Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Citizens

I imagine it's true that the gay community must define itself, must set itself apart and stake a claim in the public sphere, much as the African American community did during its civil rights struggle. And the forms with which that definition takes on, how the gay community stakes this claim follow in practice and form. But just following form, practicing the same practices is not enough to ensure success.

But one real roadblock, one mountainous challenge exists that I feel has yet to be addressed and may well be proving itself to be a major reason why the issue of civil rights for gay and lesbians can not and will not achieve a valorized station in the public sphere; that is, the greater gay and lesbian community continues, in more cases than not, to demonstrate and provide political spectacle in a way that is un-relatable to the majority of Americans.

While unfortunate, the fact remains that the Gay and Lesbian community PRIDEs itself in how it differs. And while there are wonderful intellectual arguments for any one groups’ right and responsibility to celebrate their uniqueness, the spectacle of flamboyantly pushing sexuality, in any form, is not viewed by those who own the public sphere as normal.

The African American community throughout the depression and into the early days of the Civil Rights Movement were seen by the majority of White America as outsiders. These people characterized in media and film as poor, different, ape like; less-than human. So the thought of extending basic rights, human rights was not so much foreign but rarely even considered. But as the dawn of the Civil Rights Movement crested upon our nation a new light shown upon this community; a light revealing in the media a real human existence. The existence of a God fearing people with lives, families, hopes and dreams not unlike that of White America – the then dominant voice in the public and political sphere. Sans the color of their skin, the African American community demonstrated and provided spectacle showing themselves to be the “same-as” those who already enjoyed Civil Rights.

While the gay and lesbian community desperately wishes to parallel their struggle with that of the African American in the twentieth century they can not do so as long as they do not, on some real level, provide a fundamental foundation that allows the general public to identify with them. Network entertainment has helped to some degree with shows such a Will & Grace and Queer as Folk but still, by showing a very real and sensationalist side of Gay life – the character of the “flamboyant” gay man (Jack - Will & Grace) or the seedy nightlife at Queer as Folks’ Babylon nightclub - miss the mark, especially when they emphasize these aspects of Gay Culture instead of the more normative side of life for many Gay and Lesbians. A real challenge for Gay America but one in which the struggle must come to grips with.

A past aquantience's description of the 2004 fall protest at the Georgia State Capital is an excellent example of how providing the spectacle of family, church, and a more publicly normative gay community helps to silence opposition groups. When those you oppose demonstrate the same values, look the same, and are presented as “normal” members of society, those members of the public who might otherwise disregard the gay and lesbian community’s right to exist, based solely on their inability to identify with them, now begin to see these people not as outsiders but as citizens in a classical Roman sense. That is, as part of their own public and political sphere – Citizens.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Be romantically self destructive with me

pablo : :

Lets become destructively innocent together
lets break each other's hearts
let's kiss our lips dry until the dawn
let's fall asleep in each other's arms

Picasso once said
"What's the point of doing anything
if you only know how it's gonna end up?"
Picasso the painted puts us in our place

Be romantically self destructive with me

Let's pretend we really know each other
Let's pretend that we're not just doing this for ourselves
Don't you know that you're the most important person in your life

Be romantically self destructive with me

Don't think too hard tonight
Don't feel any guilt by holding me
Don't overanalyze the situation
Picasso is right

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Adeo sic velox

rushing forward at the speed of light
fleeting, feeling the warmth of the sun
hurling earthward, spiraling to my doom
i am Icarus

Thursday, December 13, 2007

What I've been up to

So I've been on sabbatical for the last 6 months or so and honestly it's been amazing. I'm very centered and happy and have been busier now than I was before. not sure how that works but it's how it is.

So anyway, I've gotten into doing short films and filming some of my friends who do drag. If you are interested go check out my YouTube channel at Christopher Scott's YouTube.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Pic from Alaska

Here are some pictures I took down on the Kenai in Alaska.

My Live Journal

Monday, July 16, 2007

GMWAOAMTAIMAANICR

I've put some thoughts together on it all. We as Gay men have a limited population of other Gay men to choose a prospective partner/boyfriend/companion-for-the-even

ing from. The theoreticians will have us believe that 10% (.01) of the population is Gay so we'll start there. 10% of 300,000,000 (population of the US) is 30,000,000. Half of those are lesbians so... 15M Gay men in the US. Of that population how many of you out there are actually out? So let's say that narrows the field to perhaps 7% (.007) of the population (conservatively). Of this number how many of these are you attracted to? Now, this is a subjective number - we each have our own thoughts on attractiveness; our own types. Now for me it's fairly limited. I like white guys - lean, fit, preferably smooth or with little body hair (though that's changing somewhat) - typically late teens to twenty-somethings. So let's now say my number of Gay-men-who-are-out-and-my-type is about half of this number so one half of .007 is .0035 of any available male population, at best.

BUT... what about those guys who are already married, partnered, or otherwise in a committed relationship? Luckily that's a fairly low percentage to whittle off of the total - say 30% . So 70% ending in the percentage of Gay-men-who-are-out-are-my-type-are-into-m

e-and-are-not-in-committed-relationships (GMWAOAMTAIMAANICR) equal to .000245.

