Monday, October 3, 2016

Life is Indeed a Royal Flush, by Carlos


When my grandmother was 94, the family pushed her to become an American citizen. Although she had lived in this country for 90 years, we feared her social security benefits might be compromised since, unlike my grandfather, she had never forfeited her permanent resident green card. Now, my grandmother had always, to our knowledge, been an upstanding citizen, raising her two sons as a single parent, remaining steadfast even during war and the Depression, and ultimately becoming the core matriarch of the family. She was a survivor to be reckoned with if anyone was foolish enough to provoke her. On the day of her citizenship hearing, we discovered that due to her sultry past, her application had not been considered. Although we only knew the ethical, principled icon of virtue, we learned she had, in fact, been a bigamist as well as a federal felon. When she had approached the immigrations officials, she wasn’t attempting to be duplicitous; she simply assumed that events that had transpired decades earlier carried no weight in legal matters She shared with us that when she was very young, she had married her childhood sweetheart and shortly thereafter had given birth to her two sons, my uncle and my father. Unfortunately, her husband Carlos, soon started smoking and pursuing a wayward life. Having no patience for his nefarious lifestyle, she decided to leave him and raise her sons as a single parent in spite of the scarlet letter she would have to wear in the community for shunning her man. Possessing no job skills, but being responsible for two hungry babies, she bootlegged, brewing and distributing home brew in the neighborhood. Since Prohibition was the law of the land, she was apprehended and charged. Laughingly, she told us that although she spent only two days in jail, in the evenings of both days her jailers released her to care for her children. Apparently, nothing became of the charges although the record of her infraction remained. To add insult to injury, after she fulfilled her duty to her sons, she agreed to marry her beau, a man who for years had been smitten by her charm, attractiveness, and independence. Unfortunately, she neglected to inform the judge who married them that she had never divorced her first husband. She must have convinced herself that marriage vows have expiration dates. After her past caught up with her, she sought the counsel of a kind lawyer and benefactor who, in fact, remained her friend until he died of advanced age. For years she walked to his office on the first of the month and paid him $2.00 religiously until the debt was settled. By the time I was born, my grandparents were starting out their lives free and clear. However, when my mother unexpectedly died and my father, my grandmother’s son, found he could not raise me properly, I became my grandparent’s son. In the truest sense of the word, they became my parents, and better parents I could not have asked for. As for the misunderstanding with the U.S. Immigration Office, after the meeting with the officials, my grandmother just laughed, and we laughed along with her when she informed us that she had never really wanted to become an American citizen anyway. Why upset the applecart by becoming what you are not? She died decades later at peace and with no regrets. Thus, early in life she became my prime candidate for the don’t-sweat-the-small-stuff merit badge. After all, God recognizes that life requires tenacity. No doubt, He rewards those who can sleep through a droning academic lecture delivered by a verbose professor even as they dream of the bowl of steaming menudo awaiting back home.

Although it skipped a generation, namely my father, I not only inherited her intelligence, but I also inherited her roll-with-the-punches instincts. She may not have been educated, being that she dropped out in the third grade, but when I was in college and trying to prove to her how bright this egotistical college boy was, she looked me in the eye like a hawk flushing out its quarry and upbraided me, telling me, “Mijo, eres tan inteligente que caminas en tu propia mierda.” “My son, you are so bright, you walk on your own shit.” She taught me humility and gratitude with her wise words. I never again did allow my swelled head to believe that I was better than anyone else.

To illustrate our binary connection that demonstrates how we were not that much different from each other, some years ago, I was entertaining friends at our home. Suddenly, one of my guests pulled out a rubber cock ring from his salad plate, an appliance that must have been buried beneath the romaine and the croutons. He held it up to everyone with a disgusted look on this face. The cock ring had been a white elephant gift someone had given me a few days earlier, and I can only guess that I must have inadvertently left it in on the kitchen counter where I prepared our meal a few days later. I knew I had to think fast or possibly lose a friend as well as my reputation as a host. Attempting to disarm the situation with my Cheshire cat smile, I informed him that I had purchased and deliberately placed the cock ring on his plate, in hopes that it would inspire him to head out to Charlies that night and find himself a lusty cowboy with whom to spend the rest of his life. He must have accepted my stretching of the truth, for even to this day he has continued to accept dinner invitations to our home. Later, as I reflected on how I had saved the day, I thought I heard my grandmother’s muffled laughter at how I had managed to turn a possible misfortune into a victory through guile and humor, qualities that are greatly underestimated, especially when caught between a rock and a hard place…no pun intended.

