Wednesday, April 13, 2016

I Do Not Exaggerate, by Phillip


I felt like Johnson’s laughter was exaggerated as in too loud, too much like a billy goat’s bleating, just too obnoxious, but as I came to understand much more about him and his habits, I found his laughter a minor detraction. He was a man given to life-long drug use and alcohol abuse. He had been adopted by well-meaning parents who found they couldn’t easily relate to this new family member, could barely cope with the challenges he presented: impulse control, ADHD, bipolar swings, obsessive-compulsive behaviors, and eventual drug-induced schizophrenia. It took them decades to understand all that; it took me years to begin to fathom the dimensions of his life. Originally I knew only his manic laughter.

I met Johnson when giving free massages at an AIDS clinic. By the time I was finished giving him that first massage, I was pretty much in love with this crazy man with loud voice, boisterous laughter, and keen wit. While I observed these attributes I also became aware of his odor, first wondering why some guys came to massage without bathing and then realizing the smell wasn’t awful and then really liking it. Oh those pheromones! They cause problems for the unsuspecting.

Johnson came to the monthly massages at the clinic rather faithfully; something I only later realized must have required a focus he could barely sustain. I always smiled when I saw his name on my list for the day. As I got to know him more, heard bits and pieces of his story, came to admire his intellect, his vocabulary, and the structure of his thought (the man was no mimic, no parrot), my interest in him deepened.

Occasionally I would run into him away from the safety of the massage contract. On these occasions we would drink coffee or beer or we would simply talk. When he started coming to my apartment for his massages, I learned much more. I also found my defenses rising.

Some years into our friendship I realized Johnson’s life was becoming increasingly disorganized. For him I provided a kind of safety net I suppose; he provided me the entertainment of his stories of life in places I’d never go, for instance, sleeping on a grate in front of a public building along East Colfax, working as a cook in a restaurant while high as a kite on some drug, or getting into a drunken fight on his way home from a gay bar. When I realized he spent some of his time homeless, living on the street, I told a friend that I felt Johnson was hoping I’d invite him to live with me. I was trying to figure out how to avoid such a request.

One winter afternoon he stopped by my apartment. We talked, which of course meant we also laughed together. I fed him. After dark descended, he prepared to leave but said he needed to give me the perishables he had got at a food bank. The overnight temperature was predicted for 10° F. I realized he wasn’t simply going out to a bar; he assumed he might end up on the street and lose the perishables to frost. I told him to stay. He stayed two nights and then got into some housing through his case manager’s connections.

I started seeing the effects of the drugs he took, like the time in a massage when he wouldn’t turn over for the face-up work. He laughed with quasi embarrassment saying he’d taken X the night before. Or the time I saw him intimidate another guy who he thought was looking at him strangely. Or the time I met him at a sandwich shop and pushed food on him as he sat across from me, his eyes at half-mast. He never asked to move in with me, perhaps not wanting to have me refuse him. I came to appreciate that he treated me with respect, even love.

His difficulties increased when he got into legal trouble over drugs. Mostly Johnson seemed to live alone or perhaps he just failed to mention anyone important in his life. Finally I met a lover of his, a chef. The last time I saw this partner was when we went together to visit Johnson in prison. The incarceration served to end that affair.

I got over whatever naiveté I had when I heard the stories from him about surviving in a flophouse, living on next to nothing while he awaited disability insurance, squandering the SSI back-pay settlement on drugs, and being tied up and tortured in someone’s dungeon one happy New Years Day. He always laughed, mining each experience for its humor.

To you listeners who may be prone to exaggeration I say, “No we did not have sex.” Such was not part of our friendship although I certainly had thought about having sex with Johnson any number of times. I just was not willing to become the partner of a drug addict. I was more self-preserving than that. Oh, I loved this sucker—body, mind, personality, odors, wit, and openness. I liked that he liked and trusted me. I loved him starting with those strange pheromones, the feel of his muscles, and the beauty of his underarms. I even liked when he showed up on my table with safety pins in his nipples. I liked our hugs. I liked that he protected me from his worse times. I responded to his desperation. I loved our correspondence from his prison stays, was intrigued with his wild bad-boy personality; and I appreciated that he didn’t try to make me enter his world.

I know that some folk who knew him would think I exaggerate Johnson’s good aspects, but I believe I do not. Like every person I have known, he was a blend of good and bad. Neither attribute is absolute. For me the art of living is to find a balance that one can sustain without bringing unwanted harm to others.

Of course I am not unaware of the sometime unwanted aspects of things. I am pretty sure Johnson did not want to die from an overdose. Probably he didn’t expect the coke he took to be enhanced. Still, he certainly knew the risks. He wasn’t always wise, but in his way he lived life rather fully. I don’t defend him but, I did love him in ways appropriate, and that is no exaggeration at all. 

© 12 Mar 2013 

About the Author 

Phillip Hoyle lives in Denver and spends his time writing, painting, and socializing. In general he keeps busy with groups of writers and artists. Following thirty-two years in church work and fifteen in a therapeutic massage practice, he now focuses on creating beauty. He volunteers at The Center leading the SAGE program “Telling Your Story.”

He also blogs at artandmorebyphilhoyle.blogspot.com

No comments:

Post a Comment