October 1996
Autumn, cooler and overcast. Received letters from
friends in Chicago. Out of boredom and rebellion I went to a rave
in San Francisco. It took place on one of the piers from which we
had a perfect view of Bay Bridge. Did E. By daylight faces looked
clammy and weary. The limbo continues as I long to take the world
by storm.
I feel different, older, better. This year broke me,
or is it a past I cannot escape that has prepared me? Books continue
to succeed in connecting me to pieces of my history that have occasion
to feel so intensely large. As if I really am back in that room
in that little apartment off Devon and dreaming. As if the dogs
still follow me in the darkness to Zoo Place in Tennessee. Parts
of me remain in the past, while pieces of the past remain in me.
It is a fair exchange. I beg life to continue making a point not
to forget all those otherwise monumental miniscule moments, days
without which the present would not exist. I indulge because this
is my diary.
For the first time in years I long like a teenager for a man to
appease my voracious sexual appetite, and stay for once, stay longer
this time.
We've given our bloodiest, haven't we?
I remember coming to the U.S. in the seventies to
visit with relatives that had already emigrated here. I remember
seeing longhaired men, American Indians, and for the first time
in person blacks. It was fascinating. The architecture, scents we'd
never smelled, words we'd never heard. But we went back to Iran
even though Iran had undergone a revolution, and to war. America
turned again into a faraway novelty, a fantasy. Now that I've lived
here for as long as I have it is Iran that has become the novelty,
the fantasy. And I wonder if I'll ever set foot on Iranian soil
again. See the neighborhood I lived in last as a child, walk on
those streets, step again into those shops, smell those scents,
walk through forgotten doorways.
I will never belong to this country, and I will never fully belong
to that one. As an Assyrian I'll never know what it's like to have
a country, national solidarity, unity. Even while I have lived this
new uninhibited life I have always heard the cultural whisper of
my upbringing in my ears, keeping me from crossing wholly the invisible
line of total abandon.
Still the Assyrian voice vies with the American in me. And I hope
it always does. Always. I cannot stay for too long on either side.
I have duel duties.
I ache from a weekend in San Francisco. Vivian and
I fill the hole that we have in our lives. I wanted a sister, she
a brother. We walked everywhere. My feet are destroyed. Vivian,
who is only seventeen, even got into bars with me. We danced and
were drunk together for the first time. Luay, an Assyrian gentleman,
became our guardian. I met one of Vivian's lesbian sisters, Shamiran,
whom everyone calls Shammi. I also met one of Shammi's friends,
another queer Assyrian who is an immigration lawyer. We ate at an
Arabic restaurant, talked and laughed while watching a very talented
belly dancer. It was the first time that I have been with so many
other gay Assyrians. It was almost overwhelming.
Vivian is a sweetheart. I miss her dearly even now
as I write. Her lionlike hair, her great round brown eyes, her swinging
childlike walk. So free. So small in stature. Born here, raised
here.
San Francisco is crazy. Panhandlers everywhere. Riffraff, culture,
and extravagance intermingled everywhere.
I am sick of men, tired of their leering, their philandering. Rodney
told us he is HIV-positive and we were deeply saddened. He seems
so emotionally shut-off and speaks for the sake of sensationalism.
He says vulgar things, comes off callous. Yet inside there has to
live frailty.
I am tired. I'm going to take a bath.
Had a dream that a strange man kept coming into my
room at night to stab me. I was helpless. Then I was walking on
a wide avenue, naked.
E-mail from friends in Chicago cheer me up.
Dreamed that I was in a forest, in a tree. There were
huge pythons all around me hanging from the branches. I grabbed
one and threw it to the ground and it slithered away.
The days are cooler and sunny. It is a crisp autumn day in California.
Madonna gave birth to a daughter.
Finally at twenty-three regrets have caught up with
me. Eighteen shows its consequences. It's so easy to feel tainted
and I don't know if it's part of being human or in America. Whose
product am I? Because I know I am not original. I ask God to help
me forgive myself and move on. Because when I saw my reflection
in a window tonight I wanted to hold Emil and console him. He feels
quite spent.
In Playwriting I asked two girls to read the lines
of my two gay male characters because girls have musical voices,
which my characters long for. The boys in class seem to have no
animation in their bones. When they were finished reading the rest
of the class applauded. No one else is ever applauded. It's embarrassing,
but deeply, deeply gratifying and flattering.
Lena and my father called me today. They never call. I love them
so much. It made me happy to talk to them, and a little sad as always.
I wish Iran hadn't forsaken them so. If you were to ask me now my
biggest wish isn't to be famous, but for all dispossessed men and
women of Iran and Iraq to be able to return to restored lives.
My one-act "Cabin Fever" is finished for class!
Last weekend when I was sick I got to watch Betty
Davis in "All About Eve". Was she fierce!
Writing continues to satisfy an inner need, my boredom with life.
Money is a slut, too fast for me.
Been reading obsessively. Plays.
Went to church today just so I could spend time with
the family. Heard nothing new, but had an empty feeling as I looked
at the backs of others' heads. I felt empty not just about Assyrians,
but humanity in general. And wondered, What is truth?
Especially in my world.
The day I admit that I'm no good as a writer is the day I'll shoot
myself. Writing is my last dream.
My playwriting instructor tells me to take my one-act to theaters
in San Francisco, and is convinced they'll produce it. I think it
needs work. And time.
I am running out of money and will lock myself in for the next two
weeks, with the exception of the occasional latte.
Talking to Mom-Suzie is both motivational and disheartening.
She gives me that kick I need and without intending it puts me to
shame for having procrastinated in life. She herself has worked
so hard to get to where she is and the things she's overcome surely
would have broken my bones. Her strength is unique. Her Christian
faith immeasurable. She is an Assyrian grandmother and a shrewd
businesswoman.
She tells me the story of the time she was a little girl in a village
in Iran when she spent an hour watching the same ant trying repeatedly
to carry something much bigger than itself up an impossible surface.
And she talked about being in an abusive marriage to my grandfather
for twenty-seven years, longer than I've been alive! How she never
gave up hope and got out, but did more than just survive- she became
an independent woman. She says she could never just sit on her ass,
as she puts it, and receive assistance from the government or her
own children, that she would rather die.
Talking to her I feel spoiled, ashamed for complaining so much.
And about what? Sure, I've had my share of setbacks but none as
tragic as the ones I've created for myself. The past has happened.
The mistakes were made. But I must go on. Stop beating myself up.
I must take extra care. If anything I should be motivated by my
experience, no matter how unpleasant I may think it has been. I'm
good at turning grief into glory.
Alright dreams, get ready to come true!
I can hear the rain outside my window. And there's
another sound I hear tonight, one not as pleasant as the rain. It
is the sound of big disappointment. It is the sound of disenchantment.
I feel the sting. I cannot blame anyone. Feelings I feel I cannot
tell my closest of friends, nor a doctor. No one. Not even myself.
Now begins the grueling process of dealing with facts!
A pact with the self: Never share your joy with your
mother no matter how excited you may be, she will only shoot it
down. I will live under the same roof and keep my passions and interests
a secret.
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