A few days ago, I found myself among fellow writers at the Denver Gay and Lesbian Community Center, where we congregate to share our stories, our adventures with life. Notebook and keys, pens and reading material in hand, I went to the lavatory to relieve my demanding bladder. As I flushed, in slow motion I noted my keys tumbling from my hand and into the bowl, and in a split second, my world turned topsy-turvy. In a surreal moment, I saw the keys swirl around the bowl as though navigating on a white water river and disappear into the guts of the plumbing system. I remember thinking, “Wow, this toilet sure has a strong current.” I plunged my hand with some hesitation into the throat of the porcelain throne, hoping to avoid some awkward explanation, in a desperate effort to salvage my keys and my pride. After the water stopped gurgling, I stood there with what I suspect was a classic what-do-I-do-now stupefied look on my face. I debated simply walking out as though nothing had happened to save face.  Nonetheless, I washed my hands, informed the receptionist at the front desk of my misfortune, and headed up to the reading room. I was annoyed at my fate as I pondered my next options, to walk home, to call Ron at work, to kick myself in the tuchus. I decided to muddle through the reading with as much grit as I could muster.  I found it ironic that just before I read, one of the readers mentioned flushing a cigarette down the toilet, and I took that as cosmic synchronicity.  At that moment the tension dissipated like steam released from a boiling kettle. I recognized my situation to be what it was, small stuff. Gratefully, I discovered a new friend when she drove me home after the reading. Furthermore, by the next day, I had managed to replace all my keys. As for the Community Center, it was not, to my knowledge, deluged by a flood of water from a backed-up toilet on steroids. Later, as I told Ron of my misadventure of the day, we both laughed at how calm I was. In the past, I had cringed and gnashed my teeth when buffeted by life’s inevitable headaches as when my cat pied on my pants one night in retribution for some perceived offense to his feline sensibility. I didn’t notice the stench of cat urine until the following morning at a job interview. Ironically, I still got the job. Now, I just smile, and say, “Shit happens.” And at such moments I can feel my grandmother’s energy as she reminds me to wear my don’t-sweat-the-small-stuff merit medal with pride. Then, we both laugh until tears roll down our eyes. In the end, I suspect most of life is small stuff. When life rankles the soul, I recall an iconic epitaph I recently saw on a Key West tombstone. The carving on granite, I told you I was sick, is undeniably a testament to human grit. Therefore, Mámi, kudos to you. You taught me to use what God gave me. I’ve learned that He smiles at my victories even when I flush them down the crapper.

© 22 Aug 2016 

About the Author 

Cervantes wrote, “I know who I am and who I may choose to be.”  In spite of my constant quest to live up to this proposition, I often falter.  I am a man who has been defined as sensitive, intuitive, and altruistic, but I have also been defined as being too shy, too retrospective, too pragmatic.  Something I know to be true. I am a survivor, a contradictory balance of a realist and a dreamer, and on occasions, quite charming.  Nevertheless, I often ask Spirit to keep His arms around my shoulder and His hand over my mouth.  My heroes range from Henry David Thoreau to Sheldon Cooper, and I always have time to watch Big Bang Theory or Under the Tuscan Sun.  I am a pragmatic romantic and a consummate lover of ideas and words, nature and time.  My beloved husband and our three rambunctious cocker spaniels are the souls that populate my heart. I could spend the rest of my life restoring our Victorian home, planting tomatoes, and lying under coconut palms on tropical sands.  I believe in Spirit, and have zero tolerance for irresponsibility, victim’s mentalities, political and religious orthodoxy, and intentional cruelty.  I am always on the look-out for friends, people who find that life just doesn’t get any better than breaking bread together and finding humor in the world around us.

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