A few months into Therapy
My sessions with Dr. John soon became my favorite time of the week. He seems to have a genuine interest in my well-being. He doesn’t need much from me besides my $65 dollars I hand him for each session and conversation.
“Yuri tell me about your childhood. You make reference to it but don’t talk about it much.”
“What’s there to talk about?”
“Where did you grow up? Tell me about the house.”
“It’s kind of a boring story but first off I have never lived in a house. I lived in an apartment with my mom and dad in Los Angeles. Once they divorced, my mother and I moved into a tiny 1-bedroom apartment where we shared a room until I was 8 years old. I took care of myself pretty much from that point on. My mom worked sometimes seven days a week and I watched a lot of cooking shows. As a result I would often cook dinner. I am not saying my mom wasn’t there; she just worked because she had to take care of herself and a child. She didn’t get alimony at all and never made a legal fight for it because she didn’t want to kill my relationship with my dad. While my dad sent child support, there were times where that would disappear for months too because he had his own problems. I would do what I could to help mom out by making us dinner and stuff in second grade. That should have been the first homo clue.
Our house was always messy but never dirty. It was never a hoarders-status home. There were no dead cats under piles of garbage. We were never that cool. It was just piles of old bills shoved in corners, jackets and stuff strewn about a bit. I never had friends over mostly because I didn’t have any. The few friends I did have on occasion I wouldn’t invite over because our place was messy and small. At 9 or so we moved into a 2-bedroom condo. For some reason we rarely had visitors. Our home was always messy but never dirty. Even our family, my grandma and mom’s sister rarely visited. When my grandma did visit she would often remind my mother that she had helped my mother in purchasing the condo. Even though my mother had paid off the money by doing my grandma’s hair every Sunday for 12 years (she used to be a hair stylist), and with money my grandma always would remind us that we owed her for this. He visits would often end in loud arguments about grudges past. My mom was their version of Aunt Jackie from Roseanne. They always treated her as a failure, which wasn’t fair cause the concept is relative. I think that’s why my mom kept the mess sometimes so she wouldn’t have to deal with them. They seemed to care but keep us at an arms length in that way. Maybe that’s why my apartment is nearly spotless now that I live on my own?”
“Yuri, do you have friends over now?”
“Actually, when I moved to San Francisco, I made a conscious decision to make friends. I told myself to say hi to every single person I would encounter even in passing who I felt intriguing. I build up a large amount of various friends. As a result, these days I love to be the host. Now that I live alone, in my own studio, I love having people over. I’ll let them even smoke in my apartment not because I like having ashy walls, but because I don’t have any roommates saying no.”
“What type of people?”
“Friends from work, college girl friends.”
“What about men?”
“What about them?”
“So what about dating? Why don’t you talk about it much?”
“In my late teens I was pretty much a-sexual. In the past 2 and half years since I came out, I have dated some but not much. After the Elijah thing I have found it hard to trust guys. I always assume they are lying or looking past me for someone they really want. I had a year where I assumed that all gay men had HIV which I now know is not true but that fear is often in the back of my head”
“Hmmm.”
“I have this guy I’m kind of seeing. If by seeing you mean sleeping with occasionally because he is an amazing hair stylist.”
“Hmmm. So you admire his job choice?”
“No. I like getting free haircuts.”
“What are you looking for in a man?”
“I can barely focus on what I want for lunch let alone that. I want a man with a job who isn’t jealous and well a man. I’m not very picky. Every guy I meet at the bar can’t handle it. I was seeing this Latin guy for a few months on and off and he kept on asking which of my co-workers I was hooking up with which drove me crazy. I didn’t hook up with any of my co-workers ever. Okay I did once, during the first month at the Lab but that’s no one’s business and it was months before Latin dude.”
“Why are you still single?”
“I fucking hate that question. What is this a date? I’m single because as my mom puts it, I have standards that are either way too high or too low? I don’t know. I just lost a good 30 pounds. No one gave me the time of day before. The guys who interested me looked right past me as though I wasn’t there. Like this once guy, Giovanni. Italian name, but he’s Guatemalan. This guy was super hot, pre-med and very fit. His abs looked so good they looked airbrushed at all times. He had everything that would make my Jew-senses go ape shit. He never gave me the time of day when I met him in my clubbier state. It was during the first few days I worked at the bar that I met him. I thought he was a dick but he was so hot that I didn’t care.”
“Tell me about it.”
“Well I met him a few times when I was the wallflower, chubby boy of the past and frankly he was rude to me. He acted like one of those guys who was overly confident in his looks that seemed to assume he could get a free ride in life as a result. In my eyes he could too! Then about 6 months ago I saw him again. He couldn’t stop staring at me. It’s like I lost the weight and gained a vindictive side. Before I was invisible and all of a sudden I mattered. Now that I had lost weight it was like I gained some new super power and people began listening to me kind of. I noticed his eyes burning a hole on me. It’s kind of hot. I asked him to join me for drinks after my shift. I told my mom about it right before and was like, mom he’s PRE-MED and Guatemalan. She said that was nice but to call her when he’s Jewish and an actual doctor, then hung up on me. I ignored her, went out with Giovanni. As it turned out he was also a goo dancer at a bar in the gayborhood and used that to pay for school. It was the story I should have expected. He was 6 foot, abs of steel, biceps and a chiseled jaw that could make anyone want to try men. I figured that since he was also working at the bars that he would get it and there wouldn’t be jealousy. Drinks were fun. He was actually really great at conversation and less egotistical than I originally thought. He was just out of a long relationship, so he said. I ignored that because I was too into the physical to care about red flags like that. I just worked on enticing him because I could. After a few days of texting we hung out at my studio apartment. I made him dinner and we watch 300. Which may well have been porn. A bottle of wine, and 20 minutes of the movie later we were boning like rabbits. Between the fake abs on the screen, his and the wine I was in for it. The second he left my apartment, my crappy bed broke and my mattress fell to the ground. After he left I figured I would drop him because of the way he ignored me in my previous state. I tried to do that. After two hours of ignoring him I initiated text messages to him. I decided he was really into me too. A few weeks went by and he asked me to come out to a club with him. I assumed it was as his date. We held hands, kissed a little and I really knew he was into me. I felt bad for judging him and creating his pervious view of me in my head. A few drinks in, I had to pee like a racehorse. When I get back from the urine-trough gay bars call the bathroom, Giovanni had his tongue down some strangers throat. I walked right up to him and his new concubine. They barely came up for air, let alone noticed me being dramatic. I left hoping that he would run after me in the rain. The way it happens in the movies. Instead it just started to rain. I walked home drunk, alone and confused. It would be hours before Giovanni would text asking where I went.”
“How did you feel after that?”
“I didn’t. I moved on because what other choices could I have?”
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