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- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!zazen!anderson
- From: anderson@macc.wisc.edu (Jess Anderson)
- Subject: Re: Letter from my father
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.055342.4959@macc.wisc.edu>
- Sender: news@macc.wisc.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Madison Academic Computing Center, UW-Madison
- References: <1992Nov17.204906.23339@oracle.us.oracle.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 92 05:53:42 GMT
- Lines: 140
-
-
- In article <1992Nov17.204906.23339@oracle.us.oracle.com>
- dgilly@us.oracle.com (Daniel Gilly) writes:
-
- >Yesterday I received a long, surprisingly personal letter
- >from my father, who has recently returned from 5 months in
- >Europe. I thought I would share the relevant part of it,
- >since the topics raised might be of interest to many people
- >here.
-
- I'm certainly glad you did this. I was prompted by it to
- think about my own father, who's been dead for nearly 30
- years, and my mother, who died this past summer, and how
- greatly they contrast one with another in *my own* mind wrt
- my being gay.
-
- >[the letter excerpts and some other things]
-
- >To sum up, I'm amazed to hear that my father is attending
- >PFLAG, apparently on his own initiative. More than a year
- >after I came out to my parents, my father is beginning to
- >reconcile his feelings.
-
- This is indeed good news. Noting that another early
- responder (Ronald Hayden) expresses doubt his parents will
- ever be making these kinds of adjustments, it occurred to me
- that perhaps my mother was something like your father,
- whereas my father was (probably, I really don't know, we
- never discussed it) was perhaps something more like Ronald's
- father, within some limits.
-
- >I'd be happy to hear comments about the above, as well as
- >other people's experiences with their parents' coming to
- >terms.
-
- If you were reading this newsgroup in mid-June this past,
- you would have seen some writing I did about my mother at
- the time of her death. It told how very close we had become
- over the past 17+ years, how keen a fighter she was for LGB
- civil rights, and how few children probably could hope for a
- more loving, more *friendly* parent than she was to me. It's
- possible she knew me much better than I did (or do).
-
- But this was not always so, and for much longer than 17
- years she was far less accepting and far less my friend.
- The situations are quite possibly not completely comparable,
- since a major component of the problem in my case was her
- alcoholism. But I told her I was gay when I was 18 (she
- asked), and we did not really become friends until she quit
- drinking, when I was 40.
-
- My point here is not to recapitulate all that long saga, but
- only to say that one year in, that is, when I was 19, she
- was as yet *very* far from where your father seems to be,
- Dan. My further point, then, is that from the sound of his
- letter, your father is making what could be seen as a rather
- rapid adjustment, which I'm sure would delight anyone to
- whom it happened.
-
- I know it's a homely old chestnut, but patience is one of
- the most trying of all virtues. The more so, it seems to
- me, when we are young and full of the excitement and the
- ferment of all these big changes in our lives, yet bogged
- down in the dreadful inertia of the life around us, which
- for so many of us seems a not unfair description of the
- parental inclination to consider us children way beyond the
- appropriate span of years. Seen in retrospect, though, and
- for me there begins to be rather a lot of retrospect :-),
- things actually moved along all right, since it all came out
- well in the end, and opened up what seems to me (again in
- retrospect) an especially magical and rewarding period,
- itself now a cherished memory.
-
- By contrast, I imagine not a scintilla of a comparable
- experience would have been possible with my father, even if
- he had not been totally destroyed by booze. Give or take a
- couple months, my dad's life overlapped mine by 28 years (he
- was just my present age when he died, a totally wasted and
- broken person, in a state hospital, a real 19th-century
- snake pit in Jacksonville, Illinois).
-
- He wrote a diary in the madhouse, a really amazing document.
- It took me the better part of a week to read it. But the
- quality about him, as revealed in it, was that he had not
- the slightest hint of metaphor or any comparable heightening
- of experience or language. Yet he was very intelligent,
- highly articulate, and consummately careful in everything
- he said there (the writing itself is remarkable, very tiny
- lettering, all in caps, less than 1/16" high, written in
- very sharp hard pencil from exactly the edge of the sheet
- perfectly straight across to exactly the other edge, with
- almost no space between the lines). He was, in life, up
- to the time his descent became inevitable, an engineer,
- designing industrial lighting systems, and completely
- self-trained (he grew up in the coal mines of southwestern
- Pennsylvania).
-
- I have sat many times in the Lyric Theater, the opera house
- in Chicago, an immense art deco auditorium, all aglow with
- the golden light that in fact my father designed and
- installed (the house lights, not the stage lights). Yet
- from his diary it became obvious that it was only the
- technical problem that in any way engaged him; it was *just*
- engineering, not art, not design, not enjoyment, not magic.
- It was *these* fixtures, that much wire, so much current,
- these faders, etc. No golden glow; that effect couldn't
- have interested him less.
-
- I very much doubt he would ever have comprehended me in
- any meaningful way, a dreamy musician, a passionate lover
- of men, an insatiable seeker for yet *more*, whatever
- it was more *of*.
-
- In writing of his two marriages (by that time both long
- since dissolved) and of his ten children (three by my mother
- and seven by my stepmother), it was clear none of those
- twelve people was an actual person to him; at best, we were
- furniture in the chambers of his private horrors. Although
- he was not a nice man, indeed he was a real louse in a lot
- of ways, it's impossible not to feel sympathy for anyone as
- bereft as he was of anything warm or soft or kind or
- comforting to offset the pity he felt for himself.
-
- I was *very* surprised, some three or four years after he
- died, to discover that he was bisexual, or at least he would
- freely have sex with people of either gender. If it were
- possible to roll back time, there are several conversations
- I might like to have with him. I'm quite certain he never
- loved anyone, unless it was his own mother, who died when he
- was seven. But somehow, I wonder if, given the chance, I
- might find out that the other fifty years of his life were
- a tragedy of shutting out everything good because, of course,
- there are few vulnerabilities as acute as beauty, unless it
- would be being abandoned utterly at seven.
-
- --
- [Jess Anderson <> Madison Academic Computing Center <> University of Wisconsin]
- [Internet: anderson@macc.wisc.edu <-best, UUCP:{}!uwvax!macc.wisc.edu!anderson]
- [Room 3130 <> 1210 West Dayton Street / Madison WI 53706 <> Phone 608/262-5888]
- [---------> Discrimination, Bigotry, and Hate are not Family Values <---------]
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