Life Is What You Make It (Blog #462)

Currently it’s five in the evening, and I need to work on another writing assignment, one of my travel-writing stories, but since I slept for ten or twelve hours last night and am STILL tired, I want to get the blog done before doing anything else. This is my mantra today–

Me first.

Still, in an order to make this go faster, I’m doing today’s post as a list of random thoughts and gratitudes.

1. Two’s a party

I hate spending holidays alone, nothing to do. Apparently my friend Bonnie feels the same way, so last night for the 4th of July we met up and walked down to the river, where there were fireworks. Along the way I watched the stars and planets come out. I saw Mercury for the first time! You’d have thought I won the lottery I was so excited. That’s five planets you can see in the sky now with your naked eyes–Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn.

Eeek!

After the fireworks, Bonnie and I sat on the grass by the river and listened to a local band that was playing under the stars. I continued to look for constellations. I may be developing an obsession.

2. Being obsessed makes it hard to rest

Before I came home last night, Bonnie let me borrow a couple stargazing books and a pair of binoculars. Talk about encouraging my new hobby. Starting at one-thirty in the morning, I lay in my driveway for nearly an hour searching for stars, constellations, and galaxies. I was like a kid in a candy shop. Not only did I see the craters of the moon, but I also clearly identified (for the first time) the constellations Hercules, Corona Borealis, Lyra (The Harp), and Aquila (which sort of looks like a wizard’s hat).

Before I went to bed I got overwhelmed–there’s so much to learn about the sky! But this morning I thought, Marcus, the stars aren’t going anywhere fast. You can take your time here.

3. You brave your way, I’ll brave mine

This afternoon I spoke with my friend Kim, a fellow night owl. We talked about our tendency to judge ourselves for being different, like, for staying up late and sleeping in. But, as Kim said, “Some of us brave the day; some of brave the night.”

4. Ask and you shall receive

Yesterday I hung an antique chandelier in my room but left off a few crystals that had broken while in storage. Hoping to find a place where I could buy replacement crystals, last night I asked Bonnie if she knew of a place that sold them.

Get this shit.

Bonnie had some leftover crystals from a “glitz and glamour” wedding she helped decorate a few years ago–the EXACT kind that I needed.

Sometimes life is easy.

5. Life is what you make it

One of the pieces of artwork I hung in my room recently is an autographed poster of Dawn Hampton, a swing dancing legend. Dawn grew up entertaining with her family at The Savoy Ballroom in Harlem and later made a career as a singer in the gay bathhouses where Bette Midler and Barry Manilow got their start. Anyway, one of Dawn’s songs is called “Life Is What You Make It,” and this idea is on my mind today. Fun and fascination don’t have to be complicated–they can be as simple as a single friend, a blanket of stars, or both. We don’t have to get in a hurry about anything. We don’t HAVE to judge ourselves for being different. Life isn’t as difficult as we think it is.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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Sometimes life can really kick you in the balls and make you drop to your knees.

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The Universe Communicates (Blog #115)

Okay, so I’m addicted to Facebook just like the rest of the world is. There, I said it. Phew, I feel better. Anyway, this afternoon after Bonnie and I went shopping, we came back to the Airbnb, and I took a serious nap while Bonnie took a semi-serious nap and then went for a walk or whatever she did that I don’t know because–again–I was seriously napping. I mean, the sun was down when I finally opened my eyes. I think it was eleven. But the first thing I did when I woke up was–you guessed it–Facebook. Scroll, scroll, scroll–Bette Midler interview–stop.

The next thing I knew, I was caught up in this story about Bette’s rise to fame that started with her singing in The Continental Baths, which I guess was a place in New York City that homosexuals could get naked, take baths together–um, whatever–and listen to the likes of Bette Midler and Barry Manilow–live. So basically it was soap, sex, and a song. I mean, we all need entertainment. Well, Bette said that she and Barry had a falling out, but she hoped they could patch it up. And sorry, said the interview guy, but to find out more, you’ll have to go to our website.

Fine. You have my attention.

I mean, I really didn’t wake up today itching to find out more about Bette Midler and Barry Manilow, but that’s what I did. So now–without meaning to–I’m even gayer than I was before.

I guess some things you can’t avoid.

