April 1997
It is morning, cold and windy, and I worry about my Button Quails
that are in a cage outside.
Last night my restlessness was somewhat alleviated when Kim picked
me up and I had someone to interact with, react to. I became alive
and charming. Still, an air of boredom followed me since it had
earlier permeated my body. We met Vivian and her sister Shammi at
Diva. I noted that Shammi is very lesbian-sexy! If I were a woman
I would melt for her. Her hair is cropped short and highlighted
in places in bold yellow streaks. Her skin is swarthy and her smile
brilliant and wickedly charming. Her eyes are penetrating and beautifully
Assyrian, Arab, of a place that has not existed for some time. Her
sense of humor is genuine and successful.
Mom's calling for me to make Turkish coffee and put on tea so that
we may have a few minutes together. She loves it when I fix the
coffee and serve it. I think it entertains her for the fifteen minutes
that it all takes. I suppose it's all she's got, really. These minutes
when she's successfully drawn me out of my room where she complains
I spend far too much time reading, writing
Just finished packing for my trip to L.A. with Vivian, Kim, and
Jennifer who insisted I go with them even though for days I complained
about my finances! Nothing like packing to remind one just how old
and outdated one's clothes are. But I tried to remain chipper, put
on disco, and carried on. Holes in sleeves, snags in shirts, faded
socks, twisted seams, stories in fabric of places I may or may not
have been. So, diary, are you coming with me?
Alone and with you I feel the warmth of the wine, the joy of being
in Los Angeles. I feel like a child who has snuck away, mischievous,
the moment palpable around him, emotions new and exciting inside
him. The drive down in Kim's convertible was great fun. I wore one
of Kim's diaphanous scarves and sunglasses. We smoked, talked, laughed.
The coast darkened as we neared L.A. The ocean a vast black wall
to our right. One thing is for certain- well, two: sleep and this
imagined and sublime kiss.
It's good to see Eli. The last time I saw her was two years ago
when she visited Chicago from her native country, Norway. It's hard
to imagine that we went to high school together for a year and that
we've kept in touch all this time through letters, so many letters.
Now Eli lives here in L.A. with her boyfriend Jim and is studying
film editing. I'm truly proud of her, and a little envious as she
has always done the right thing.
At breakfast I joked, 'Have I aged?'
"You look the same," Eli answered in her usual unaffected
Scandinavian way.
In the afternoon Vivian, Kim, and I hopped into the convertible
once more and headed into West Hollywood, sunny, open, and gay.
We had cocktails at a gay bar on Santa Monica Boulevard where Vivian
entertained us with her usual delightful and hilarious stories,
gestures, and facial expressions. The French doors of the bar opened
right onto the sidewalk where we gazed passersby, the vodka tonics
we sipped making us now lightheaded and giddy.
I suddenly spotted a man who looked faintly familiar, and said,
'Was that the guy from "Caroline in the City"?'
The girls encouraged me to find out. I hesitated a moment but Kim
and Vivian were adamant. So, I got up and followed. I found it ironic
that years before I had met his current costar Lea Thompson in the
shop where I worked in Chicago.
I approached the actor who strolled with four other handsome men
and called out, 'Excuse me, excuse me.'
They turned in unison.
'I'm sorry to stop you like this, but aren't you the fellow from
the show?'
Now all five men grinned, their faces shining in the Southern California
sun.
"Yes, I am," smiled the blond actor.
'I just want to tell you you're very funny. You're just great! You
really do steal the show,' I found myself spouting off easily, comfortably.
Now the actor removed his sunglasses, extended his hand, and asked
my name.
'Emil. Emil Keliane,' I said cheerily as we shook hands. I turned
to the other men and said hi.
"I'm Malcolm Gets. Thank you," said the actor warmly.
And that was it. We parted, all of us still smiling, free, somehow
connected.
Saturday. Back in Modesto.
We were walking along Venice Beach enjoying the sun one early afternoon,
browsing through the many small shops there, when a staff member
from the show "Ellen" gave us tickets to the taping that
was to take place that very afternoon. Not having any particular
plans for the rest of that day the three of us looked at each other,
shrugged our shoulders, hopped into Kim's convertible and headed
to Disney Studios.
While we waited outside in a line made of a variety of people, and
many lesbians, the actors who portray Ellen's parents happened to
walk by. I instinctively began applauding them as I have a love
and a respect for actors and artists, and soon the others in line
did the same. The two gracious actors nodded their heads humbly
and waved at us.
