Friday, January 31, 2025

ALMOST A DEAD MAN - CHAPTER FIVE

For the past forty years Hollywood had scorchingly portrayed every German as a Nazi. Most young Germans were no different than Americans, wanting the war to be over for good. 'Germany' to Sean conjured up the Black Forest, Mad Ludwig's castles, the Rhine, beer, knockwurst, koo-koo clocks, lederhosen, Goethe, Bach, Beethoven, Schiller, Mann, Hesse, Wagner, Marlene Dietrich, LILI MARLENE, Rommel, the Wehrmacht at Stalingrad, Ilsa of the SS, and inescapably Hitler. Not once in his life had he ever thought about visiting this city. Even after seeing AN AMERICAN FRIEND.

He left his motorcycle on East 11th Street and Avenue D. A dangerous block. Uncle Carmine owned a lot there. It was safe. The Sicilian plumber had once been a merchant marine. He smiled upon hearing Sean’s plan.

“Hamburg, I went there a few times in the Sixties.”

“You see the Beatles there.?”

“No, I only had time to visit the whores and they were plenty of those and pimps. A nasty town. Be careful. It was safe, but some parts were as bad as the East Village. Who you have staying at your place?”

“A young Swedish weightlifter.”

“Swedes are good subleasees. Clean. Pay on time. Any problems call me.” He knew all about his problems with the 9th Precinct.

“If anyone asks about me, tell them I’m in Hamburg.”

“Better I say nothing.” Like most Sicilians honored the traditions of omertà or holding his sand. Sean went back to his apartment and packed a bag, then dressed in a black shirt, suede shoes, and an midnight blue English suit. His mother had bought it for his college graduation. Sine laude. His Swedish subleasee sat in the chair by the window. He wished he was him. Before leaving for JFK the young man asked Sean, "Didn't the Beatles play there?”

“Yes."

Everyone knew that.

Sean took a taxi to JFK. No one asked him anything at Immigration or Customs. He was dressed as a good citizen. His bag only had clothing and a journal. It told everything and more. The trans-Atlantic flight was on schedule and took off on time and for the first time in weeks he fell asleep with all his cares in the world behind him.

A little after dawn the Lufthansa flight from Frankfort slipped beneath the European overcast and landed at his destination on time. All the travel books mentioned the Star Club and proclaimed Hamburg as a vibrant port city. Now he was there.

As the 747 taxied through the morning mist Sean had asked himself,, ”What am I doing in Germany?"

Going back to New York was not an option, yet Sean remained in his seat, as the other passengers deboarded the plane. The flight crew motioned for him to leave and Sean walked off the 747 into the nearly empty terminal. After retrieving his one bag, he approached customs and immigration.

"Passport, bitte." The officer regarded his papers and stamped a six-month visa in his passport. He passed through the arrival doors. Unknown faces greeted Sean. No Kurt or Bertram. He was exactly where and when he should be. He went to a phone booth and he dialed Kurt’s number. There was no answer.

The other passengers and their families vacated the terminal. A pale-faced police officer in a green uniform passed Sean. Loitering in an airport terminal wasn’t a crime be a crime and he was too tired to worry about setting a bad example. He sat on a bench. The struggle to keep his eyes open lasted only a few seconds.

Thirty minutes later a herd of businessmen in pinstriped suits hurried into the terminal. Sean snapped awake. His bag was at his feet, attesting to Germans’ honesty, if nothing else.

A young policeman walked past him and a paranoia-driven delusion that the long arm of the NYPD had alerted Interpol to his arrival seized him. He sat upright, as the uniformed officer addressed him in German, then politely asked in English, "Are you lost?"

Sean lifted a piece of paper.

“No, my friends were supposed to meet me. I didn’t know how to call them.”

"Maybe I can help." The officer looked at the paper and dialed the number.

After thirty seconds he hung up and pressed 'O' and then spoke German too rapidly for Sean. He wrote down an address and said, "Your friends live on Kaiserringstrasse. Maybe twenty minutes by taxi. It should cost forty marks."

"Viele Danke." Sean’s dealings with New York cops had ill-prepared such cooperation or the German policeman wishing his good-bye. “Have a good stay in Hamburg.”

Outside the terminal he walked to a waiting taxi. A rap on the Mercedes’ window, woke the scruffy driver. The back door's lock popped up and Sean sat in the rear. The car smelled of the driver’s hours behind the wheel. Some things remained the same from city to city. He cracked the window and handed the address to the driver, who grunted and drove away from the airport.

The road was smooth and the streets were inordinately clean. The houses were orderly and their lawns were well-manicured. The passing suburbs could have passed for any affluent city in the western world, except the billboards were in German. Sean read a few, but soon gave into exhaustion and didn't open his eyes, until the taxi stopped before a high brick wall on a tree-shaded street.

"Ein Kaiserringstrasse," The driver pointed to a faded blue door and told his passenger, "Vierzig mark, bitte."

The Mercedes abandoned him to the quiet street. A cool mist veiled the white sun and sea salt was in the air. The house was close to the Elbe River. There was no buzzer.Sean pushed the door open with his foot and entered a neglected garden.

Tall weeds choked the yard. Creeping ivy strangled twisted oaks. A dirt path led through the wasteland to a Gothic mansion. Cracks crawled up the masonry, paint flaked off the wall in sheets, and the roof missed many shingles.

Only the BMW and Porsche in the driveway suggested any inhabitants and Sean climbed the crumbling limestone steps, expecting the timeworn building to dissolve into thin air, as a raspy breeze curled through the reeds by an algae-choked pond surrounded by statues of headless nymphs. Sean shivered and called out, "Bertram. Kurt."

The names died without any echo from the garden.

The front door was ajar and the musty air from within the house was tainted by the sting of fresh paint. He called out again and stepped inside, his footsteps creaking across the warped floorboards. Heavy curtains blocked the light from the first room and Sean groped for a light switch against the wall. His fingers tapped a greasy button and electricity blazed from a chandelier precariously fastened to the buckled ceiling.

A clutter of paint tubes and cans in the former dining room surrounded an easel. Empty champagne bottles stood in the far corner. Color-smeared rags partially carpeted the floor. In the midst of the chaos a painting of a nude brunette with a pageboy haircut viewed through broken glass rested on an once-elegant chair.

"Anyone here?" Sean's voice quickly drowned in the neglect, as he admired the voyeuristic skill with which the artist had captured the shattered woman’s wantonness. Sean dropped his bag on the floor. He had slept in worst places, except a savage growl vibrated through the house to be succeeded by a woman's guttural cries. Sean picked up an empty champagne bottle, then charged up the crooked stairs down the gloomy second-floor hallway to where the woman gasped, "Nein, nein, nein. Nicht wie das."

Sean peered into the room. Sputtering candles lit the near-naked brunette from the painting. A pale-skinned man was on his knees and she was far from helpless.