This evening while Bonnie went to her final Kizomba dance, I went for a jog. One of my closest friends from high school, Neil, messaged me this weekend and suggested that I meet him in Seattle for a half-marathon. “I think it’d be really good for both of us,” he said. “And it will also guarantee me a spot on the blog.” (We all have dreams.) Anyway, I’m lately in the mood of saying yes to life (as well as beer, donuts, and cigarettes), so I told Neil I thought that would be a great idea, both for our friendship and for my waistline. That’s as far as we’ve gotten with the plan, but now it’s in print, so maybe it’s more likely to happen. Either way, I figured now was as good a night as any to start training.

I’m not sure how far I jogged tonight, but I’m confident it was the farthest I’ve gone this year, maybe ever. All I know is I was gone for two or two-and-a-half hours, and I jogged the majority of the time. But I also tried to take in the city and dream about living here one day, so I stopped to look around, explore. I saw a shirt with a kid hugging a unicorn that said, “Hold your horses.” I found out hotels are a great place to use the restroom and grab a drink of water–just walk in and look like you belong.

Here’s a picture of a gay bar that I thought had a great name–Cheer Up Charlies (like the song from Willy Wonka).

My jog took me to South Congress, which if you’re going south to north and cross the Colorado River, becomes just regular Congress and runs smack dab into the capitol building. Anyway, first I went south (away from the capitol), and then I turned around and went north (toward it). I can’t tell you how much I’ve fallen in love with this view and this city while being here this week.

There’s a quote by Chris Prentiss that says, “Not only is the Universe aware of us, but it also communicates with us. We, in turn, are constantly in communication with the Universe through our words, thoughts, and actions. The Universe responds with events. Events are the language of the Universe. The most obvious of those events are what we call coincidence.”

I thought a lot about this idea while I was running, the idea that the universe communicates. Honestly, I used to think that the universe–or God–didn’t notice me, wasn’t interested. But I’ve been coming around to the idea that it does, not just saying it but actually believing it. And I guess you could make a meaning out of anything, but sometimes when I see particular road signs or hear certain songs, I like to think that God is talking me.

Tonight on South Congress, I found the sign above that says, “I love you so much.” After that, there was another sign on a hotel that said, “Let love in.” Neither message was earth shattering, but both were subtle reminders that there’s a lot more good in the world than I’ve previously believed. I can’t prove to you that I was “meant” to see those messages tonight, but I could have ended up on any other road tonight, run by any number of other signs. And of all the signs I did pass, those are the ones that caught by attention. So whatever you call it, I think there’s something “out there,” or more likely “in here” that’s nudging me in the direction of “life ain’t so bad.”

Cheer up, Charlie.

When I got home from the run, I was drenched, breathing heavily. And I guess I can only stand so much healthy living for one day, since I drank a soda and smoked a cigarette (and then threw the rest of the pack away). Then I took a shower, made some toast, and sat down with a to-go container of peanut butter and a miniature jar of strawberry preserves that someone had left in the refrigerator.

And get this shit.

The lid on the jar said, “Straw Berry Manilow.” Barry Manilow! How great is that? I actually laughed out loud. I mean, it’s clever marketing to start with, but I love that I was learning about Bette and Barry earlier this evening, and then there’s this funny little reminder that not only is the universe capable of lining up some pretty amazing messages if we’re willing to see them (how much work would it take YOU to put Barry Manilow in someone’s Facebook feed AND Berry Manilow in their Airbnb refrigerator on the same day?), but that also God has a delightful sense of humor.

Barry, berry delightful indeed.

The quote earlier referred to events like these as coincidences. Carl Jung called them synchronicities, and he believed they stemmed from the fact that all of life is connected. He called that connection Unus Mundus, which is Latin for “one world.” Sometimes I just imagine that God is like a child playing hide-and-seek. After a while, it’s no fun to stay hidden, so you have to start dropping hints. Hey, I’m over here. Look at this sign. Now I’m over here–in the Straw Berry Manilow preserves. That’s right, I’m talking to you.

Oh hey, God. Fine. You have my attention.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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You can’t play small forever.

