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I thought I could bang out a column today—a
regular column, a column about my readers' problems and their freaky
fetishes and all those asshole politicians out there. You know,
the usual.
The day my son was born, I managed to slip out of
the maternity ward and write a column; I wrote one the day I was
indicted by the state of Iowa for licking Gary Bauer's doorknobs.
(I was actually indicted for voter fraud—on a trumped-up charge,
your honor—but Bauer's knob needs all the attention it can
get.) I've written columns on days that I was dumped and on the
morning of 9/11. So I figured that I could bang out a column today.
I opened my laptop and started reading your letters.
I love reading your letters—I do. But I couldn't get into
it. I just don't have a column in me this week. I'm disappointed
in myself. I write this column at Ann Landers's desk, for crying
out loud, and the old lady banged out a heartbreaking, truncated
column when her marriage collapsed. If Landers could bang one out
under that kind of emotional strain, then I could damn well bang
one out, too. Just do it, right? Just fucking do it. But I just
fucking can't.
My mother died on Monday.
Perhaps a sex-advice column isn't an appropriate
place to eulogize an articulate, elegant woman, a practicing Catholic
named for the patron saint of hopeless causes and, perhaps consequently,
a Cubs fan. I mean, really. Eulogizing my mother back here with
the escort ads? So let's not think of this as a eulogy. Let's think
of it as a thank-you note, the kind of nicety that my mother appreciated.
Forgive the cliché: My mom gave me so much.
She gave me life, of course, and some other stuff besides: her sense
of humor, her bionic bullshit detectors, her colossal sweet tooth.
She also gave me—she gave all four of her children (Bill,
Ed, Dan, Laura)—her unconditional love. Long after I came
out, she told me she always suspected that I might be gay; I was
the quiet one, the boy who liked Broadway musicals and baking cakes
and shared her passion for Strauss waltzes. When I asked my parents
to take me to the national tour of A Chorus Line for my 13th
birthday, that should have settled the matter. Your third son? Total
fag, lady. But my parents were Catholic and religious and
it somehow still came as a shock when I told them. My mother came
around fast and she came out swinging—rainbow stickers on
her car, a PFLAG membership card in her wallet, and an ultimatum
delivered to the whole family: Anyone who had a problem with me
had a problem with her.
But the real reason I feel compelled to thank her
in this space, back here with the escort ads, is because I wouldn't
have this space if it weren't for her.
My mother, as my brother Bill likes to say, made
friends like Rockefeller made money and George W. Bush makes mistakes—and
she was that friend you confided in and went to for advice. I was
a mama's boy—hello—and I spent a great deal of
time in my mother's kitchen listening to her tell her friends exactly
what they needed to do. Sometimes gently, sometimes brusquely, always
with a dose of humor. My mom liked to say that her son got paid
to do something that she did for free—and isn't that the way
the world works? Women cook, men are chefs; women are housewives,
men are butlers; she gave advice, I got paid to give
advice. (And for a few years, she did too; my mother and I wrote
a joint column for a couple of websites in the 1990s.)
So I want to thank my mom. I wouldn't be writing
this column today if it weren't for her gifts and her ability to
find the humor in even the most serious of subjects.
Even death, even her own.
After a long struggle, we had to go into my mother's
hospital room and tell her that nothing more could be done. She
didn't go into the hospital expecting to die and she was not ready
go. But she took the news with her characteristic grace. She said
her farewells, asked us never to forget her (as if), and
paused for a moment. Then Mom lifted an eyebrow, shrugged, and said…
"Shit."
My mother wasn't crude; I didn't get my foul mouth
from her. She used profanity sparingly and then only in italics
and quotation marks. When she said "shit" on her deathbed, we understood
the joke. What she meant was this: "Now, the kind of person who
casually uses profanity might be inclined to say 'shit' at a moment
like this. But I'm not the kind of person who casually uses profanity—and
certainly not at a moment like this. But if I were the kind
of person who casually used profanity, 'shit' might be the word
I would use right now. If I were that kind of person. Which I'm
not."
Everyone gathered around her bed—my mother's
husband (my son has two fathers and so do I), my sister, my aunt—knew
what Mom wanted: She wanted us to laugh. This woman, so full of
life, who wanted so badly to live, having just been told she would
not, she was trying to lift our spirits. ("Shit,"
for the record, wasn't her last word. Those were just for the family.)
Anyway, my mom is dead, and I am not in the
mood, as she used to say. ("You are so," one of us kids would usually
respond. "You're in a bad mood.") So I'm going to take a
week or two off, from the column and the podcast, hang out with
the boyfriend and the kid, and burst into tears in coffee shops
and grocery stores. I'll run some greatest hits in this space while
I'm away—I'll find a column or two featuring Mom—and
then I'll be back, just as filthy minded as ever. In lieu of flowers,
please send pictures of your boyfriends' rear ends. (Lesbians may
send flowers.) If you're the donation-making type and you're so
inclined, my mother would be pleased to see some of your money flow
to PFLAG (www.pflag.org)or the
Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation (www.pulmonaryfibrosis.org).Oh,
one last thing: I was supposed to take my mother to see the national
tour of The Drowsy Chaperone in Chicago this Friday, April
11. It was her birthday present. I got us great seats: seventh row,
on the aisle. But I won't be able to use our tickets now. Not because
it would be too depressing to go without my mother—not just
because—but because, as rotten, stinking fate would have it,
I'm going to be at my mother's wake on Friday night.
But I'm practical, like Mom, and I'd hate to see
perfectly good tickets to a national tour of a hit Broadway musical
go to waste. And it occurs to me that there has to be a teenage
boy out there—in Chicago or close enough—who likes musicals
and has a mother who loves him for the little musical-theater queen
that he is. If you know that boy or you are that boy or you were
that boy a decade ago or if you're that boy's mother or grandmother,
send me an e-mail and I'll arrange to get these tickets to you.
Like I said, they're great seats. I would go if
I could. But I can't.
Shit.
mail@savagelove.net
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