Kim, Vivian, and I were seated in the front row where our excitement
inside the studio began to gather momentum. We smiled at each other,
spoke very little, and simply took in the set, the lights, the cameras,
and the few crewmembers who buzzed about preparing for the taping.
Once all the audience members were seated, an unseen DJ played funk
music and introduced each actor who took the set dancingly. We applauded
and howled. There was the kind of energy in the studio that was
definitely charged and contagious.
Ellen made a short speech in which she thanked her crew and cast
for a wonderful season to which this was to be the last episode.
Now Ellen accepted questions and comments from the studio audience.
I was quite content just observing when Kim nudged me, urging me
to, "Say something. You love Ellen."
I raised my hand. Ellen turned to me and pointed, "Yes, over
here."
I found myself speaking out loud, 'I think I speak for everyone
when I say that you guys are so funny and talented. Just fabulous.
We love you.'
The audience applauded in agreement.
"Thank you," Ellen said, then asked, "What is your
name?"
'Emil.'
"Well, Emil seems to be the spokesperson for our audience tonight,"
Ellen quipped. There was laughter. The other cast members seemed
tickled. Ellen and I went back and forth for a bit; she asked where
I am visiting from. When I mentioned that I consider Chicago my
home Jeremy Piven mouthed to me that he loves Chicago. We gave each
other the thumbs up.
The taping itself was a mesmerizing experience. Every scene was
shot twice, the second take invariably the more dazzling one, funnier,
better. The actors seemed to hit every note perfectly. The crew
moved quickly, efficiently. It was awe-inspiring.
In between set changes we were entertained by a lanky emcee who
told really bad jokes and performed great tricks. During one particular
lull the emcee announced that he was now holding a dance contest,
and would pick three random contestants from the audience. We cheered
and stamped our feet. The unseen DJ again played some dance tunes
and the seats began to rock.
Two boisterous young women were called down by the emcee where they
joined him in front of the audience.
"And the third contestant isss
Emil, our spokesperson!"
screamed the emcee.
Shyly, reluctantly I stood up and walked to the front.
"The person who dances with the most effort wins," declared
the emcee.
I remember looking over at Vivian and cracking up. Vivian and Kim
remained in their seats with their mouths hanging wide open, disbelieving
as I that this was actually happening.
Suddenly The Village People's "YMCA" aired on every speaker
and we began to dance. I looked directly into the audience, extended
my arms out, snapped my fingers, and shook my toosh. Two cute gay
guys smiled in my direction from the blur and boom of the studio
audience.
When I looked over at the emcee and the other dancers I realized
that all three were engaged in a dance that was led by the emcee.
I, too, tried to dance as they were but was suddenly overcome by
an instinct to move into other directions. I found myself dancing
away from them, moving rhythmically to the left, shaking my shoulders
at the spectators who now laughed uproariously and seemed to scream!
Of course, their response fueled my own enthusiasm and when I spotted
the steps that led up through the hundreds of seats I took them.
Next thing I knew I was propelled upward by the heated applause
and the howling that almost drowned the music, shimmying up the
steps. Now the audience was almost frantic. Having reached the very
top I threw my arms up in the air, turned around, shook my butt
one last time, and began to head down again to join the others.
And as soon as I did the music stopped. It was perfect!
Vivian said later that the lesbians behind her were chanting, "Go,
Emil! Go, Emil!" Kim said she couldn't believe her eyes, that
the next thing she knew I was all over the studio, and that it was
all very surreal for her.
The emcee, a young, goofy, and handsome man, picked up his microphone
and began the judging process. He held his hand over one of the
girls' head. The audience applauded, as did I. Then he did the same
with the other young woman. The audience had a similar response.
And lastly, he said, "And Emil
"
Here, the entire place was actually roaring, the floor reverberated
with applause. The emcee extended his cheek to be kissed by the
girls, and when he turned to shake my hand I, too, placed a kiss
on his cheek.
When I went back to my seat the wonderful lesbians sitting next
to me shook my hand, "Good job!"
During the rest of the taping various crewmembers would look up
at me and wink, or smile. It was very warm and humorous.
I noticed that Jeremy Piven kept staring at Vivian who seemed oblivious
to his many glances. Later, we laughed about this.
