It's going on midnight, everyone's asleep, I have two pockets full of chocolate chips and a hard cider at the side of me, which I'm rather unladylike-ly sucking straight from the bottle. Ah, life is good. Or rather, it can be good...this isn't exactly a Kodak moment, but there you go - take it where you can get it.
So today was World AIDS day, ppphhbbttttt. Whatever. Millions of people dying all over the world and we throw one stupid day at it like it's going to matter. Every time I've thought of the whole "AIDS day" thing it's just pissed me off, and it didn't help that I'd read an article by an HIV-positive writer who was moaning about the apathetic attitude many people seem to have lately about the disease - he cited low turn-out to rallies, waning contributions towards research, etc. While I can certainly empathize with all of these sentiments...I mean, hell, my mother wouldn't be alive today (and that's certainly no exaggeration, as she's been on several cutting-edge, pseudo-experimental government funded research drugs) were it not for fund-raising contributions there was one aspect of the article in question that really bothered me - the author has been HIV-positive since 1998. This isn't someone who was caught off-guard, as so many people were, in the seventies and eighties; this was someone who just a few short years ago was engaging in high-risk behavior and admitted to having anonymous sex without condoms despite knowing the risks. And there he is, moaning that no one cares anymore...it may sound callous but it's like saying to someone, "Look, you can't swim, don't get into the water because you'll drown - crap, you got into the water anyway, well, here's a life jacket - take the life jacket, stupid, you're going to drown! How many damn life jackets do I need to throw you now that you've been stupid enough to get into the water to begin with despite all of my warnings?" My mother knew the risks and chose to ignore them seven years ago - this guy knew the risks, particularly as a gay man, and chose to ignore them. Kiddo, if you don't wear your seat belt don't expect me to cry too much for you when your dumb ass goes through the windshield. Okay, I'm mixing metaphors now, I should stop the bitching.
I think the reason that all of this has my back up is because of my brother. I've mentioned him once, I think, on here...he's gay and doesn't have a whole lot of contact with my mom's family, primarily (I think) because he doesn't like my dad. He's from my dad's first marriage, which produced two daughters and a son, and my dad's ex-wife pretty much poisoned those siblings against my dad and my mom's kids. Those kids are Skank, Bitch, and Bro, for future reference. Skank is in jail somewhere, I think - Bitch is nowhere as far as I'm concerned, and Bro is somewhere "dahn sath", or so his accent tells me - he moves around a lot. Despite being rather close when we were younger (he's around seven years older than me and lived with us until he was around sixteen) we're not so close anymore. In fact, the last time I spoke to him was last Christmas where I got drunk and called him and bitched to no end about Bitch and the way she's treated my dad. Anyway!
So Bro calls my dad not so long ago, they shoot the breeze for a while, and somehow it transpires that Bro tells my dad that his boyfriend has come up positive for HIV. (Despite living with my mom having the disease for so long I don't know at what point it turns from HIV into AIDS but I'm more apt to say HIV when discussing it...maybe because HIV is just a virus and AIDS is a whole
syndrome, I don't know - psychological thing, I guess.) Now, Bro didn't say that he came up positive, but knowing him like I've known him I'm pretty sure this was his "closeted" way of telling my dad that he, in fact, had the virus himself. I don't know - I can't bring myself to call him. I'm not sure he'd even come clean with me about it all at this point. It's a bit hard when you have to say, "This is Natalie...your sister, remember?" and hearing the, "Ahhh, my
sister" because he couldn't place the name.
But it brings me back to the original point - who the hell is getting HIV in the year 2002? Maybe it's better if I don't talk to Bro as I'm sure I'd say something like, "Okay you moron, what, have you had your head buried in the sand for the past twenty years or something? Do you not realize
how people get HIV?" Wholly unproductive. I've had too many very close friends - one of which, ironically, was the boyfriend of an ex-boyfriend of my Bro's - stricken with the disease and even too damn many of my family members hit with it for me to be able to dole out the emotional support anymore. There's nothing left to give, there really isn't, and I can't make any apologies for not being able to garner sympathy for some guy who got the disease in 1998.
