but younger gay men forget that people like me pushed and pushed hard to be able to be out at work, that we pushed and pushed hard to open up housing, employment, and yes, minds.  Just as the older generation did, and grateful I have always been, for the guys of my era.

To those who mock me, my answer is always the same: "If you are lucky, you'll make it to my age. And that's a big "If".

And I think of all the men stuck down by AIDS when there were no cures, just death. 

Still, I worry about the next ten, twenty, and thirty years.

Will my marriage be invalidated?  Will our health insurance be cut off because we aren't a straight family? Will we be hunted down, and forced to separate for our own safety?  Because there are certainly enough angry people who see the LGBTQ+ community as the easiest target that can find.  Without a boogie man, they have no platforms. Without hate, they have no power.  That scares Cookie.  

I hope not.  I hope we grow old into our dotage. And before taking that final step into an afterlife, if one exists, there isn't much of a wait for the other to join the first to go. 

But the one thing that remains constant is that we will remain at war with society until they give up trying to make us into something less than they are. We have to keep pushing, keep making our voices heard and our rights guarded, and we need to keep pushing. 

We have to remember that being enough isn't just enough, but that our rights matter, we will not be pushed, and shoved around.  We will strike back, and our allies need to know that we love them, and we'll support them as they support us. 

Nothing won is ever safe. Life is full of struggle.  My Ancestors taught me that. 

Still, what an amazing forty years it's been.

11 comments:

  1. Great story, thanks for sharing that. I think a lot of us can identify!

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  2. I'm not quite there yet, but I also never thought I'd be this age. How did this happen? I would have to hear some of the Cookie youth stories. I bet you got some doosies! I'm sure you had to be popular, what with , the beautiful cookie monster of yours!

    But let a gayling call me old, and she'll get slapped!

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    1. I was once young and reckless. Over drinks I'll share stories.

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  3. Younger generations often don't fully understand until THEY become the older generation. Occasionally, you get the odd bright bulb in the patch who has studied history, read, observed, and can think for him/herself but generally, they aren't thinking much at all.

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    1. ^This^ exactly this.
      They are young and invincible, and a year lasts a decade to them. Karma knows this too. Today's Twinkie is tomorrows Ho Ho Whore.

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  4. We were all with you, dear Cookie - The Young and the Restless (or was it The Young and the Hung, I always get them mixed up!). I wasn't that much later than you in making my début in a cloud of pink smoke - but it was indeed a very different world.

    The baby gayers nowadays have no idea what it's like to actually be illegal [as anyone under 21 was until 1994 in the UK]. They have never experienced going to funeral after funeral after funeral of people the same age as yourself, nor the "backs against the wall"/"bum chum" comments that passed as "humour", nor the "gay-bashing" on the streets and in the media we had back in the 1980s.

    All together, now!
    "I've run the gamut, A to Z
    Three cheers and dammit, c'est la vie
    I got through all of last year, and I'm here
    Lord knows, at least I was there, and I'm here
    Look who's here, I'm still here!"


    Jx

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    1. They will never know what its like to see police in a gay bar and have a wave of cold rush over them only to find relief in knowing the off duty police were hired by the bar owners. Tis true. And I know that drugs were being done in the bars, but it wasn't as overt, at least in my experience.

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  5. I love everything about this. While we haven't met (yet) in person, I am glad to have you as a friend, as our backgrounds are so eerily similar.

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    1. I am really looking forward to the day we meet. Glad you're out there, ever so much.

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  6. Beautifully and transparently Written. You could have been talking about the Rights and struggles of many demographics considered Less Than at any point in History... Women, Minorities, Immigrant Populations, as well as the LGBTQ Community. I heard Wanda Sykes the Comedienne say something Interesting tho', she said being Gay was harder for her than being Black, becoz she never had to Come Out as being Black. Wow, that was profound. If who you are is evident, I suppose people, even the unaccepting ones, know it from the Jump, but being denied who you even are and having to conceal it and not be authentic to Self must be so much worse, scarier, and finally Coming Out and being unsure of the reaction, takes a lot of Courage. My Grandson felt he never had to Come Out, since by Two he was pretty easily identifiable and said he wasn't flying under anyone's Radar and knew it. People always and still do consider him a Female, even when he's Presenting Male, he Presents as either and considers himself Gender Neutral, but is Married to a Man. I don't always have complete understanding, since it's not my personal Experience, but I do try to understand as much as I'm able, and treat every Human Being with the dignity and Humanity ALL deserve. I remember having to break glass ceilings in the Corporate World as a Female Executive, it was often very difficult, but I do Hope I paved the way for some of the next Generation of Young Women to succeed and not have to fight so hard. I'm also of mixed Race, and that whole boundary is another one Society is resistant to and feels some kind of way about. Society has many biases, we can only hope we evolve as a Species beyond it all one day.

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  7. Hooray for hte journey and the happy ending!

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