Once the filming was over and we were walking out of the studio
that was now quiet and emptying, one of the ushers turned to me
and said, "You stole the show." I thanked him. An elderly
woman also complemented me on my "performance".
Kim and Vivian were charged. I was in a daze.
The very next morning we were waiting for a table at a West Hollywood
restaurant and stood outside on the sidewalk smoking and talking
when a small dear woman came out of the restaurant and walked right
up to me.
"Are you Emil?" she asked.
I did not recognize her and wondered how she knew me, but answered,
'Yes, I am.'
"You were great last night!" she said. I then made the
connection that perhaps she was one of the audience members.
I thanked her warmly and asked her name.
"My name is Ellen, too," she said, "I'm one of the
writers on the show."
My friends and I looked at each other in disbelief that this wonderful
woman would have taken the time to come outside and tell me all
this. I hugged her.
She said that fun stuff happened all the time during rehearsals
and tapings but, "never anything like that."
It was all drastically magical.
When I called Chuck in Chicago and told him this story he said that
I am blessed with a "circus life!"
One evening I got to hang out with Eli and Jim alone. We had dinner,
sipped wine, and became increasingly nostalgic talking about mutual
friends back in Chicago. Eli suddenly got up from the dinner table
and ran into another room and fetched a box of old photographs.
We spent hours rummaging through old pictures from the start of
our friendship, when we were still only teenagers. There was Maggie,
Lisa, Brandon, Marcelo, Rachel, Bryan, Gay Pride on Halsted Street,
St. Gregory high school, everything! So many memories of what seemed
like moments ago, not years.
Last night I went to The Brave Bull with Jennifer, a classmate from
Playwriting. Gary was bartending and was as sweet as always. Ran
into other friends and acquaintances, but wanted mostly to see Shammi
who was in town from San Francisco. She is more than sexy. I think
I'm in love with her! The surprise of surprises was when I walked
into a different part of the bar and discovered Shammi and Jennifer,
who is "straight", making out. We brought the party back
to my house since mom was up in Marin to work at the family rest
home. Incredible, Shammi and Jennifer spent the night together and
left before I woke up. I, on the other hand, masturbated mutually
with Eno, a guy I know from the college. He's not terribly attractive
but has a certain undeniable charm about him. I enjoyed watching
him take his pants off. His orgasm was quite noisy, heartfelt. His
entire body shook. He wanted to go further but I did not. And when
he wanted to spend the night, cuddle, and caress, I wanted nothing
but escape. I cannot go through these tender gestures with mere
strangers. I save them for the one I will love. And I know Eno,
he can do this with anyone. I wanted nothing more than to be alone,
to sleep alone.
What was I thinking? How could I so blindly chain myself and call
the chain "mother"?
Why am I often unhappy? It must be the smoking and drinking, this
unhealthy diet, and all the immature people in my life. It's time
to get on the one-day-at-a-time regimen. It is all in my hands,
and I'm reaching.
My loneliness drives me into desperate friendships that aren't
good for me. Rodney is back from San Francisco. He couldn't make
a go of it there and I could tell he was ashamed. I tried to make
him feel better about having tried to start a life there, but he
was drunk. I feel a peculiar bond with Rodney that I have never
had with anyone else. I am brutally honest with him and it seems
that we have a mutual respect for each other. I'm glad he's back.
Becoming Americanized as I have has induced a split in my personality
that to this day is in conflict with my Assyrian upbringing.
I'd like to believe that in this world there are no "foreigners",
that we are all inhabitants of the same, singular planet. I know
deep in my heart that borders are just an illusion, though we insist
on them.
I want freedom. For others and myself.
I want gay marriage to be legalized.
I want to be able to go back to Iran and say a proper goodbye to
it, to see my cousins, particularly the ones who were born after
we left.
I want to be able to provide for my parents, retire them, give back
to them for everything they have given up for us.
I want each word in the English language to stick and never leave
me.
I want to relearn Farsi and write letters to my maternal grandfather
who lives in Tehran, showing my love.
I wonder just how many times the word "want" appears in
my journal.
On the laborious bike ride home against the wind I made up songs
and poems in my head. Something about a lover who never makes promises,
just does things. And soon I wanted to be that kind of person. No
talk. No promises. No more resolutions. Just action!
One night in Chicago, Melisa called and said, "Meet me outside."