That's been what's been on my mind today - AIDS, my Bro, that whole thing. I've avoided calling my father in case he heard something about AIDS day and it conjured up feelings about Bro...I don't think that it would, but I can never read my dad. As I've said before, Bro came out at an early age, not that he needed to, and decided to move back with his mom shortly after that. Bro told me once that he moved away (to North Carolina? I dunno.) with his mom because he was feeling like my dad wasn't digging on him living at our house anymore. It's taken Bro years - literally
years to realize my dad never gave a second thought to the "gay thing". In fact, for a while I didn't think my dad acknowledged the fact that Bro was gay because he never talked about it, until Bro got into a car accident. What is was is that Bro was walking on this wall thing that was built to keep part of a hill from flowing over the road - I don't know what it's called, but it was basically a retainer wall built from railroad ties. Not important - anyway, Bro was drunk and balancing on this thing when he fell off. As he fell, a car came around the blind curve and hit him as he was falling. Huge, fuck-off bad accident...long story short, Bro ended up with some long-term amnesia and - seriously - forgot he was gay. Didn't know who the hell he was for a long time, and when he did sort-of sort out who he was he didn't know that he wasn't supposed to like girls. It was utterly crazy; he ended up with some girlfriend - a lot of what I know from this time came second-hand from Bro's mom, who lived near him - and he decided he was going to marry her. Bro called my dad to tell him and my dad panicked - he was like, "Whatever you do,
don't get this girl pregnant." I didn't understand why this was such an issue until one night I was hanging with my dad and asked him about it - he said, "The thing of it is, Natalie, is one of these days he's going to remember he's gay. It's one thing to divorce someone but it's something else entirely to have to explain that to a kid." Again, long story short, Bro "woke up" and regained all of the details of his life, came out to his girlfriend, blah blah blah. Happy ending, no? But the thing I take away from all of this is that my dad - who could have very easily said, "Hey, son, way to go...you marry that gal, start that family!" in the hopes that his son would "straighten" out, didn't do that. He thought about potential off-spring...know what I mean? He knew that Bro would figure it out eventually and my dad just didn't want a kid to get caught up in that. I think that's very cool. Another cool thing about all of this was I'd said something to my dad one night because I'd heard him talking about all of this to a friend of his who has a gay son as well...but dad didn't mention the accident. I asked my dad why he would leave this detail out of his story and he said, "I don't want him pushing his kid out in front of a car to make him straight." I was floored - my father was actually astute. Doff of the cap to him, indeed.
Jessica tapdancing christ, I've spent a half-hour writing that, and that was so totally not the direction I wanted to take this entry. I guess I've been more preoccupied than I let myself realize with it all - which really is short-sighted when you think about everyone in the rest of the world who are dying, literally, out of ignorance of the disease. Western world, you can kiss my ass if you want sympathy over becoming HIV positive in this day and age because you just couldn't resist making off with someone in a bar one night and being stupid...I'll save my sympathy for the poor African women who are forced to have sex with their positive husbands with no protection because it's their "duty" as a woman - even when they know their husbands have been fooling around. I read a story - in Readers Digest, of all places - about the AIDS epidemic in Africa where some truck driver was talking about having sex with hookers while he was on the road...it was a lot of "A man has needs, you know" kind of thing, and the interviewer asked him if he ever used the condoms that are freely distributed in bars, gas stations, pretty much everywhere an African truck-driver would go. This guy, with no sense of irony whatsoever, said that he didn't want to use those condoms because they were free, and how effective could a free condom be? Lordy, I wish I were making that up.
1.00 and it's cider number two...
My little Beastly has woken up. I don't want to do too much navel gazing with regards to my kids because I know how annoying it can be to other people but this boy-o really is a wonder. We did Thanksgiving dinner on Saturday (Sam was in Illinois with her dad until then, which is why we pushed the dinner back) for the first time since I've been with Andy and it really was a special thing. I mean, I'd busted my ass cooking all day long for the sake of what amounted to a ten-minute chow fest but it was worth it. When I finally whooshed into my seat I was able to look around the table at Andy discussing crossword puzzles with Samantha, at Zoe delcaring, "I no yike dis" as she shovelled food into her mouth, to Nic, who was staring wide-eyed at the purple light bulbs I still had in my dining room from the night he was born - and I thought, "If this isn't nice, then what is?" That's exactly what it was...it was a take-a-deep-breath-and-smile-to-yourself kind of nice. Nothing big, just a little something inside that pops and makes you open your eyes. For as much as I bitch - and lordy knows I do - I wouldn't change a bit of it, not for anything. I don't know how many people can ever say that, let alone on such a regular basis as I do. Simple and happy, simply happy. I highly recommend it.
Though, of course, I cooked far too much for my small family and now we're on leftovers for days. I told Samantha one of my favorite dinner-time, "Eat what I put in front of you" stories about when my Gran lived with us when I was younger. My grandma was Jewish but I didn't really know that until I was older as she never discussed it with me. I remember asking her once why she got so upset with me when I wanted bacon for breakfast - she said, "My gypsy, we don't eat bacon." (She always called me her "gypsy princess", though I'm not sure why.) I asked why we couldn't eat bacon and she said, "We don't eat pigs because that's where the devil lives." Ooookay, gran, easy enough for my five-year-old brain to comprehend - I could just see myself at breakfast, "Mom, these pancakes are delicious! Oh, and coud you please pass the Devil?" Nah, not happening. So we didn't have pork.