Thigh-high black patent leather boots with stiletto heels rose above her knees. A studded dog collar encircled her neck. The cuirass of steel chains draped across her chest partially hid her pointed breasts. Metal rings tightly encircled their tips, so her blunt nipples were achingly erect. A belt was looped in her right hand. On most women the entire ensemble was a folly, but the brunette pulled her attire, as if it were her second skin.

A spider web of thin scars latticed her torso. None had been accidental. Her heavily made-up eyes and lips coated with a shiny black lacquer failed to disguise her facial features had been catastrophically warped like the tectonic plates of the Earth. Neither her deformities nor the man with stringy whitish-blonde hair crawling at her feet detracted from the illusion of her simultaneously being an angel and whore, although Sean cringed, as the belt repeatedly cracked against the man’s flesh.

Her victim sagged forward, as he tensed for the next blow. The leather fell again and again, ripping mercilessly into the flesh. The man grabbed onto the iron bedstead. She knocked away his hands and he flopped onto the floor. Her talon-tipped fingers wrapped around the man's hair, as she said, "Ja, nichts, du bist nichts, mein Mistvieh."

When the brunette turned her head, Sean nearly kneeled to join the slavish worship. A sheen of sweat on her skin shone in the candlelight, as the cold amber eyes examined the stranger without any alarm before she brunette reached down to strangle the man. His panting was strained, yet his red face glowed with anticipated pleasure. A video camera in the corner recorded the entire erotic asphyxiation. The images played on a TV screen. Sean was embarrassed by his arousal of their elaborate ritual and backed away from the doorway.

On his way down the stairs their struggle seemed to intensify.

Back in the painting studio he lay on the carpet and stuck wet paper wads in his ears to block out the noise. His eyes were shut, but the images of this woman unfolded in his mind like crumpled photos of pin-up girls from the ancient Playboy magazines, the creases forming the same tangle of scars across her skin.

Upstairs Petra doubled the thick belt in her hand. A whip was more effective, except Lukas' back had not recovered from the severe lacerations of their previous appointment. Only Petra Wessel had the proper motive to exact the proper penance from his flesh.

"Koter." Petra pushed off Lukas like a dog in heat.

"Ich bin Ein Koter." He declared himself a cur and assumed a crouching position with outstretched arms. "Schlag mir. Bitte."

Petra had long ago perceived someone being 'top' to another's 'bottom' hardly demarcated who was master and who was slave. She showed no mercy for Lukas. The belt smacked explosively on his back. The pain reverberated through his trembling limbs. At number ten Petra halted for several seconds. His old wounds had re-opened and the blood trickled down his back to form a red delta at the base of his spine. Lukas watched the red drops drip from his chest to the stone floor and Petra dug her spike heel into his calf mercilessly. "Willst du mehr?" Lukas nodded. His breathing paced ragged at twenty, his skin gleamed with blood and sweat at thirty, his hands shook at forty, then at fifty he cried out with pleasure, as the release of endomorphins pulsated from his back like a priceless morphine shot and he murmured the safety word.

Petra stopped and panted from exertion. Her thighs were flecked with blood. She lowered the belt to her side and sat on the chair, sticking her boots underneath his head. He licked them clean, as his tongue departed from the glossy leather to that first raised ridge of scar tissue slightly above her knee.

Petra directed his attention to whatever he had missed with a riding crop, telling Lukas that he was a good dog, which signaled this session’s end. Lukas got to his feet, as if he had snapped out of a trance and asked, “You ever wonder why?”

“Why what?” Petra unfastened her outfit like a gladiator weary from combat.

"Why the pain?" Lukas wiped away the blood with a towel without exhibiting any discomfort from his new wounds, as if to prove invulnerability.

“I’m no psychologist.” Petra never asked any ‘freier’ questions, but the customers always wanted to confess their motives and Lukas was no different. “I’ve tried everything; cocaine, heroin, homosexuality, orgies in search of the ultimate sensation, but only pain makes me feel alive. I thought you of all people would understand that epiphany.”

Before Petra had luckily passed out from her beating, each blow from her assailants had dragged her through an intense agony, She touched her left eye instinctively, recalling the horror of it popping out. She hated Lukas speaking, as if these meetings bestowed upon him an insight into true suffering, because she possessed a realistic grasp of the truth and countered, "Doesn’t your wife make you happy?"

"Marrying her was a mistake." Lukas stroked the lacerations on his back, as if they were a work of art. "One I am stuck with at the moment. Your friend, Kurt, is very much in love with my wife, but if she went with him, then I will be free to marry you."

"You would marry me?" While men had offered to rescue her from a life of sin, none had proposed marriage. An elopement with Petra would scandalize all of Hamburg, but Lukas was a big a fool as any ‘trick’, if he believed her salvation could be achieved through a sacrament.

"If Vanessa was out of the way, I will." Lukas had gained nothing from Vanessa other than having a wife other men wanted. He put on his shirt, the silk blotting with splotches of red. Petra will never take him seriously, until his wife was out of the way. “You know we are made for one another.”

"Do not say that." She threw Lukas his clothes. "I have to attend to my guest."

"Ah, yes, your guest.” Lukas pulled on his trousers and slipped on his shoes. “Who is he?”

"Kurt hired him to work at the nightclub." Petra stuck with Kurt’s cover story.

"Another American in Hamburg," Lukas stated in reference to Wim Wenders' AMERICAN FRIEND.

Petra regarded movies as a pale reflection of life and hoped, Lukas would leave without launching into a discourse about his beloved cinema. “Yes, they come and go."

As he crossed his tie, Lukas smiled inwardly, since the American might be involved in Kurt and Cali’s plans and he asked, "What about tomorrow?"

"You’re paying the rent here. You can come and go as you pleased as long as you pay for my time too." Petra was amazed at his capacity for pain as well as his paying an exorbitant price for one session. His obsession for pain did not prevent her from keeping a gun at her bedside, because Lukas was rumored to have killed two men in Morocco during the 1970s. He was not to be trusted, then again no man was.

Lukas lay an envelope containing 5000 DMs on a table, as if it were a down payment on her soul and left the room without another word. Once certain he had left the house, Petra went downstairs to the studio. The American was sleeping on the floor. She pulled open a curtain and nudged him with her naked foot.

Sean sat up and opened his eyes.

The brunette’s electric-blue silk nightgown barely softened her nail-tough exterior. Without her high heels she was his height. Heavy gold bracelets, earrings, and chains on her wrists, neck, waist, and ears indicated a distrust of banks. She examined him with narrowed eyes and said, "Kurt told me you could pass for a young Orson Welles playing a cop."

"That's the Irish in me." Sean stood up and brushed the sticky rags from his jeans.

"Coll isn’t an Irish name." Her left eye was icier than the right and Sean noticed its movement was out of synch with the right. In fact the color didn’t match the other and he suspected it was fake. "No, my grandfather used an alias to cross the border into America. Somehow it stuck. I'm sorry about the intrusion.”

"Herr Coll, I heard you on the steps." She folded her arms, pushing her breasts together, then smiled mockingly to infuriate Sean, who said, "You could have locked the door."