We sat on the hood of my Caprice, in the humidity, under the light
of the street lamp and talked of the future. I was obsessed with
the future. The future is illusive and dangerous and frightening,
but it is a reality no one can avoid. I just wanted to know that
I'd be O.K., taken care of, self-sufficient, content even. I am
still terrified of the future. I'm afraid of loneliness, of old
age, of money, and of violence.
Patience. Love. And I must be understanding of my family's shortcomings.
There is an Iranian boy at the college I talk to sometimes. We
formed a friendship at the computer lab this afternoon when we worked
side by side on our assignments. I speak broken Farsi with him and
when I cuss he dies laughing. He says my Farsi is formal. I remember
another Iranian kid in Tehran saying the same thing, that I spoke
like textbooks. Mehrdad is his name, the literal translation of
which means- the sun gave. Given by the sun. He wears his hair long
in a ponytail and has huge almond-shaped brown eyes. They are warm
and friendly, smiling. He is just twenty-one years old. His mother
is Assyrian and his father Persian. Mehrdad has only been in the
States for one year and speaks English beautifully with a charming
Iranian accent. It seemed that everything he told me this afternoon
surprised me, about which we laughed a great deal.
I saw Eno on campus. It wasn't uncomfortable. We only waved and
smiled.
While riding my bike in the sun I became certain that I would never
reach a finish in my pursuits for the perfect life. Sure, I'm better
as a person than I used to be, stronger. But it seems that self-improvement
is perpetual. I have a lot of work, yet. When it comes to living
there's forever room for renovation, rehabilitation.
I own this fear I possess of making decisions. In the process of
losing my inhibitions I am cautious not to lose my compassion and
thoughtfulness.
I tried to write an ending to "Third Rail" and even became
emotional doing so, pacing the room, speaking out loud the lines
even as I wrote them, but I was very much conscious the whole time
that mom was in the house somewhere and this halted my creativity.
I need space, privacy, meditation, patience, forgiveness, and courage
just to write a line, or two. It's just not that easy for me. I
must have a sense of adventure in writing.
Noon. The day is a warm clear suburban heaven. Love hasn't found
me but the inevitable thought has- that if I were more ambitious
or smarter I would have more security and comfort in life, more
hope. Money! I may be broke but I am not broken, yet!
At a friend's barbeque I drink margueritas and am shocked to find
I am again socializing with people I swore I would not see anymore.
And I am struck by a certain sorrow for a while, and finally an
angry compromise. Always settling for less because I feel I do not
belong, belong, belong.
Dad called the other afternoon and the entire thing was anticlimactic.
Sometimes it's like I'm thrown into a life raft with a complete
stranger, a man whose language I do not speak.
I had a dream in which there were baby pythons everywhere, in houseplants,
on bookshelves, even moving inside pictures and paintings on the
wall. The snakes were for the most part tame, except one, which
bit me. Always snakes in my dreams.
Addictions persist. Luckily creative ideas persist also.
I miss Anais. I know that I must resume reading The Diaries again
when I can afford them. It's hard to admit, but I know that my own
diary becomes exciting while I am reading Anais Nin. She inspires
me.
Dr. Elam pulled me aside in U.S. History, looked at me with those
warm smiling eyes of his, and said that I'm very bright but probably
prefer to party than to study! He smiled at me knowingly, but without
judgment. A beautiful man, Dr. Elam. White beard, round spectacles,
wavy gray hair that falls to his shoulders. Dedicated to teaching,
to informing, to giving us chunks of U.S. history that were otherwise
left out of our textbooks in high school.
'Sometimes I just feel like dropping out and writing plays on the
road,' I confessed to him.
"At least get your bachelor's first," he advised tenderly.
He then told me about one of his own daughters who struggles with
formal education and whose interests and passions lie elsewhere.
I had a dream that Barbra Streisand and I were walking along a
Manhattan avenue. We never spoke and simply walked arm in arm, in
silence.
In another dream I stood alongside myself in the future. I was older
and stood looking into a mirror, wearing only a navy blue towel
around my waist. I was not a diarist in the dream, in the future,
but a cartoonist!