What Gran used to do - beside speak in backwards questions like, "What, this aggravation you think I need?" - was make us her Friday stew, which was comprised of leftovers of every dinner we'd had that week. Most of my youth was spent fighting four other kids for leftovers but when my gran lived at our house there were always plenty left to go into her Friday stew...no matter how much we stuffed ourselves. We would try to eat all of the leftovers so that maybe, just once, we wouldn't have enough for the stew and would get to...I don't know, order a pizza or some chicken or something. But no, we always had enough, and it always made for the most revolting meal we'd ever had, on a weekly basis mind you, which was no small feat. "What, you want for I should waste this food? Kids in China would kill for this food!" Gran seemed to think that Chinese kids were absolutely starving for some reason. So stew it was - dad called it "Jew Stew" but he didn't complain too much beyond that. Though I did witness, on occasion, him throwing out particularly horrid leftovers so that they wouldn't be included in that Friday's meal.
My gran was a tiny little woman, born in Russia, who taught me many valuable lessons - like where to hide food in my room "If the need should arise" and the benefits of drinking warm beer. "Och, you should be so picky! It's warm but it's still a drink. What are you, a Romanov, to turn down a free drink?" She had a little case that I was told was meant to hold champagne - it was lined with fur but she kept a couple of cans of Budwiser on one side and a load of smashed up Twinkies on the other. Cool woman, she was. Oh shit, did I just say my sentence backwards? Must be Chanukah that has me thinking this way.
Boy, Chanukah really sucks - I don't think people realize this. That whole eight nights of gifts thing really is a farce. I remember one year my first gift was a belt. Second night was a pair of stockings - on and on it went until I received an entire outfit...whoo, a whole outfit, a dress, stockings, shoes, hair bow, the works! Most of the time the gifts were given as parts of a whole gift - it's not like I got, say, a bike for the first night, then a new tape player, then some Barbies or whatever...all eight nights were parts of one "larger" gift. It totally sucked. I mean, I was really sad when my gran moved into her own apartment after living with us for so long, but at least we got Christmas presents after she left - and after all, isn't that what kids really care about?
I wanted to write more about this whole jumble of crap I've had going on in my head but it's now 1.50 and I have my little man sleeping in my lap so I'll have to save it all for another day - no, don't cry! - but I think I have Nic's sleeping patterns down to the point where I can get away for a while during the day and post with some more regularity, rather than letting my brain shit all over Blogger when I get the chance, like I've done tonight. Christly christ, this is a long read, and a doff of the cap to anyone who made it through it all.
In honor of my "What, for I should read this rubbish?" grandma, I've decided to post the lyrics to Adam Sandler's Chanukah song - don't see the movie, as I've heard it's awful, but the song is really good for us little misplaced and confused Jewish kids.
Skittering-ly,
Natalie
The Hanukkah Song by Adam Sandler
Put on your yarmulke, it's time to celebrate Hanukkah
Its so much fun-akkah to celebrate Hanukkah,
Hanukkah is the Festival of Lights,
Instead of one day of presents, we have eight crazy nights.
When you feel like the only kid in town without a Christmas tree,
Heres a list of people who are Jewish, just like you and me:
David Lee Roth lights the menorrah,
So do James Caan, Kirk Douglas, and the late Dinah Shore-ah
Guess who eats together at the Carnegie Deli,
Bowzer from Sha-na-na, and Arthur Fonzerrelli.
Paul Newmans half Jewish; Goldie Hawns half too,
Put them together--what a fine lookin Jew!
You dont need Deck the Halls or Jingle Bell Rock
Cause you can spin the dreidl with Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock--both Jewish!
Put on your yarmulke, its time for Hanukkah,
The owner of the Seattle Supersonic-ahs celebrates Hanukkah.
O.J. Simpson-- not a Jew!
But guess who is...Hall of Famer--Rod Carew--(he converted!)
We got Ann Landers and her sister Dear Abby,
Harrison Fords a quarter Jewish-- not too shabby!
Some people think that Ebeneezer Scrooge is,
Well, he's not, but guess who is: All three stooges.
So many Jews are in show biz--
Tom Cruise isn't, but I heard his agent is.
Tell your friend Veronica, it's time you celebrate Hanukkah
I hope I get a harmonica, on this lovely, lovely Hanukkah.
So drink your gin-and-tonic-ah, and smoke your marijuana-kah,
If you really, really wanna-kah, Have a happy, happy, happy, happy Hanukkah.