So with the male population of the US being 150M or so and GMWAOAMTAIMAANICR at .000245 the target population is now approximately 36,750 men in the entire US. Seems pretty good right? Well, I would really like to date a local guy. Lucky for me I live in Atlanta. So... Atlanta = 5M people so 2.5M men. .000245 of this number is 612.5 guys.

Wow, I'm excited! 612.5 Gay-men-who-are-out-are-my-type-and-are-into-me! Woot! There is always a but though...

This 612 guy population here in Atlanta is cool in terms of hooking up and stuff. But not all of those guys want to hook up and honestly I don't always want to hook up. How many of these guys want a relationship? Or to date? Do I want these things?

So okay, my percentage of possible prospects is at this point just .0035. So I select a cute guy, one from my population, sitting near the bar - What are the chances he's into me? My experience shows that only about 10% of the twenty-something population is into "older guys" - a title I carry proudly. So my percent of Gay-men-who-are-out-are-my-type-and-are-into-me goes down to .00035 of the male population.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Something about me

I’m 41 years old. Well, 42 this summer but as a gay man I’m holding onto 41 as long as possible. Or was that 24? Yes, 24. What an amazing age that seems to be.

I don’t remember much of 24 anymore and it’s not from some early form of senility, though some might argue otherwise. It seems more from the fact that 24 is not just 18, um 17 years ago but a whole life away. A straight life; a life with a wife, two daughters, a dog, a cat, some gold fish, car payments, a mortgage, and working the 9 to 5 in not so shinny black dress shoes and all too often a tie.

I was never truly that person. It was the expected thing. It was the normal thing. It was safe.

Safe. So much focus there for me; perhaps for us all. It was 1974 when I discovered my sexuality and fully nine years later before I accepted it internally. 1983, Fag, Gay-Cancer, AIDS, Expectations. There was a lot to feel safe about deeply stowed away behind my white picket fence and my two weeks of summer vacation.

The early 80’s and it’s realization that AIDS was real, here, and not going away was a scary time for many – unless you were straight. Oh, and not a heroin addict. Well, I hated needles anyway, how hard is it to set aside this inner self. This anomaly of life; I’m sure all men feel this way, have this attraction. Right? It natural. You’re okay, you’re straight; safe – I’m safe.

Safe. I hate that word now. I want to jump out of airplanes, ride motorcycles, dance until 5 am on a Wednesday, buy day-old bread, color outside the lines. I want to be… me - or who I would have been.

I have a boyhood friend - actually my first lover - who, at age 18 died face down in the living room of some rented beach-front condo in South Florida. Heroin and cocaine. An overdose. A party gone wrong. Maybe it was a hookup. Maybe it was a trick. It’s unclear. But for me it was the clincher. That was me; or would have been if I was out and in the scene. I never had a chance to say goodbye. I guess that’s the way it always is. I never told him how much his laughter lightened my heart. I was off at college with a girlfriend and a 1 year old daughter back home. The clincher; AIDS, drugs, sex - he was gone and I was - safe.

I told my wife and family I was gay in the fall of 2005 shortly after my 40th birthday. Lots of support from several new gay friends I had made in Atlanta. A real family I was to discover. My real family took the news with mixed reviews. My wife was devastated and I became devastated by the pain I was causing my family. My daughter of 24 still does not accept this choice. My then wife and I raised our children fairly agnostically and I am happy that my oldest daughter developed her spiritual and religious beliefs outside of parental socialization. But that must certainly make a lot of this harder for her as a newly initiated Christian in the south. And I’m okay with that. My youngest daughter is a lesbian but I think she may have internally taken this even harder because of that. I was still her father, should be married to her mother, and should be there with them. But she must at the same time support me as gay. I can’t even imagine how that works psychologically, emotionally for her. The dog and the cats took it well though so I did have support there.

Family. Compared to the straight community the GLBT community is close; family close. So we’re family I guess. Maybe that’s because our own families have often rejected us or at best just don’t understand or maybe just don't want to talk about it. Maybe it’s the social stigma that is placed upon us, or the popularity of publicly discriminating against gays. Regardless, every day I am thankful I have this new family (catty as it may be sometimes ;-)

As a newly-out male I found that being invited to family gatherings like trivia at Joe’s or a campy drag show at Blake’s became my outlet; my salvation. The summer before I came out I’d often spend afternoons working from some Midtown coffee house just so I could be close to the gayborhood - close to an open and accepted community as is perhaps possible in the south. Certainly as close as it gets in the red-state of Georgia. Here was a comfort, a level of acceptance I had truly never experienced nor expected before. Here there were people, students, professionals, musicians, teachers, cooks, bar tenders - all variety of people who were like me or, even better, were unlike me but saw me as just another person; one of them, who I was. Comfortable.

I met new people and made more friends. Expanded my circle of support while working through the challenges ahead if, wait – when I came out. It was certain now. I had hidden myself behind my shield too long. Safety came from within, not from without and I knew - I knew.

So I suppose that is the short version. My life from then until now. I'll see if I can dig up some older journals and repost them if there is any interest.