I spent an erotic afternoon in the park exchanging ideas and stories
with Scott, a straight acquaintance. His long brown hair fell lightly
about his face, his imperfect nose charming. Old tall trees rose
about us. Nearby the Greek stage remained empty and silent, as did
the many narrow isles of seats. Across the street charming A-frame
houses, quiet now in the Evanstonian afternoon. Here Scott and I
discussed the politics of sex and our own desire to overcome our
shame. We both agreed that everyone has as much right to free and
protected sex as to filtered water. That sex for sport, when performed
with honesty and responsibility, does not render a person unemotional
or unintelligent. Men and women alike have a right to define their
own pleasures and needs, and how to fulfill them. I enjoy Scott
because I feel that as a heterosexual male he does not live and
have sex as though he were oppressed or the oppressor. He is liberated
and on the grass where we sat talking he admitted he enjoys the
act of giving women pleasure without pretense or false promises.
He said that often the women he sleeps with own their sexuality
and do not care to become attached just to shirk the shame of spontaneity.
I knew what he meant by this as I myself have struggled for years
with this shame, this need to associate sex with love so that it
will mean something more, something noble. Growing up gay in Iran
and being Assyrian I assumed that wanting men meant that I was like
women, if not a "woman" myself, and I adopted her sentiments,
her guilt, as well as the same pressures regarding relationships.
Later that afternoon I thought of Karen and her sexual plight and
pleasures, and called her. I told her about my conversation with
Scott in the hopes of setting the two of them up. But Karen was
not interested and said she was only into, not her husband, but
"the love of my life"- a gorgeous Bay Area man.
'I guess I wanted to live vicariously through you,' I found myself
realizing.
"That's exactly it," Karen exclaimed, "But I didn't
want to say it."
'Darling, you know you can say anything to me,' I said, almost pleadingly.
She said, "You want to impress him by bringing him a woman."
Mom received a letter from Iran. Since our move to the States my
cousin has had a daughter who recently celebrated her eleventh birthday.
Eleven?! Has it been that long? In pictures that were included with
the handwritten letter little Leona posed proudly in front of her
cake, smiling sweetly into the lens. And as I looked at these distant
snapshots I wondered if this Assyrian little girl ever wonders about
us, her many cousins who moved away long before she was even conceived.
Does she ask many questions about us? Does she dream to come here
as I did when I was even smaller than she? I want to reach out to
her even now. I want to meet her and be with her, tickle and kiss
her, talk with her, walk the fading streets of Urmia with her. Tell
her great stories of frivolous Americans! This is one of those moments
when memories and feelings of Iran crash and mix in America making
my heart beat strangely, as if there are two hearts in my chest.
It's raining now. It's been months since the last rain. I love the
sound of water rushing through the gutters in the eaves. The loud
clink and clank of water and metal. The sounds tonight are comforting.
I feel like an infant who is reunited with the heartbeat of his
mother, in the womb.
The rice is on the stove, the chicken on the grill, laundry, and
homework. My attention is all over the place. I think of mom and
all those years when she was much younger and raising her two little
boys, keeping a home, being a wife to a man she did not know or
love. It all makes me crazy.
A Japanese fabric designer is inspired by the sun. How it gives
us light and shadows. This the designer mimics in pleats. There
is so much art everywhere in the world. So much imagination and
creative productivity. Trial and error. Accidental discoveries.
Successes! I want so much to be a part of it.
Art, a communication of souls. The reconciliation of men.
Each time I walk away from people I take with me doubt. It's as
if I were collecting everyone else's insecurities and taking them
with me. Carrying their weight in my belly.
Had a fantastic dream in which I was aboard a space shuttle, which
took off with great force. We made it safely into space.
I'm on an unhealthy kick. A binge mindset. I want to drink, drink,
drink, drink! It's very sad, and it scares me. But it's what I want.
Is there an alcoholic inherent in me?
My dilemma seems to be a lack of balance. If I were more focused,
dedicated, hardworking I would allow myself the pleasure of intoxication
and frivolity. I am experiencing shame concerning Saturday night.
I feel that my life's going nowhere while time itself is at full
speed ahead, leaving me older and bitter, aware of my flagrant misadventures.
Lovely receptions at parties do not fill the hole in my life. Kisses
and merriment do not make impending decisions go away. The magic
of love does not make disappear the realities of responsibility.
My wardrobe bores me.
Sex bores me.
I am failing each societal category.
I find sexy the man who isn't.
I will never write a novel.
Thank God for lesbians!
Poetry
I've just had a pleasurable orgasm.
Spent the day drinking on campus with Rodney. When he got sick I
nursed him in the restroom. The whole thing was humorous.
