Reykjavik - The Bitterness of Love
Lost
By Jack Mauro
In the words of Stephen
Sondheim, here’s a little story that should make you cry.
My friend Dale decided it was time to fall in love. Again. It had been
about a month since he and his last love split up, the last love having
come to the conclusion that Dale was not the love that would last. Dale
had reached the same lifeless plateau about two hours later. But the other
guy got the call in first, so he got to walk away with the Dumper laurel
wreath on his brow. And Dale picked himself up, brushed his hair back, and
started all over again.
We do this a lot, lately, don’t we? That is, turn to romance as though it
were yet another commodity to obtain and neatly fit into our daily
routine, like updating a database or attending a monthly steering
committee. I blame Oprah, as I’ve blamed Oprah before. Oprah,
surprisingly, sails on, my disapproval notwithstanding.
I blame the internet, too. The last thing humankind needed was further
blurring of the line between sex and love and, with the possible exception
of eBay, it’s the biggest thing the net provides. Dale is but one of an
army of men who see a posted profile, feel a stirring beneath the fabric
of their 2-Xist boxer shorts, and confidently foresee a zillion nights of
perfect compatibility broken up by occasional bouts of animal sex. So I
blame Dale as well. But I’ll go easier on him; he’s suffered enough for
his folly.
To the story, then. Dale found Jeff. Jeff found Dale’s finding of him
fine. Let the dating begin.
For maybe three weeks – a Grant Wood portrait of enduring couplehood, as
gay pairings often go – all was grand. There were movies, there were bites
had at fun little bistros, and there were bites enjoyed in passion.
Favorite CDs were traded, that a hot new band could be shared. Disks of
movies were left in apartments, not worried about because, well, they
could be remembered and taken back home after next time’s bites.
Then this love that was fizzled out and died like a Pepsi cracked open and
left on the side of a highway. Cell calls got increasingly bitter.
Somebody was inconsiderate, somebody else turned out to be a moron. New
pictures were uploaded to gay dating sites because everyone knows that
life must go on. All that was left were the few loose ends.
They always say it’s the children who suffer when straight couples
divorce. When gay men break up, it’s the DVDs that are the forgotten ones.
Lost, ignored, uncared for in the maelstrom of grown-up heartbreak. In
this instance, two particular films were the casualties: Dale’s copy of
Bjork’s ‘Dancer in the Dark’, and Jeff’s less aesthetic – if more
watchable – copy of Kristen Bjorn’s ‘Hot Times in Little Havana’. Modern
love may be a mess, but at least it’s eclectic in its viewing habits.
Dale finally remembered his Bjork, and wanted it back. Jeff in turn
realized he missed his Bjorn. Each in its way a tool of seduction, each
was again needed to round out each man’s arsenal d’amour. But neither man
wanted to make the trip to the other’s place, for the exchange. Pride is a
strange thing. We will throw our legs up in the air for an acquaintance,
yet be unwilling to hand over a lousy movie when on our feet once again.
Anyway. The mail man became the third, kind of hot, and blissfully
otherwise uninvolved element in the affair. His job made him the liaison,
and two DVDs were delivered to two, now despised, addresses. Just in time,
too. Dale had a date he wanted to impress with Icelandic virtuosity, just
as Jeff had arranged a night with a partner for whom the cavorting of
Latin men was just the ticket. That same evening.
The end of this story does not need to be told. What is important is that
it be recalled how very similar the names of ‘Bjork’ and ‘Bjorn’ are; that
young men today are not good about slipping back into their original cases
the correct DVDs; and that, when any of us scans our entertainment
collections, we do so with a peripheral eye at best, and with barely even
that when we are pissed off and only grudgingly seeking something to
return to someone else.
But, if the reader can summon in his mind a picture of a young man rubbing
his crotch in fevered anticipation of sex to be viewed and then in reality
had, only to find himself staring at an Icelandic artist rehearsing ‘How
Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?’ from ‘The Sound of Music’ - with the
always lovely Catherine Deneuve looking on - as, simultaneously, another
young man expecting to hear the mellifluous, if atonal, strains of Bjork
at the top of her game, faces instead five Cuban men enjoying the oral
attentions of a sixth, he knows all there is to know. And can go home now.
© Jack Mauro, All Rights Reserved.
Article provided by GayLinkContent.com.
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