The day begins with a stretch and ends with pie. On any
other ordinary day this would only be a blink of my eye, but today is no
ordinary day. Today: I walked the dog; I fried eggs; I went to Freddie’s to buy
spinach and then to Hollywood Pet to pick up dog food; I took a picture; I went
to choir practice. On a similar ordinary day two years ago: I got in my car; I
put an apple-pear pie next to me on the seat; I crashed the car. It was
snowing. It was an ordinary day. It is one I choose to remember.
In the morning I walked my dog, Tater, which is short for something like, Tater Chicken Nugget Golden Sunshine, or
some other Denali kennel’s staff riff. I choose Tater, because it was simple, and let’s
be honest, she is a Tater. I love her, sometimes. Several days before she
pounced into my life, my ex-boyfriend called and told me he had met someone,
purely by accident, the way it is written. My heart broke not because he had
found someone but because I had not. I asked the universe to send me love. I
wished for it on every snowflake I walked under. I cried. I wrote a song. Three
days later, Tater sat in the middle of the Denali Park Road, in the sunshine
waiting for someone to take her home. She is an unexpected joy. I joke that she
is my chastity dog and she has kept me getting in trouble on more than one occasion
and warned me when I should have listened. She is more than that though. She
curls up next to me chest in the bed and keeps me warm, and is training me for
the day when it will not be her but someone else. For years I didn’t let anyone
touch me, hug me, much less cuddle with me for fear that I would be found out.
It’s not easy to hide that when you are a guy. But with her, I find it easy to
say I love you, and to give her a hug. I can tell when a guy touches me now that
I don’t flinch as often and she has made that small difference. She is gift.
She is love.
Before I walked Tater, I made breakfast which consisted of
three fried eggs, baby spinach, and a small handful of pills. This has been my
breakfast, with some variation since spring of last year. I am a Paleolithic
eater. I have a strict diet and I exercise most days of the week. I am
religious about it. I have to be. I always thought my heart carried the burden
of the years but as it turns out it was my stomach. Leading up to the car
accident I had been having migraines and everything I put in my mouth I
developed sensitivity too, including the kiss. My stomach was no longer working
and eventually I would have starved to death. Now I am working with a naturopath
to fix it. It is helping, but I still hurt. I blame myself. I get angry with
the society. I have no money to deal with the situation yet I must. This is my
therapy. This is why I am careful what I say to others. Maybe if I had let
someone touch me, hug me, love me, teach
me, know me when I was younger, I would know that it would be all okay one
day. Maybe.
The evening was full of mostly gay men, singing. Even though
I have been in the choir such a short time, the impact of being among my brethren
is overwhelming, emotional, and a new necessary ordinary. Today was different
though and not so ordinary. Staff had arranged the chairs in a circle with the
piano in the center so we could see each other and tune. I could put faces to
back of necks. A few seconds before break the director played a few notes of
Oklahoma from the musical of the same name, and 130 gay men broke into a
rousing rendition of the number. I sighed, so
cliché, so beautiful, so poignant, yet so
right on. Later in the practice one of the fellow choir members asked me
why His eye was on the sparrow,
tongue in cheek or not, I smiled. For I
sing because I am happy. I sing because I am free. I am there because I am
free.
The day ends with a slice of pie and a few words of remembrance.
This last paragraph is for you. Any other ordinary day and the words you say,
the actions you do have an effect on the people you meet. For me, it was a
blonde cop, who helped me get out of the road one snowy morning. I never met
him. But his actions, his kind words, led me down a path far deep into the wood
where I heard my first sparrow sing.
This is where I
smile. This is when I give you a hug. This is how I choose to remember. Good
night.
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