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From a Distance (Blog #93)

This probably won’t come as a surprise, but I love Bette Midler. I guess there are certain requirements you have to meet if you want to be a card-carrying homosexual, and I’m proud to say I checked that one off at an early age. For this I blame my late Uncle Monty, who, although straight, also loved The Divine Miss M. (I suppose this is allowed). I remember sitting in his dentist’s chair as a child this one weekend when it was just the two of us at his office. Uncle Monty loved music, and that particular day he had Miss Otis Regrets on repeat. Just that one song, over and over for maybe an hour. It was the first time I’d heard anyone do that, play a song so many times that it becomes forever a part of you.

This morning, on the way to a funeral, I was in a car accident. It happened in Fort Smith where Free Ferry turns into 74th, this sort-of blind curve that leads into a steep hill. I made the curve, and as I came onto 74th, a rather sizable and stupid turtle was (slowly) crossing the road. So I swerved to the right side of my lane, and then back to the left, successfully dodging the son of a bitch. But the car in front of me had come to a dead halt–in the middle of the damn road!–I guess to play Jesus and save one of God’s more ignorant creatures. Slamming on my brakes, I stopped just in time to miss hitting them.

But the guy in the pickup truck behind me–didn’t.

It’s funny how moments like that one both slow down and speed up all at once, like a rubber band that’s pulled slowly backwards and then snaps forward–BAM!–and it’s over. A rubber band snapping–that’s what my neck felt like. And then all at once my coffee was splattered across my dash, my change scattered all over the floor, the baseball cap that was on my head–in the backseat.

For a few minutes, it felt like a dream. I’d only slept a few hours the night before–I’d just had the shit knocked out of me–everything was being processed about as slowing as that fucking turtle was crossing the road. I pulled my car over, so did the others. A lady yelled from the accident site, “Are you okay?”

“Uh, yeah,” I said.

An old man crawled out of the pickup truck. He had hearing aids. He looked confused. He said, “What happened?”

My guardian angel is obviously getting paid about as much as I am.

The lady and maybe her son were then next to us. Is everyone okay? And then they were gone, back to the accident site, kicking the remains of my back bumper into the grass. At the same time–I think–the tortoise rescue team either moved the turtle off the road or picked it up and put it in their car like a couple of cat burglars except–obviously–different. I don’t remember them saying anything during this whole process, and then they–what the actual hell?–got in their car and drove off. Assholes. (This is me learning to express myself.)

The old man gave me his business card. I gave him mine. His hands were shaking. He couldn’t find his insurance. And then he did. I walked down to the accident site and looked around. My magnetic hide-a-key had come off my bumper. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve used that thing. I lock my keys in my car constantly. I picked it up. Tearing a piece of styrofoam off my bumper, I put it in my front seat and called my insurance company. The man still seemed confused. I was on the phone with my agent, but he kept talking, saying–I think that’s the wrong insurance card–No, it’ll work–Do we need to call the police? No, we don’t. My agent says we don’t have to if we don’t want to–I don’t want to. I’m going to be late for the funeral.

The man drove off, and then I did. I didn’t even think to look at his truck, see how badly it was damaged. Then on the phone with his insurance company, I pulled into a hospital parking lot and filed a claim. The lady was super nice, but she actually said, “I hope the turtle is okay.” I thought about the fact that my neck had recently functioned like a slingshot, the fact that I could hear birds chirping through the open spaces in my trunk, the fact that my guardian angel is obviously getting paid about as much as I am lately.

I replied, “That turtle can die.”

Next I drove to the funeral, my bumper scrapping my tire the whole way, myself leaned back like a gangster because I couldn’t get my broken seat to return to its full and upright position. At the funeral parking lot, I got out and looked at the damage again. My bumper looks like a park bench, I thought. It’s so dented in, you could curl up and take a nap on that thing–like a cat, like a whole bunch of cats.

By this time I was thinking more clearly, so I called my parents. I’m okay, but I was in a wreck. I’ve gotta go, but don’t ever park your car in the middle of a street to save a reptile. Then I called my chiropractor and my massage therapist. Both of them said they could see me today, but it would mean leaving the funeral early. “Okay,” I said. “I’ll be there.”

For the next six hours, I was in and out of offices. The chiropractor, who was at least a seven and a half, said it was “nothing major.” I thought about saying, “Nothing major! Do you want to see my rear end?” but figured he wouldn’t know I was talking about my car. He said I had a slight compression in my neck joints, probably due to tight muscles. So he adjusted me, ran some ultrasound to reduce inflammation, and told me to come back next week. Then I went to my friend Justin’s house because I had time to kill and didn’t know what else to do.