"And spoil the mood?" The woman walked out of the room. "Come with me, I will show you where to sleep."

Sean trailed her to the neighboring room. The windows gave a view of a fog-shrouded tanker on the river. She pointed to the small bed in the corner.

"You can sleep there."

"What about Bertram and Kurt? They were supposed to meet me at the airport."

"It was a late night at the club and you managed to get here on your own."

She leaned against the door, her legs apart, so the silk lay against her pelvis. He hadn’t slept with a woman since Lisa six months ago. Her stance warned he should save his offer for a more accommodating woman.

“Guess they were right. What is your name?"

"My name?" The silk robe slipped from her left shoulder, revealing a rounded breast, its nipple swollen. The shiny blue material further separated to show her soft belly bisected by a gold chain. Her left hand closed the robe and said, "Petra Wessel."

"Wessel? Like Horst Wessel?" Sean referred to the old Nazi martyr from the 1930s.

"So you are up on your history.” Maybe if the Nazis had won, she might have been royalty, but those ghosts are better left dead and buried. “Maybe we can have a test someday."

She stepped away from the door, leaving behind the musky smell of another man on her skin. Her footsteps climbed the stairs and a door slammed shut. It was a foreign city, a haunting house, a strange way to wake up, and this woman. For today his problems had been left in New York. Sean took off his boots and lay on the bed. Sleep was hardly what he experienced next, but no dreams of H-bombs invaded his dreams and he was happy.

Least for now. SIX The Peugeot 405 labored up the hills to Joux Plateau through the villages above Lac Leman and the summer wind combed through golden hay. Cows grazed in the pastures, their tails swinging lazily, while farmers tended to their chores. Tourists loved the bucolic scenery, but this was not a joyride for the gray man behind the wheel.

Nude Modeling Day # 1


On Canal Street
In Chinatown
Seven minutes to 1
On time
Climb three flights of stairs
First floor a wonton shop
Second floor a Mah-Jong parlor
The clack of tiles
Third floor a massage parlor
A faint aroma of tobacco
One more set of steps to the drawing studio___
Seven older artists before easels
Sitting in folding chairs
Fluorescent lights overhead
I say hello
No hello back
They are here to draw
I am here to be naked
Three hours
$75 cash___
Strip in a corner
A green robe
Ralph Lauren
Twelve years old
I older
72___
Stand on the platform
The wood clean to my feet
Robe off from my shoulders
I now officially a nude model
Timer on
Twenty minutes pose
Five minute break
Three hours
Sit in a folding chair
Take the pose
Not Rodin's THE THINKER
$25 an hour
Legs apart
Hands on my knees
Eyes straight ahead
I see no one___
They see my body
Wonder how they see me
Doesn't matter
I am only a naked body
Lines, curves, shadows
I look at none of them
Eyes ahead
To the brick wall across Canal Street___
Strange to be the object of no desire.
Thirty years past my prime
Skin hangs off my bones
Muscles shadows of ruin
A long scar across my abdomen___
No one talks
Pencils scratch on paper
Electric heaters moan
I am naked
Not cold___
No phone in my hand
No music
No talking
My mind runs rampant
Seeking to land somewhere
I pick prime numbers
1,3,5, 7 ad 1001
1001 is divisible by 7 and more
It is not a prime
I did the math in my head___
Change focus
The Sexual Revolution.
So long ago
So forgotten by the followers of the Nailed God
I sit naked
Twenty minutes pose
Five minute break
My pose
Legs apart
Hands on my knees
Naked
Exposed
Dream of the Sexual Revolution
1964 to Now
Michelangelo's David
I am bigger___
More reminescences
1967
Finding Steven Hammer's THE ITCH
The stroke book had all the answers
Atop Nahanton Hill
Glossy sex magazines in the Combat Zone
The smell of Pine Sol
XXX double-bills in Times Square
Sticky floors
Libbie in the hallway of the Ritz Hotel
Alice crying God in a swimming pool
Beer little Beer on Soi Six
Elena under the Brooklyn Bridge
Candida at the Piscine Deligny
Sharon everywhere
Ro
I was her angel under candle light
She got me this job
Nude modeling
Three hours
$75 cash
I look down
Not a rise
A flaccid penis
Just like Michelangelo's David__
Twenty minute pose
Five minute break
Furious strokes from one artist
They are all older than thirty
Two women
I turn off my wicked thoughts
Resuming the pose
Legs apart
Hands on my knees
Eyes straight ahead
I fall on Tinoretto's drawings
A revelation
At the Morgan Library
The bare bones of paintings
All starts with pencil and paper
Light shadows form lines
Filling in the space
This is not Magic, only Art ___
Once again my gaze on the brick wall
Across Canal Street
The bricks yellow orange___
Two more sessions to go
Legs apart
Hands on my knees
Eyes straight ahead
Twenty minutes pose
Five minute break
The Adonis theater
On Eighth Avenue north of ShowWorld
Naked, but for a jock strap.
A little stiffness
The Sexual Revolution
Is not dead
For in me
It is alive
Simmering in our veins
Awaiting the awakening___
Last session
Twenty minutes pose
Five minute break
Legs apart
Hands on my knees
Eyes straight ahead
My mind blank
No thoughts
No erection
Across the street
The bricks yellow tan
Only four artists left
One leaves
Rolls up his drawing
Color pencils
Good work
Looks nothing like me
I am only a naked body
My mind blank
No erection___
Maybe next time
I'll take Viagra
Viva le Sexual Revolution___

The Harsimus Branch Embankment - Jersey City

Last Wednesday I left Clinton Hill to act the role of a drunken pool player in low-budget film. LATE FAME. A movie from a 1894 novella about a forgotten poet discovered by the young. My friend was the lead.

"This movie is about you."

Famous for never.

One scene was all I got.

Losing at pool. None of the extras looked like barfly. I guess I was there to add cred.

In at 9. Out at 2.

I walked to the Grove Street past the Harsimus Branch Embankment. Erected in the 1900s to carry trains to New York Harbor. Red sandstone. Each block a ton. According to Wikipedia the Pennsylvania Railroad branch served its freight yards and carfloat operations on the Hudson River at Harsimus Cove

Landscape historian John Stilgoe writes of the structure as having “the everlasting solidity of Egyptian pyramids and Inca roads."

Fairly amazing masonry work and still standing, although the ground has sunk under its weight. The height varies from 13 to 27 feet. The top is inaccessible to the public and since its closure In the 1990s nature has taken over with woods spanning the one mile stretch.

I saw no way to scale the walls

A new Eden.

Without man.

No Adam or Eve.

Mankind back to whence we came

No one.

Ps I thought the Embankment was pre-Roman.

