Saturday, October 18, 2014

I Haven't Given Up on This Blog Yet




You thought I'd gone and died, didn't you? No such luck, at least not yet. I'm not usually a lackadaisical writer; my personal journals are updated more or less daily, but my first year of college has proven to be more stressful than I thought it would be. There's so much reading that it seems I do nothing else. You know when the last time I got drunk was? Last month. Do you have any idea how shameful it is for an 18-year-old to go a full month without being shitfaced? My older brother David says that I'm imposing this on myself, but David is also 24 and living in a rehab while my parents tell all their friends that he's "on vacation." So maybe he isn't the best to be doling out advice.

Not that college isn't going well. I've started making some cool friends, and one of them even wants me to come record some music with him and his bandmates, which I'm stoked about.

And what's strange is that all I have to write about is grades and music and making friends. Such mundane things, right? The same things any other 18-year-old would be thinking about as he began college. It'll be a year ago in two days. A year ago when all of the mundane things almost ended forever. See, there's the meat of this blog, or at least my reason for starting it, but I'm not ready to dive into that yet. Not now. I think that a year later I'm still processing what happened to me. Be patient as I figure out how to say it. I am, after all, young and vain and foolish.



Like I don't have enough going on in my life now, right? I still don't have the faintest idea how to come out to my parents--both of whom, by the way, make a total mockery of marriage but who would regard my sexuality as inexcusable. I don't think they'd particularly care themselves, because I don't think they care about much of anything, but the hole in the image they've shown the world could never be tolerated. So there's that.

But hey, it's not like I'm making any progress on the man front, anyway. I am surrounded by young men whose beauty astounds me, whose splendor leaves me in a state of near constant lust and awe, and, for some reason, distant sadness. Maybe it's because I'm too frozen by fear to approach any of them, but maybe it's because I recognize how transitory this is for all of us.

The leaves in Virginia are changing now, from the emerald of summer into the blood scarlet, sunlight gold, and inferno orange of fall, assuming in decay a glory that will soon fade to brown death. Aren't any of us the same? And I don't mean that in some abstract, pretentious college-freshman way, but in a very practical sense: I am a beautiful boy. At 18 I am stunning, and I know it. My face is fair and flushed, more pretty than handsome. My eyes are deep green and bright. My hair is long, golden, lustrous, and full. My body is a masterpiece of sinew and lean muscle. Sometimes I stand naked before the mirror and just stare. I am 5'10" and weigh 120 pounds.

But how long until my moment is over and I fall from the branch? In five years I will be 23, and surely not as captivating as I am at this very instant. You must remember, I have an older brother and knew his friends. I've seen how this goes. When I was 12 and they were the age I am now, I used to secretly lust for them. One of them was named Henry, and on some occasion when he and David were going out he gave me his cell phone number so I could be in touch with them. I wrote it down on a napkin that I kept in my dresser drawer, and on occasion I would pick it out from amongst the socks, trace the numbers with my finger, and dream of Henry and his lovely face and blue eyes and golden hair. I used to pleasure myself to him. And today he has a beard and a belly and the hair that mesmerized me has long since turned brown and been cut short.

It's unfair that we're given so brief a window. I live in terror that I will not find someone while I am still in it.



Speaking of brothers, James and I are at my grandmother's house for fall break! He's 19 and a year ahead of me in college, so we just headed up to Philadelphia together (our grandmother is from Virginia but lives in the city--it's complicated). Tomorrow we're expecting two cousins and their parents.

One of these, Rose, is much older than we are--she's like 40--and already a doctor. Then there's Andrea, who is, despite his name, a boy. My Uncle Jake married an Italian broad--Aunt Francesca!--and in Italy Andrea is a boy name, so that's what he got named. He and I went to the same boarding school until I graduated in June and I haven't seen him since--he's 17 and still in high school for another year--so I'm quite excited. Well, kind of.

You see, my father's family is great and terrible for the exact same reason: they're perfect. All of them. Rose is a doctor and her sister Kate is a corporate vice president. Andrea is, to sum it up, flawless. Track star, perfect grades, tons of friends, great looks, yet so down to earth that he's impossible to hate. And he gets that he's a walking cliche, and actually cracks jokes about it. I mean, come on. And his parents are also insanely accomplished, just like mine, and that's better than being from a family of crackheads or something, but it creates a little bit of pressure, too. Like, if I want to sit out on spending my weekends working at a soup kitchen for developmentally disabled Ethiopian landmine orphans and instead maybe, say, watch Netflix, I might be seen as bringing down the group average or something.

But sometimes I just want to be gay and watch Netflix.

I feel like I'm not saying this right and it's coming off as rich-kid whining. So, if that's the case, I'm sorry. And never you fear: I will be back to share more. Thanks if you've hung on this far. Why do have a feeling that none of it will end well?


5 comments:

  1. Hello, 1st-time visitor to your blog and concur with Chicken. You are honest and sincere. You are also at the other end of the age spectrum from me and I feel compelled to tell you, with honesty, sincerity and judiciously waiting to tell loved ones personal stuff that they probably already know, things do get better, easier. You don't have a Google Friend Connect widget up so I'll add your site to my blogroll at "Trainride Of The Enigmas" and follow as best I can. I wish you all the best and have a measureless pride and confidence in your generation.

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  2. I agree with Geo, as I do on many things. Also, his blog is well-worth reading.
    You need to give things time. I know, that's hard for you to do at your age, but it works often. Relationships, meeting someone, other things, it works usually if you wait. Do the things you do at university, it'll figure it's self out.
    I worked in science related things all my life, but the courses I remember at university are the history subject. Diversity is the spice of life my young friend.

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