Mom-Suzie called the other afternoon saying that she wants mom and
I to move up to Marin, so that she may rent out this house and make
ends meet. But she's worried about mom's reaction and doesn't bring
it up with her. So, the responsibility has been handed down to me
for the time being.
As I worked on "Third Rail" this afternoon I found that
Philip opened up to me a little more. As a character I got some
hints as to who he is and where he will go in the play. Philip is
difficult for me to figure out as he is a white heterosexual male.
Together in a room we'd be silent. Cutting good lines out of the
play is painful.
As I move through life I look about me and see many traps, which
ironically I have set for myself. I see also that I've been quite
cunning in this. My extremes are exhausting.
My play is a tempest of jet ink and red pen markings!
Nothing like a reality check in a conversation with my aunt Jackie
who advises me to place my creative passions on the back burner
and pursue something lucrative, like medicine, computers, engineering!
The only e-mail I receive from Marcelo is a forward, a petition.
Nothing emotional. Nothing personal. Sometimes I can't help but
question my ties. Where's the experience in friends who are totally
like us? And where's the pleasure in those who aren't?
Alcoholic tendencies get the better of me. Even as we speak I'm
failing. Thought Modesto would save me from myself. I was naïve.
I was mistaken. Will I win over the temptation tomorrow?
Instead of completing "Third Rail" I partied. Masked
my fatigue and disappointment with pot and alcohol. God, why do
I feel as though I missed my train? That it's too late for me. That
I've been left behind. That life and success wait for other young
men and women who deserve them more than I do.
I'm smoking like I don't love myself.
The nausea I am experiencing is not from the alcohol and the bad
pot that was sprinkled with hash. This sickness is from another
uneventful night in the horrid little town of Riverbank with friends
I thought I had sworn off. I spent the night mostly outside under
the moon and the stars beating myself up for subjecting myself to
such mediocrity. Where was the charm, the warm conversation, the
wine, laughter? And why was I hanging out with guys that got so
drunk and so needlessly angry they pulled the car to the side of
the dark desolate road and tackled a lone innocent mailbox? Somehow
in an attempt to improve my life I have run into chaos, feeling
stuck within a wheel that's out of control, trying to inwardly salvage
scraps of a stronger self, flashes of an industrious self. But I
know it is myself who robs me of productivity. It is the addict
who switches decisions and conclusions in the night, somewhere between
sobriety and intoxication, between power and weakness. I break my
own rules, challenging myself. It is not Modesto that's at fault,
it is not Chicago to be blamed for corrupting me, swaying my convictions.
It is me, me, me! Not dad, not mom, not lack of space and money,
not heterosexuality and brutality, not America, not Iran, not AIDS,
not anyone. But me. I am as of now and officially taking responsibility
for all my shortcomings. I am starting to think that "trying"
is an illusion, a distraction. What I have so far kept nebulous
I am finally ready to admit to and be rid of.
I had a dream a few nights ago that some men, children, and women
were exiled from society- driven from the civilized world into a
marsh, a forest. I was one of these outcasts. Dispossessed we sought
shelter in this vast and wild landscape. I climbed a tree that swayed
precariously. Below an alligator charged at someone. I thought the
tree would betray me and break. Soon we were surrounded by all sorts
of wild animals. A giraffe nipped at my foot, demanded attention.
I kicked it as the tree swung dangerously about.
Without this inherent sense of drama I would not be able to write.
I left because I suddenly could not stand to be in Michael's living
room, with others, and in this town. I left to save my individuality.
I grabbed my bag and simply walked out. I heard Michael ask Stephanie
where I was going. On the bike ride home I promised myself never
to compare myself to Michael again. I have so much more talent,
potential, energy! I left because I feel finished there. I left
because there are beliefs I hold fervently. I feel such rage, but
know I have to remain patient with Modesto, with mom, with school,
with society, with myself.
It's got to be a control issue. I can't change my parents' mind
about homosexuality and how it applies to me, so I make it a point
to try and win others over, to correct them, to enlighten them.
And most chronically to make them like me.
The impossibility of my mother ever transcending her phobia gives
me an upper hand I'd rather not have. To know she lacks the intelligence,
and original thought. I will always carry the wish for my mother's
acceptance with me. Why should it be hardship that makes us stronger
and not felicity? I think of countless teenagers that suffer needlessly
because of homophobia. I think of Grace's brother who committed
suicide needlessly.
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