On The Hurricane Deck

On the hurricane deck
Of the Spirit of America
Staten Island ferry
Departing St. George's
Bright sun on the Inner Harbor____
I've taken this ferry
Hundreds of time
Mostly to see a good friend
Dr. Nepola
We go back to 1970
I left him in Berkeley
Telegraph Avenue
1973
Got a ride in a Ford Pinto
East
With Marilyn
A single mom
With her daughter in the back
That night
We made love in the Bonneville Salt Flats
She dropped me in Cheyenne___
I haven't stepped foot
On America
This year
Does Jersey City count?___
Neil and I are still friends
I called him on the crossing
No answer
I came I saw I turned around___
Hundreds of trips to Staten Island
This time I thought there might be ice
Last time the harbor froze over
2017
Not today
A crew member said,
"Was some last week by the Battery."
His accent pure Staten Island___
Same as Dr. Nepola
He and I still talk about that trip
Across America___
I am an American
Irish too
The passengers mostly tourists
From scores of lands
Their accents
From far from here
Their smiles
Happy to be here___
On a cool January afternoon
Crossing the Inner Harbor
The Verrazano Bridge spanning the Narrows
Brooklyn docks to the East
Statute of Liberty
Always welcoming the poor
America beyond
The Salt Flats so far away
With Manhattan to the north
Full speed ahead___

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Staten Island Fog - May 9, 1978 Journal

From May 9, 1978 Journal

On the Staten Island Ferry
The first time
I've left Manhattan
Since going to Boston
On Christmas___
11 AM
I can't see anything of Manhattan
The fog furls over the ferry's wake
Across the Inner Harbor
The rank smell of the sea
Beyond the Verrazano Bridge.
The gray water darker than the gray air
The world a maze of opaque sameness
The ferry approaches St. George
The passengers disembark
Return to Manhattan on the same ferry
A fog horn sounds the departure
11:30
The wooden dock enveloped by gray
Fifteen seconds later we are lost in it___

Chaney - Sebago Lake - June 1960

My best friends as a child were my older brother and Chaney

We lived in Falmouth Foresides, Maine.

We did everything together.

School, hockey, eating stolen strawberries from the nearby farm, hang at the docks at the end of our street, and swim at Sebago Lake.

My family moved to the South Shore of Boston in June of 1960.

This excerpt from GAYBOY relates the last time we saw each other. --------------------------------------------------------------------------

Chaney stood on edge of the lawn. My father had mowed it this morning.

“I guess I’m going.”

“Have a good summer.” Chaney kicked a clump of cut grass with his sneaker. His jeans were torn at the knee. This summer was supposed to have belonged to us. A snorkel and diving mask hung in his hand. They were a gift from his Czech grandmother.

“My father says we’ll return in July for vacation.” The week on Watchic Pond couldn’t come soon enough.

“Don’t go swimming without me.” Chaney lowered his head. Boys weren't supposed to cry in public.

“I won’t.”

I eyed his mask, wishing I had one.

I reached into my shirt pocket and pulled out my Pete Runnel’s baseball card. The infielder was our favorite Red Sox player. I offered it to him.

“Here.”

“No, you keep it, but if you go to a game at Fenway Park, have him autograph it for me.” Chaney smiled with the prospective of having the .300 hitter’s signature as well as not having to hand over his mask in trade.

“Everyone in the car,” shouted my father.

“See you.” I slipped the playing card back into my shirt pocket.

“Not if I see you first.”

___________________________________________________________________________________

I recently recorded a piece about what happens to Chaney.

Please go to this url

Chaney

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awPPmr1NJHg

The Vanishing of Belief


My aunt Gloria loved to tell the story about my baptism. The christening was on a hot June day in 1952. Her husband was my godfather. He wore Marine officer whites and a smile. Uncle Jack was glad to be back from Korea. The priest recited the rites and my aunt said as soon as he mentioned Satan that I started bawling like I was possessed by the Devil.

"You didn't stop crying until you were out of the church."

My aunt was a good Catholic as was my mother. They sent their children to Our Lady of the Foothills to educate us in the Ways of the Church and I had entertained an avocation for the priesthood until my best friend drowned in Lake Sebago. Chaney was a good boy. No god should have let him die, however my friend had perished without any divine assistance and I rejected the existence of god from that day on.

I was 8.

I refrained from telling my mother about this apostasy. She would have been devastated by my atheism and I acceded to her wishes that I serve as an altar boy at our local church.

"Who knows? Maybe one day you'll be a priest like your uncle." The priesthood was a favored destination for second sons.

"Maybe one day."

But there was no chance that I would regain my faith. My soul was lost to heaven and hell. My godless spirituality was a secret to friends and family for years, since most Americans couldn't get their head around the idea of life without religion. Non-believers were considered heretics to be avoided by the faithful until President Obama recognized non-believers in this inauguration speech.

We were on the map and neither the Vatican nor the Baptist ministry could deny our presence in the modern world. Our numbers are estimated to be about 15% of the US population and our ranks are growing so fast that the Vatican has proposed a meeting in Paris between believers and non-believers, although I can't see any reason for dialogue with our persecutors.

They can go their way and I will go mine.

A man at peace with the cosmos.

We are not alone.

We are together.

Humans and the stars.

For I was only crying at the Baptism because I was rejecting not only Satan and all his deeds, but god and his too.

BLESS ME FATHER

My First Holy Communion and Confirmation of Faith to the Catholic Church took place at a church in Maine in 1960. My mother dressed me in white to symbolize the purity of my soul, although she had me wear a red jacket with a black velvet lapel. I had a fight with my best friend Chaney after the rites.

Not really a fight, but I must have said or done something bad, because I remember his crying and my mother telling me to apologize.

Afterwards I confessed this sin confessed to the parish priest.

"I had a fight with my best friend."

"That falls under the THOU SHALT NOT KILL COMMANDMENT." Father Murray had heard worst. "Say one Hail Mary and one Our Father."

"That's all."

"It's not like you killed anyone."

I came out of the confessional and said the two prayers.

"What was your penance?" Chaney asked, as we walked home to Falmouth Foresides.

"One Hail Mary and one Our Father"

"Sounds like you got off light," Chaney said on the church steps.

"I'm sorry." I couldn't say it enough to him.

New England Tel & Tel was transferring my father to Boston at the end of the school year. Next year I would be attending a Catholic school.

"Forget about it." Chaney undid his tie.

I did the same.

We were best friends.

A month after my family moved to the South Shore of Boston Chaney drowned in Sebago Lake.

I stopped believing in God, but couldn't tell that to my parents or nuns without earning the wrath of the believers. At school I studied the Baltimore Catechism and at church I served as an altar boy with a family friend, Ray Howell. Latin was our first foreign language. We went to confession together.

"Bless me father for I have sinned." My sins were always the same.

Disobeying my parents and taking the Lord's name in vain.

The penance was always the same too.

"Five Hail Marys and one Our Father."

"What about you?" I asked Ray.

"I made up things." He was a good boy.

"Why?" I was eleven.

"Because the pastor can't believe that I am not without sin." Ray was ten years old.

"And are you?" My repertoire of swear words was very small.

"I think so."

"Me too." I could not recollect Ray ever breaking a Commandment.

By freshman year in high school I had violated eight of them.

