For much of my life, I believed that never coming out to my father because of his homophobia prevented me from becoming "whole," but after reading
Tramps Like Us I wonder what that even means. We learn in the first chapter of this gay memoir cum bildungsroman that author Joe Westmoreland's father sexually abused his older sister on a regular basis and started to do the same with his younger one, too.
I wanted him to do to me what he did with them. I don't think I would have minded it as much.
That's quite an admission. It reminded me of something that I learned when I worked at the
National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, a non-profit organization that once staked its reputation on providing scientific information that could be easily understood by the public, and shifted the onus away from the afflicted. For example, did you know that more than half of women who seek treatment for addiction have been sexually or physically abused?
I mention this particular stat because our upbringings--specifically his second-hand trauma--help explain the different paths that Westmoreland and I took despite how much we had in common. We're both members of the same generation and social class who preferred punk and New Wave to disco; even more unusually we both assiduously kept journals, although I was much more likely to write about getting off than getting high. The similarities kept piling up the more I read about who he hung out or slept with, where they went, what he ate and listened to. Despite him falling in love with a sympathetic felon, there's not a lot of drama in Tramps Like Us, although the writing flows simply and hypnotically, a kind of poetry of the quotidian.
Both Westmoreland and I moved far away from our hometowns and fell in love with New York City at first sight
Going to a gay bar in Kansas City felt like doing something nasty in your own backyard with your parents inside watching television.
* * * *
But New York wasn’t like that. It was piled on top of itself instead of spread out. You didn’t need a car to get around. From the minute I arrived I was surrounded by the feeling of life everywhere. It was like I had been plopped down in the middle of a giant school of fish and had to swim fast to keep up.
. . . we disliked gay "clones" in the 70s and rebelled against their look
“Castro Clones” were the gays who wore jeans, Lacoste shirts, and hung out primarily in the Castro District. Their uniform style was a revolt from the fashion of San Francisco’s hippy days, which was still predominant. I told Ali [his non-monogamous longtime companion] that I didn’t want a man bad enough to lose my identity. I hated it that everyone had mustaches so I grew sideburns because no one else wore them. The clones wore tight blue jeans so I wore perma-press slacks. They wore tight T-shirts so I wore button-down-collar dress shirts from thrift stores. I waged my own personal war for individualism. I wore my green iridescent sharkskin suit with pants to match almost every day.
. . . we ended up creating our own families
It was at that moment, in the middle of my crowded living room, when I realized that everyone at this party had one thing in common. We were all refugees from one kind of torment or another and could never go back home. Home was something in the future that had yet to be created, not someplace in the past. I felt like we might never be rich or famous, but at that one moment, when Donna Summer was playing on the stereo and everyone was dancing and singing along, there was a feeling of success. Of victory. We had all come out of our own separate nightmares to a place where just being ourselves was okay, not dangerous. That was a strange new feeling, reason alone to celebrate.
. . . and we watched while AIDS killed people to whom we were closest. But
Westmoreland ended up an HIV positive, former drug addict with a long-term lover and I didn't. He also got his memoir published, taking his spot-on title from a lyric in Bruce Springsteen's "
Born to Run."
Our differences, however, are more instructive. If I had titled my memoir after a song, it probably would have been "
This Must Be The Place" by Talking Heads, after a peripatetic childhood although to this day, I do love a
road trip.
My parents drove to New York City to drop me off at
Columbia in 1971; after graduating from high school two years later, Westmoreland fled Kansas City because he couldn't bear his father's and anger and abuse of his sisters. While I earned a bachelor of arts degree in English, he hitchhiked extensively, living briefly in Miami, New York and New Orleans before finally settling down in San Francisco with a sometime lover but eternal best friend from Kansas City. I stayed in New York for the remainder of my life pursuing a career that never gave me much personal satisfaction while Westmoreland worked only enough to survive, and dreamed of becoming a filmmaker or writer.
I can't decide if Westmoreland led a more interesting life or not before he got clean, around the same time that I began forming my family in
the Pines, but I do recognize that I ended up on the more bourgeois, conventional trajectory thanks to the support of
my parents, as flawed as they may have been in some respects. It's been said that you're judged by the company you keep, and while alcoholism and serious drug use was not unknown among the young (and then older) professionals that I shared houses with for more than 30 years, successful men with enough money to pay $10,000 a summer for a bed by the end, we certainly weren't tying each other off and mainlining heroin. There's even a moment when Westmoreland and his tribe, fully cognizant that HIV is blood-borne and fearful, but not certain that they have been infected, share a needle. WTF?
My father once drove a thousand miles from
El Paso to Kansas City and back just to hear me deliver a talk before an audience of 500 people about an advocacy campaign to raise awareness of the dangers of fortified wine consumption among teens. A friend who read
Homosaic, my unpublished memoir, observed that I was in love with him, a comment that I pooh poohed at the time because we all have our own baggage to carry.
Westmoreland's was a lot heavier than mine.