Department Of This Is How Life Works, I Guess
Dateline: Monday, late morning. I received a text from MH, in forming me that his Uncle JW had died “peacefully, I’m told” this morning, and that that was the only information he had so far. I didn’t know his uncle well; I received the news with no emotion, save for the flat affect of Another piece of family history to log…. And as I was doing so, I remembered my first encounter with JW.
Background: JW was the youngest of my FIL’s five siblings. [1] I met JW a couple of months after MH and I married. [2] This was at a time (late 1988) when gay rights issues were predominant in the national news – particularly in California – and fear of AIDS sparked a backlash against anti-discrimination legislation. JW, who knew that I was a native Californian and that MH and I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, steered any conversation he had with me toward “the gay thing.” He did this during every one of the (few) times he and I were in the same room, which were always at my FIL’s family get-togethers. [3]
That first encounter took place when MH and I flew out to Florida to join his parents, who hosted a mini-family reunion/ congrats to MH and Robyn! gathering at a condo complex in New Smyrna Beach. One afternoon, as one of MH’s cousins and I were out on the condo’s lanai chatting about our respective favorite beaches, JW, who’d apparently overheard us from inside, joined us on the porch. He asked me if I’d ever been at a beach and seen two men strolling by the seashore, holding hands. I said that I had. JW shook his head and made clucking noises, then said that he didn’t think he could “handle it.” “Handle what?” I asked him. “Oh, you know,” he said, shuddering with…ick discomfort. “I just couldn’t handle it.”
I knew what he was getting at, but feigned befuddlement. What was there to handle, I asked him, other than the sight of two people walking on a beach? JW said he realized that the theoretical, hand-holding gay couple technically weren’t harming “anyone else,” but that it would make him feel very uncomfortable to see that.
I reminded JW (perhaps, informed would be the more correct way to state it, if moiself was enlightening JW as to something he hadn’t previously been aware of ) that in many countries around the world, especially those with conservative/religious/strict/oppressive cultural mandates, it is perfectly fine – and is in fact, the norm – for non-romantic, same-gendered friends to show physical affection in public, such as two men walking arm-in-arm or holding hands. However, in those same countries, a male-female romantic couple (even a couple engaged to be married) would not hold hands or be “physical” in public, lest a sexual liaison be implied.
Knowing this, I asked JW, why would you assume that any two same-gender people you see holding hands are gay? Perhaps they are expressing affection, as I had done fairly recently, with a female friend whom I hadn’t seen in years – and, yep, wouldn’t you know it, we were at the beach. As we strolled along the seashore, walking arm in arm, delighted to be in each other’s company, one of us joked about how someone’s bigoted uncle from the Midwest might be harumpfing to himself about ….those lesbos flaunting it in public.
My FIL later told me that his lil’ brother’s way of communicating was via teasing – that JW teased people he liked. I can’t remember my reaction; I probably responded with something mildly snarky. My lifetime of living in California had made me familiar with that form of teasing, in which someone, for some reason, can’t hold in their prejudice – they just gotta share it with you – but wants to be able to backtrack ( “What are you getting so excited about/can’t you take a joke? I was just teasing.” )
Moiself finds this next fact neither good nor bad – merely noteworthy: this story I’ve shared is the strongest memory I have of JW. Evidently it is also the most lasting impression, as it’s the first that came to mind when MH told me that JW had died.
At least we aren’t West Coast lesbians.
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Department Of Memory File Search:
What Was In That Letter Which Prompted My Response?
Last week while searching for my letter to my MIL, written in response to her critique of me keeping my surname after marriage ( the subject of my blog post two weeks ago The Name I’m Not Hyphenating, 1-16-26 ), I came upon a letter from moiself to my own mother (shared below). The letter from my mother which prompted my reply is somewhere up in my attic, but I decided it was more fun to suss out, from what I had written, what was the subject of her letter. Sure enough, it all came back to moiself – little-to-no sussing needed.
It was a kick to read something I’d forgotten about: my parents’ fond hope – obsession, almost – that one of their four children would want their truck-and-trailer rig after they could no longer use it.