Murder and adultery were out of my league, but one of my transgressions was stealing wine from the sacristy. It was sweet. Two slugs gave a good kick. Ray never drank any.

My last time inside a confessional must have on the other side of 1970, although Ray Howell became a priest out of high school and last summer at a family barbecue in Boston the monsignor asked me, "When was your last confession?"

"Long time ago." My sister and her friends were in the pool.

"You're still a non-believer?" Ray was wearing the black.

"Yes." I was in denim shorts and a Red Sox shirt.

He frowned and filled our glasses of wine.

"Think of all your sins."

"That wouldn't be easy." I had done worst than disobeying my parents and taking the Lord's name in vain in the last court decades.

"Think hard."

"Yes, Father." I watched my younger brother cannonball into the pool. His splash created a tsunami.

I was seven years old again.

"Are you sorry?" Ray was serious.

"Yes, Father." I truly was sorry for most everything, although not cursing at New York Rangers fans or not believing in God.

"Then you are forgiven."

"What about the Hail Marys and Our Fathers?"

"I think we said enough penance in our childhood. Now drink up. In vino veritas."

In wine there was truth and Ray Howell was a priest for my own heathen heart.

"Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maximus culpa." The Latin Mass.

I am truly most sorry and I raised my glass. We drank together and he made the Sign of the Cross.

Lightning struck neither of us dead and we clinked glasses.

I hadn't been so blessed in a long time, but then a wordless confession at a BBQ suited me much better than a dark closet in a church.

In wine there was always truth.

HEAVY METAL ACCORDION by Peter Nolan Smith

Every boy has a best friend in his youth.

In 1959 I was lucky enough to have two; my older brother Frunk and a neighbor.

Chaney and I attended the same kindergarten class at Pinewood Elementary in Falmouth Maine and we did almost everything together boys were supposed to do that far north.

In the winter we played hockey in the small backyard rink my father built from 2 by 10s and also sledded down a gully to a tidal ice pool. During the summer we swam in the shallow waters beyond the marsh grass and bicycled to the forbidden bridge crossing the salt flats to Macklowe Island.

That August in 1959 the two of us crawled under the fence into a strawberry field and ate ripening fruit on our backs. The farmer caught us and my father paid him for four quarts. They were worth his angry words and ten whacks of the wooden spoon from my mother.

Partners in crime, but Cheney and I were in love with the same girl. Kathy Burns was sweet on Chaney. He played the accordion. I had no musical skills, even though my mother was famed for a voice capable of silencing the Portland Cathedral choir.

Chaney was a protege on the squeezebox. He mastered SINK THE BISMARCK and DAVY CROCKETT as well as the standard songs learned from his music teacher; YELLOW BIRD and MACK THE KNIFE. I envied his virtuosity as well as Kathy's admiration of his talent.

That autumn our brunette schoolmate held a birthday party to which I was not invited. Chaney brought me a piece of chocolate cake and told me how he had kissed Cathy in her basement. The cake tasted like chalk, but I congratulated Chaney's success. We were best friends.

Thw next summer my family moved south from Maine to a suburb south of Boston. Chaney and I vowed never to go swimming, unless we were together. His parents had a place on Lake Sebago and my grandmother's cabin was on nearby Watchic Pond.

"Wait for me."

"You and me only swimming together."

"And take care of Kathy Burns."

"I will, because one day I'm going to marry her."

I bid him good-bye and my father drove us south in our Ford station wagon. It had wood paneling and he liked to go fast.

That summer was warm in New England and my parents took us to Nantasket Beach for Memorial Weekend. My mother considered the wide strand of sand to be the best beach in the world and she had been to Bermuda for her honeymoon. My brothers and sisters ran in the eddies of the surf. My father swam past the waves. i sat on the blanket and my mother asked, "Why aren't you in the water?"

"Because I told Chaney I wouldn't go swimming without him.

"We won't be in Maine for another two weeks."

"I can wait."

"Seems a waste." She reached out her hand. "Come with me."

I was a good boy and obeyed my mother.

The Atlantic was cold, but not to the young.

Upon our return to our suburban development my father hosed off the sand and salt off his boys outside, while my mother showered my two younger sisters inside. We dried off in the warm summer sun.

The phone rang in the living room. My mother answered it and came out a minute later with wet hair.

"Go sit in the car."

"What I do wrong?"

"Nothing. Just do as I say." She was on the verge of tears.

"Yes, ma'am." I went to the station wagon and sat in the front.

To the West the setting sun shadowed the silhouette of Great Blue Hill.

Several minutes passed before my mother came to the car. She leaned on the open window with a pained weariness and said, "Chaney drowned this afternoon."

"Drowned how?"I already knew how.

"In Sebago Lake. Everyone had gone waterskiing and left him with his grandmother. He swam out too deep and struggled in the water. The grandmother couldn't swim and he drowned. Say a prayer for him."

"What time?"

"I don't know. This afternoon."

My mother walked back into our house.

I sat in the car and looked at the sky seeing only the sky.

Chaney had broken our vow, as had I at Nantasket Beach.

One of us paid the price.

Chaney.

Not me.

Two weeks later my family headed north for a vacation on Watchic Pond.

My father drove first at Falmouth Foresides. New people were living in our old house. We stopped at the Noyes. I hung out with his brothers. None of us spoke of Chaney. As we prepared to leave, I saw Cathy Burns across the street. i walked up to her and she said, "I know what you did and so did Chaney."

"I swan."

"You were wrong."

"I was. I miss him."

"Me too. Chaney could play accordion."

Yes, he could."

My father hour later I was swimming in the tannin-tainted waters of Watchic Pond. It was wide enough, but short by a mile to make a lake.

That night my parents sat around the campfire and my mother sang 'YELLOW BIRD'

I wished Cheny was there to play accordion.and since that sad day every time I see an accordion I think of Chaney and any time I see a street accordionist I ask them to play SINK THE BISMARCK. None of them know the Johnny Horton tune and I request IN-A-GADDA-DA-VITA.

None of the accordion players can play that 60s hit either, however I'm sure that Chaney would have liked Iron Butterfly.

Cathy Burns too.

After all we were all best friends.

To hear Rene Sevieri's cover of IN A GADDA DA VIDA, please go to the following URL

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ugt9pZVkgtg

Monday, January 27, 2025

Seeing Things

When I was given psychological tests after my fatal diagnosis of liver cancer, I told the psych interviewers that I experienced visions and saw people out of the corners of my eyes.

"Hallucinations?"

"No, visions. I can see beyond the veil."

I informed them that I had been born with the placenta around my head. For the Celts birth with the caul meant you have the sight. Not only of the future, but all dimensions of time. No one had ever said that and afterwards my health proxy FX Timoney said as we drove back to Clinton Hill that I might not want to tell everyone everything.

"I can only tell the truth."

As I sickened ammonia seeped into my brain. I had long periods of 'brain' fog' from the hepatic encephalopathy. More comas than hallucination, but outside my eyes the world swirled out of control. I wasn't scared by them. More amused, since I was no longer drinking, the 'visions' and brain fog were my only out of body experiences.

