Anyhow, Terry was off at a party when we arrived at their home, and Greg proceeded to take us on a tour of his immaculate garden. Hydrangeas everywhere! Hydrangeas, for the record, are what I call every flower I don't know the name of, which includes all of them.
Then Greg took us inside and he and Chuck proceeded to talk about design stuff and their kitchen cabinets. My eyes glazed over and I started daydreaming about watching the Rockies game, which I was missing for this very event.
I texted Terry: "They're talking house stuff. Please come home and save me!"
Terry, who is slightly dyslexic, missed the "l" in talking. He wrote back, "Don't let them take the piano!"
Yeah, I pretty much love Terry. Greg, too. Good people, and they're super fun to laugh at. With. I mean with.
Anyway, back to the text: you see, Terry's eyes also glaze over when we talk house stuff and flowers. Like me, Terry likes when things look good, but doesn't much care about how it gets there.
It got me thinking about that idea I certainly had growing up, when I first learned about gay relationships... one guy would be more masculine, one more feminine. There'd be the guy, and the girl.
That's never been how it's worked for me.
Now, I'm not talking about sexual things, because that's none of your business. I'm really talking about gender roles and how we play into them, and they play into us.
If you think about it, it's not that surprising that pre-Stonewall, a lot of gay men used campy humor in which they changed pronouns from he to she, etc. This still exists, of course, but the whole, "She needs to get over herself" thing seems to me to be of a different era. It played into the notion that there's SUPPOSED to be a male and a female, and anything else is unnatural. I mean, why else would a guy call another guy (or himself) a girl?
My point is this: being gay has allowed me a totally different understanding of what it means to be male, and masculine. It affords me the opportunity to wear proudly all the attributes I have, without labeling them. I no longer think about what it means that I am a gay man who never misses a Colorado Rockies game. When I used to tell some friends that, they'd say, "How butch."
I mostly cringed inside when they said that. I mean, why can't I like baseball, without it seeming like I'm trying to overcompensate for something?
And also, why can't I like the music of Michael Callen and Mary Chapin Carpenter? I mention these two artists because on the way home, we listened to both and I found myself getting emotional listening to the songs, because they're so full of raw emotion. So I like that, too. And I like Entourage (or I did back when it was good) and Bridget Jones' Diary (the first one at least). I can cry and I can shout, and I don't need to think that it means that I am more or less masculine. Those constructs are prisons other people put themselves in. Not me, not anymore.
When Chuck merged his iTunes with mine... oh my God. Backstreet Boys for days! He has the musical taste of an 11-year-old girl. He can also bench press my weight, and fix just about anything that breaks in our house. I cannot do that.
So Chuck isn't the girl for liking to design stuff. He and Greg are off to the Home and Landscape Show today, while Terry and I will play racquetball. But if I called my stronger-than-me, deep-voiced husband "the wife" he'd give me a raspberry. Just like I'd do to him if he said that to me. Not because a wife is bad, but because it doesn't apply. We are both men.
And if I said that about Greg, he'd just laugh, because he knows: ten minutes on the racquetball court, and there'd be no question who is king.
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