I remember comparing notes with my siblings when our parents purchased what was to be their last RV-setup – a fifth wheeler towed by a pickup truck.
Ala this.
My comparing-notes suspicions were correct: all of us were, individually, being consulted by our parental units. Mom and Dad said they couldn’t decide which they preferred, a self-contained RV or a truck-trailer set up, and “for the future,” wanted to know what *we* preferred, so that it could be handed down to us. Poor, dear folks – they were surprised ( and definitely hurt ) that none of their offspring wanted…whatever setup they chose. We all respectively advised some version of, Thanks for thinking of us, but please pick whatever is best for *you,* as we don’t want any kind of RV.
I can read between the lines of the letter to my mother, and recall how bemusing and face-palming I found it when, in her letter to me, she’d tried to appeal to some stereotype of Men-Like-To-Drive-Trucks®, as perhaps a last ditch effort to get at least one of her daughters to consider taking the rig (our brother, my parents’ only son, was a strong no way from the get-go), if only to please her husband by offering him the ultimate manly symbol of manliness: the opportunity to drive a pickup truck.
Moiself’s unsolicited, non-RV advice to y’all: pick a time to go through some of your old family letters, whether in the attic or on your computer files. You’ll likely be surprised/touched/amused/confused by what you find.
April 13, 2009
Hi, Mom
Thanks for your letter and sharing your ideas about the truck and RV. You certainly put some thought into various options, which I appreciate. I got a chuckle out of the fact that, despite your claim that most men love driving and having a truck, we have [4] MH, R____, E___ and R__ – manly men, each in their own way – and not one truck drivin’ dude (as my daughter would say) among the four of them. It must be something in the water.
A few years back Dad brought up the subject with me. He said he’d made the offer of the truck & RV to all the Parnell kids (if anyone took him up on it the offer would include compensating the remaining three accordingly – he always strove to be fair, to, as he put it, “even things out,” which was so sweet of him). He told me everyone had said, “Thank you, but no,” and so he thought he’d eventually sell the setup and put whatever he could get out of it “into the estate.”
Anyway, you’re right about MH and I not wanting the rig. Although we enjoy kayaking and hiking, etc., we’re not interested in any kind of RV set up. We do have RVC hookup and parking space, but that is for temporary use only. Our CC & Rs prohibit us from storing any such vehicles on site. Even if we took you up on your generous offer to pay for off-site storage, the additional upkeep and insurance wouldn’t be worth it for something we’d use at most once a year (if that often). RVs can be great for retired folks, who have the flexibility to take longer trips or even just longer weekends, and who have time before the trip itself to do the necessary preparations and also time after the trip for the fix-up, put-back-in-storage chores (and such tasks take longer when the RV is stored off-site).
I’ve fond memories of our family trailer trips, and included in the memories are the fact that those trips were long. Our family enjoyed the benefits of Dad’s government job – he had something like 25 days of vacation (plus holidays) and often took them all at once in the summer, when we (I mean of course you and Dad) would prep the rig and then take off for weeks. MH and I simply don’t have that kind of vacation time. But we do appreciate the offer!
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Freethinkers’ Thought Of The Week [5]
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May you have fun reading between the lines of letters sent and received;
May you remember to keep copies of letters sent and received;
May you agree to disagree with – and challenge – your teasing uncle;
…and may the hijinks ensue.
Thanks for stopping by. Au Vendredi!
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[1] Only one of whom – the second youngest – survives now.
[2] Although they were invited, I don’t remember JW and his wife attending our wedding, which was across the country from where they lived.
[3] and which were mercifully [from moiself’s perspective] rare, as MH’s father’s extended family lived 2k+ miles away, in the Midwest and/or South and/or east coast.
[4] My husband, two BILs and brother’s names redacted. Not quite Epstein-file-redaction worthy, but still….
[5] “free-think-er n. A person who forms opinions about religion on the basis of reason, independently of tradition, authority, or established belief. Freethinkers include atheists, agnostics and rationalists. No one can be a freethinker who demands conformity to a bible, creed, or messiah. To the freethinker, revelation and faith are invalid, and orthodoxy is no guarantee of truth.” Definition courtesy of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, ffrf.org