The corner of the eye sightings and the brain fog have gone away. I had feared that my brain might have been damaged. Post-transplant it's functioning better than ever. Now I am sober, but visions I still see. Prediction. We are in for a rough ride in America. The Land of the Freaked.

Nameless Hippie Girl

This photo symbolized the free-wheeling hippie era. I had long mistakenly supposed the young topless woman so enthralled with the music was at Woodstock, but today I discovered thanks to 2011 Daily Mail report that the flower child had a name.

Jennifer Wilson.

Her photo had been taken at a music festival in 1978 shortly after her move from Essex to London. She was not on drugs. The twenty-five year-old had recently divorced her husband. Concerts were something to do.

"I seemed to be photographed at pop concerts every time I went. I used to wear unusual clothing with lots of colours - I still do but I'm trying to tone it down now I'm older. I think it was at Reading Festival, while dancing to a band like Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Deep Purple, Genesis - it could have been any band like that. I used to love music when I was at school. The teacher used to tell us to close our eyes when listening to a piece of music so you can hear it properly and not get distracted by what's going on around you. I still close my eyes now when listening to a new record. Sometimes the photo is used with the wrong story, like drugs or promiscuity, that insinuates all sorts of things I don't like. I didn't take drugs, I was too naive. And I wasn't even promiscuous. I couldn't believe I was the one who was photographed. It was the happiest time of a my life. I met lovely people. It was all love and peace."

This photo captured the era.

It has helped keep the spirit alive.

"I'm shocked that the photo has been used this long."

ThE Age of Aquarius has just begun.

Acting Advice 102

Last week I was hired to play a bar pool player in LATE FAME, a movie created from Arthur Schnitlizer's 1894 novella about a forgotten Vienese poet discovered by the young. the script was well-carved for the leafing man, Willem Dafoe, who had said, "This is a story about your recent life."

Sort of true. I am famous for never.

I had no written lines. I ad-libbed and Willem fed them to me without the director countering him.

I also heeded Steve McQuuen's stage stealing from Yul Brenner in THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN. Brenner was a big star and he demanded the six other cast members stand still. He had the biggest horse on set. In one screen McQueen stands with the other five actors. They are all still. McQueen plays with his hat. According to vintagenews.com When the camera was rolling and he was crossing a stream on horseback behind Brynner, he swung out of his saddle, scooped water in his cowboy hat, and doused himself. or dipping off his horse to get water from his hat et al. Your eyes are glued to him. No lines.

In 1985 I played a thug in Dennis Berry's LAST MOVIE starring Scott Renderer and Gabrielle Lazure. Scott had been in the Performance Garage Troupe with Willem. I asked for some acting tips. I knew nothing.

Scott, also a young painter, said, "Speak slowly and distinctly. Move a little slower in the scene. Know tour marks and lines. Don't look at the camera. if you can see the lenses, then the lenses can see you. Lastly never start until you hear 'action' and never stop until you hear 'cut'.

It was good advice.

Someone else told me, "Don't hit on the lead actress. The producer is # 1. # 2 the director, # 3 the lead man and as for the writer and actress prefers to go home with a Hollywood Boulevard valet than a writer

Good advice then

Good advice now.

Lazurus II Dancing - January 25, 2023

January 25, 2023. One month post transplant. Looking clean in Jacob Eye Home. Reciting poetry with Jack Haven. Weighing 160. Skin and bones and looking like I played with the Rolling Stones.

That morning Charlotta Janssen said, "You're not in the waiting room anymore. You're alive. Get a hair cut and start dressing good. "

When she is right she is very right.

Aran Isles sweater hanging off a scarecrow. Dancing dancing dancing, "I'm a dancing machine."

Sunday, January 26, 2025

Jeffery Dalmer Was Not Alone

Jeffery Dalmer murdered over seventeen men from 1978 to 1991 in Milwaukee. He started with animals as a child. At his trial he claimed to have acted alone, however in 1964 I saw evidence that he might have been connected to a long-running nationwide Satanic cult. I wrote about it in my unpublished novel WICKED YOUTH.

An excerpt from WICKED YOUTH.

The Blue Hill Reservation ran six miles east to west from the marshes of the Neponset River to the abandoned Quincy Quarries. Old trails crisscrossed woods and we scoured them for places of curiosity. Chuckie and I were walking on the Sawcut Notch along Pine Tree Brook. We had never been to this part of the woods, but he spotted a collapsed Quonset hut, with a steeple toppled on the ground. New England winters were hard on abandoned building. The makeshift church bore the scars of a recent burning and Chuckie threw a rock at a window. It missed by a foot. We heard a flutter of feathers and turned our heads to a dead elm at the end of the overgrown field.

Hundreds of black crows perched on the tree's withered branches. The rustle of dry leaves slithered a command and their scavenger heads swiveled to a burnt patch of grass in the field. I blinked several times. “You see that?”

“Yeah.” Chuckie was scared. So was I.

A whitened skull had been stuck on a chest-high stake. Dead animals were impaled on five smaller poles wrapped with arcane rags. Some people claimed the Blue Hills were cursed by the massacred tribe of Massachusetts Indians, but these dead animals had nothing to do with dead red men.

“That big skull belongs to a dog and the others look like cats.” Chuckie picked up a stick.

“Red Halley said the Devil was in the woods. I thought he was drunk.” The crows followed my bending over for the rusty steel rod and I peeked from the corner of my eyes.

Just because I couldn’t see a face or a body didn’t mean the woods were empty. Chuckie had had a pet dog. “You think the dog might be Skippy?”

“No, Skippy is long gone.” I knew that his father had given Skippy to a poor kid, who had no mother. I never told him the truth.

“Just like your bunny rabbits.” I had had pet bunnies for one day. They had jumped from the box in my garage. The fall had put them out of their misery. We had cried when they died.

“Yes, just like the bunny rabbits.” This setting was a sacrilege and we charged the skulls with a scream.

The murder of crows wheeled overhead, as we knocked the totems to the ground and pounded the skulls to shards. Chuckie and I ran from the meadow followed by demonic cawing. We didn’t stop until reaching the giant slabs of granite marking the boundaries of the quarries. Breathless Chuckie turned to the woods. “Who you think did that?”

Our usual list of villains of men in black hats, Nazis, and aliens from outer space never stuck the animals on stakes. “I don’t know.”

“Me neither, but whoever did it is will be angry with whoever messed it up.” Chuckie was right.

“This will be our secret.”

A savage howl pierced the summer air.

Both of us started with horror, thinking the howl might belong to the dog’s skull, but I recognized its owner. The Rolla’s black dog had smelled my scent. Her was more scary than any dead dog.

Years later I found the following photo in the newspaper.

It came from the collection of Jeffery Dalmer.

I had seen it before.

In 1964.

And I shivered thinking Jeffery Dalmer was not alone.