Well, Justin, who knows a ton about cars and pretty much everything, is what we affectionately call a wet blanket. So he took one look at my car, pointed out that the entire frame was compromised and compared it to a can of soda pop that’s been stepped on by a circus performer. He said, “There’s no going back. It’s totaled. See how this door won’t open and that wheel is no longer perpendicular to the ground?”

“That’s a bad thing?” I said.

“Yeah. And you probably won’t get much money for it.”

(Pause.)

“Where did you say you keep your beer?”

My massage therapist, Ron, was a miracle. Is a miracle. (Go see him.) He worked on me for about thirty minutes, got my muscles to relax, and put bright blue Kinesio Tape on my neck, which is supposed to promote healing and blood flow to injured muscles. That’s me (with the tape) and Ron in the photo up top.

Next I went back to Justin’s, and we got lunch. Justin, who prefers the term “realist” to “pessimist,” said I should go to the doctor and request x-rays. That way, in the event that I’m really screwed up, there’s proof from the day of the accident. So Justin drove, and that’s what we did.

The receptionist at the doctor’s office had a basket of pens with a label on it that said, “Pens,” but when I first noticed it, I honestly thought it read, “Penis.” God knows what Freud would say about that, but I just figured it meant I’m ready to start dating again.

The doctor said there were no broken bones, nothing out of place. Phew! He also said it was a good idea that I came in early, that I got ahead of things, and he wrote a prescription for a muscle relaxer, an anti-inflammatory, and–Score!–a pain pill. So my last stop today was the pharmacy. Well, no, I take that back. I went to Starbucks for a White Chocolate Mocha and a chocolate chip cookie so I could go home, take drugs, get fat, smoke cigarettes, and generally feel sorry for myself. (My therapist has previously endorsed this sort of behavior on exceptionally difficult days. She calls it “comforting.”)

When I got home, I pulled my car, Polly, into my parents’ garage. I got the car from my Grandpa Pauline after she passed away, and it occurred to me this evening that I would probably never drive her again. At least in Polly–no more trips to see my Aunt Terri, Uncle Monty’s wife, in Tulsa–no more trips to see my therapist. In a strange way, it felt like a death. At the same time, I was glad I didn’t buy those new car mats I’ve been thinking about for over a year.

It’s funny how grief and joy get all mixed up. As I stood at the end of the garage and alternated oral fixations–coffee, cookie, cigarette–I put my earbuds in and searched for Bette Midler’s Experience the Divine: Greatest Hits, an album I’ve had on repeat off and on for over fifteen years. For probably twenty minutes I played From a Distance over and over. It’s about the idea that “from a distance,” everything looks beautiful, everything is just right, everything is–okay. It says, “God is watching us–from a distance.”

I thought about the fact that some days God feels so far away. Some days life is already a lot to handle, more questions than answers really. And then a couple of turtle-lovers and a guy who’s not paying attention come along and fuck things up even more than they already are. It’s like everything is falling apart. But then again, in my case, I got excellent, immediate care. What’s more, insurance paid for everything. So far, I haven’t spent a dime. So in that sense, it felt like everything was coming together, that God was anything but far away.

In one of the most profound books I’ve read about healing trauma, I learned that the physical body often releases trauma through crying and even shaking, as might be evidenced–respectively–by a small child, or a duck that ruffles its feathers after a fight. Before I knew this, I didn’t trust my body to cry, to curl up in a ball if it wanted to. Most of today, I’ve been in “I can handle this” mode. I haven’t been angry, upset, sad, or worried. But this evening while listening to From a Distance, all the emotions hit me, just a hard as that fucking truck did. So when I started to cry, I didn’t push back the tears. I welcomed them. And when my body started shaking, I slumped down into a ball, leaned against the side of the house, and tried to make room within me for all of life’s mysteries. I can only imagine that from a distance, it was quite a beautiful thing to see.

Quotes from CoCo (Marcus)

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I believe that God is moving small universes to communicate with me and with all of us, answering prayers and sending signs in unplanned moments, the touch of a friend's hand, and the very air we breathe.

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