A Tree of Black Crows - 1964

Back in the last century 1964 my best friend and I were walking through the woods of the Blue Hills south of Boston. Abandoned cow pastures overgrown with thorn thickets. Crows cawed beyond the dense tangle. We pushed through the copse and entered a meadow covered with thick grass. A church slouched to the ground, its steeple laying in pieces on the ground. On a dead elm hundreds of crows perched on the bare branches. Bone pickers.

"Satan," Chuckie whispered.

"THere is no Satan." Evil yes, but I was an atheist. We bleieved in neither God or Devil.

The countless black eyes stared at a large dog's skull stuck on a stick within a cabalistic circle of smaller skulls. I picked up a length of wood and smashed the skulls. The crows remained on the branches. Coal eyes on us. My friend and I backed out of the pastures. The thorns closed over the path like the fog over a mirage. We never went back or even told anyone about the crows or skulls. Till now.

Crows hold a special place in Celtic mythology once believed to be firends to the underclass as a familiar to the Phantom Queen Morrigan, a war goddess with the power of shapeshifting and befriended by the banshees. As the jealous concubine of the all-powerful Irish god, The Dagda, she offers prophecy and favor to heroes and gods alike. Odin's crows Huginn and Muninn are watching us all.

Still.

Beware Christians___

Saturday, January 25, 2025

Beautiful Tapestry - Nona Ortega - Planetary Alignment January 23, 2025

Hmm ...

I bought this fantastic tapestry
I wanted to cover the fingernail marks of Mom
In her dementia
Clawing at the wall and ripping out her teeth
And calling out for her mother___
I barely survived hanging this cosmic beauty
Sprinkled with celestial embroidery___
It darken the room
Maybe it made me feel weird
It's deep blue with concentric tiny mirrors and fantastic handiwork
Tonite only the tiny mirrors are in a line
Like the planets tonight___

Planetary Alignment January 25, 2025

Tonight's night sky will present a planetary parade of six major planets. The rare collection of seven planets in alignment will gather the solar system's celestial energy hopefully changing the current human miasma of despair.

The sun will be the unseen lynchpin for Mercury, Venus, the Earth Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, although light will illuminate the Moon. Just after sunset the planet will reveal themselves and Venus and Jupiter will be the brightest. The alignment of all nine planets are a mathematical impossibility even with the downgrade of Pluto as a planet. According to https://www.livescience.com/ last time the eight planets were grouped within 30 degrees was Jan. 1, 1665, and the next time will be March 20, 2673.

It's sunny in New York City. Last night I spotted the Evening Star in the sky. Tonight might be clear Comet C/2024 G3 will appear seventeen minutes after sunset, which will be at 5:12.

In the 1983 film Local Hero, Peter Riegert, playing an aspiring executive says from a classic red English phone box to his boss in Houston, "Sky, sir? It's amazing. I wish you could see it! I wish I could describe it to you like I'm seeing it!"

All I can say is put away from cellphone and keep your eyes on the sky.

The Evil Of The Church

In the early 1970s I drove taxi in Boston. Occasionally I received dispatched calls and picked up young girls in a family way. Our destination the diocesan home for wayward girls in Dorchester. These young girls sent to the nuns to be treated as Mary Magdalene, who was never portrayed as a loose woman in the New Testament. Birth control was a mortal soul. sexual education was banned and abortion meant eternal damnation. They arrived crying, rejected by their families with the stern care of the penguins. Heartbreaking. I was in no position to help them and spare them the agony of the Goodbye Room when the babies were taken from these teenage mothers forever. I rejected the Church at an early age of eight. I have never prayed to the Nailed God since.

ps The Sisters of St. Mary taught me throughout grammar school. Sister Mary Goretti, Sister Mary Osmond, and Sister Mary Magdalene were some of the best teachers in my educational years. I went on to attend Catholic high school and college. I failed religion in high school. Thank you.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Fools - Hubert Brown - MANCHILD IN PROMISED LAND - 1965

I said a fool was somebody stupid. Dad said I was right, but there was more to it than that. He said it takes a stupid person to keep looking for something that is never there. - Hubert Brown - 1965

As true then as it is now.

The One The Only Evel Knievel - 2015

America has not elected a bald president since Dwight Eisenhower in 1956. Every candidate with a hair issue has been rejected by the voters, although the outcome in the electoral college proved to be a landslide for the GOP, Hubert Humphrey missed defeating Richard Nixon in the 1968 popular vote thanks to George Wallace diverting the Deep South to support his cause of segregation now and segregation forever.

This year Donald Trump has surprised media pundits by seizing the lead for the GOP despite sporting a sweep-over. His attacks on migrant workers has resonated amongst white voters fearing the loss of their majority rights and the media have showered the billionaire with increased coverage despite his covert baldness.

Yesterday I found a photo of George Hamilton playing the daredevil Evel Knievel, the second greatest athlete of all time. Andre The Giant is # 1. The movie actor renown for his deep brown tan sported a coif very similar to Donald Trump and that might be another reason GOP voters are attracted to the billionaire candidate.

Of course Donald Trump is no Evel Knievel, but then again he's no Dwight Eisenhower either.

To view Evel Knieval's first jump in 1967, please go to this URL

ps Never trust a man who lies about his baldness - James Steele - Fugitive

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

LOSING RELIGION - 2013

A week before Christmas of 1967 I received my midterm report card from Our Lord’s Health High School on the South Shore of Boston. Having a stutter and stammer I had been expecting worst, however Bruder Karl had graciously passed me with a D+ in German. He loved that I read Rilke's poetry. Brother Valentine had seen no merit in my reciting verses from Virgil's "Aeneid" and failed me in religion. I was going to lose my full scholarship.

“Sorry.” I showed my mother the report card in the kitchen. My brothers and sisters were in the den watching TV.

"You failed religion?" Her eyes blinked in disbelief.

"Yes."

“What is wrong with you?”

“Nothing.” I hadn’t the nerve to tell her the truth.

“Nothing?”

“I t-t-t-tried my best.”

“Yes, I know you did, but explain how do you get an F in religion?” My mother had me on the stand.

“I got a 90 average in the t-t-t-tests.”

“What about your homework?”

“A+.” These results weren’t enough to overcome my one failure for Brother Valentine.

“Then how can an ex-altar boy get an F?” My mother threw the report card on the table.

I had served Masses throughout grammar school as a non-believer.

"I don't know," I answered, since I couldn't tell her the truth. I had refused the brother's for after-school lessons, but there was something even worse for a devout Catholic.

"Even Stalin didn't failed religion and he was an altar boy too." My mother hated the communists.

“I know.” I fought off the urge to say that Stalin had been a bank robber too.

“What will Nana say?”

Up to now I had been a good Irish-Catholic boy.

“Why do you have to t-t-tell Nana?" My Irish grandmother's faith rose with the sun and burned deep into her sleep.

"Telling her that you failed religion will ruin her Christmas." My mother picked up the phone.

“P-p-please d-d-don’t call Nana.” My Irish grandmother prayed for my soul every day.

“Heavens forbid I call my mother, but I’m getting to the bottom of this F.” Her finger angrily spun the Princess phone dial and she said to the person answering her call, “I’d like to speak with Brother Valentine."

"P-p-p-please don't," I begged, since not having a scholarship meant my transfer to a town high school with girls. A normal life.

"Go to the living room.”

Whatever she had to say to my teacher was for adults and I sat on the plastic-covered sofa.

Five minutes later the telephone was racked in the receiver. She entered the living room and stared at me with disbelief.

“Brother Valentine said he failed you, because you don’t believe in God.”

"Yes."

"And you lost your scholarship?" The devout Catholic had been so proud of my winning free tuition to Xaverian. She thought I might become a priest like my Nana's brother, Father Mike.

“I got all As in the tests and did all my homework. I don’t deserve that F.”

“But you don’t believe in God. Tell me that isn't true."

"I have doubts." My refusal of his advances had also doomed my sophomore year.

"Brother Valentine didn't say doubts. He said disbelief. Which is it?"

I shut my eyes like a parachutist jumping out of a perfectly good plane.

"Disbelief."

"My son is a disbeliever. An atheist." Her right hand signed the cross and a sigh left her lungs, as if her breath had been seized by the Devil. The Church had burned heretics for challenging the divinity of Jesus and atheism was an even greater anathema than communism in Cold War America.

"You're fourteen years-old. How can you know if you don't believe in God?"

"I decided three seconds after you told me, "Chaney is dead."

At the age of eight in 1960, my best friend had drowned in Sebago Lake. Chaney and I had vowed never to swim unless we were together. He was in Maine. I was on the South Shore.

"I prayed to God to save him. To bring Chaney back from the dead, but God didn't save him."

Also to forgive me for swimming at Nantasket Beach. Everything was all my fault. I was all-fallible.

"God moves in strange ways."

"More like he doesn't move at all."

“But you were an altar boy.” Her head spun with my blasphemy. to her faith.

“I did it for you.” I also served, because my older brother and I received $5 for funerals and up to $20 for weddings.

“Your teacher said if you recant your atheism, he will give you a B and your scholarship will be reinstated.”

My girlfriend attended the town high school and failing religion seemed like the fastest way to end my Catholic schoolboy career. I told my mother, “I can’t do that.”

“Why not?” She was not used to any resistance to her will.

“I don’t believe in God.” The Christian God had exterminated non-believers. Genocide was wrong. I believed in anything, but Him.

“Wait till your father gets home.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

My father had never hit me in my life. Corporal punishment was my mother’s job. My fear of the Maine native was derived on the desire for his love and I had a tendency to make mistakes.

That evening I waited on the front steps for my father. I thought about running away, but the night was bitterly cold for December and I liked sleeping in a warm bed. My father walked up to the house. He was an electrical engineer. They liked order and he groaned upon seeing my face, “Now what?”

“I failed religion.”

“How did you fail religion?” He had played football in college. Discipline was a key to survival in his world. Obedience, punctuality, good grades, and saying our prayers were all he expected from his children.

“I don’t b-b-believe in God.” I struggled with each word. I possessed several wicked speech defects.

"Since when?"

"Since Chaney died."

That long?"

The summer of 1960 was only seven years ago."

"It took a few year to free my soul."

"And you don't believe a force ruling the universe?"

"Maybe gravity and the speed of light, sir." I was good in math, but rejected the infallibility of any law of science other than 1 + 1 = 2 or the power of zero to negate all numbers and formulas. I scored As in math.

"Heaven and hell?"

"Fairy tales," I told him my truth, hoping he kept that from my mother.

"You're going against the beliefs of most of the people on Earth."

"I know." I had calculated that there might be a million atheists on the planet. Not many, but I was one of that not many.

None of them lived in my hometown.

"This is a big problem for your mother. What are you going to do?"

"Whatever she wants." I lied. Obedience was the path of least resistance.

"Good boy, but try and keep an open mind about God."

"You're not mad."

"I'm mad, if I know what's good for me." My father had converted from the Episcopal Church to marry my mother. His faith in the Holy Roman Church was almost as young as me. He pulled me to my feet.

“If that is what you believe, then that’s up to you, but don’t expect any Christmas gifts this year. Christmas is for Christians.”

My mother and he had words that night. My older brother cupped his hands over his ears. Frunk was a believer, but didn’t criticize my decision. He had been Chaney’s friend too.

Christmas morning I received no gifts and our family attended the 8 O’Clock Mass. The pastor’s sermon was dedicated to Christ’s birth of divinity. His eyes fell on me several times. I didn’t not take communion. My mother told her friends that I was sick, but the rumors of my heretical stance were spreading around town. In 1964 Life magazine referred to Madalyn Murray O'Hair as "the most hated woman in America". ... "Woman, Atheist, Anarchist". I had to keep my stance secret.

My girlfriend stood by me. Kyla loved me more than she loved God.

My Nana came to Christmas Eve dinner with the rest of my relatives. Father Mike never came to our house. He was now a monsignor. Uncle Jack, an ex-marine and a lawyer. He spoke in conspiratorial whispers with my mother. They looked at me and shook their heads. Everyone in my family was deeply religious. Nana knew nothing and gave me a Realistic transistor radio at the end of the meal. She used to take my brother and I into the city. The trolley to Forest Hills. A subway to Washington Street. Confess our sins and light candles at St. Anthony's Shrine, where she prayed a rosary in Gaelic, then hot dogs at WT Grants, and a movie at Loew's Orpheum. I loved her so much and at the end of the dinner I kissed her with all my love. She blessed me with the rosary at the door, then left to be driven home to Jamaica Plains by Uncle Jack.

"And you want to hurt that woman?" my mother murmured behind my back.

"No." It was the truth, but I was godless.

"Then Christmas would be a good day to rejoin the Church."

"I'll think about," I said, giving her a wrapped box.

It contained a silver chain and cross.

She loved it almost as much as my wavering.

After New Year’s the phone rang every morning. The Xaverian brothers pleaded for my soul.

“Come back to the faith and we’ll give back your scholarship.” The Vice-Principal was playing good guy. The Dean of Discipline wanted to make me an example for the rest of the school by burning me as a heretic, but he wasn't after my soul. Only my body. I was never going to say 'mea culpa' or forgive me. I had done nothing wrong and told the brothers in the principal's office..

“I don’t believe in God.” I belonged somewhere other than an all-boys high school and that was closer to Kyla at the public high school.

"Then you'll be damned to Hell." The Vice Principal switched to bad guy with the ease Dr. Jekyll becoming Mr. Hyde.

Things got rough during the Christmas Holidays. Old friends players in my hometown called me a commie faggot. I was neither yet.

Xaverian suggested to my parents that I see a psychiatrist from the arch-dioccese.

I agreed to this experiment for my mother's sake.

On a cold gray January afternoon my parents drove over to Commonwealth Avenue in our Delta 88. None of us spoke on the ride and reaching Commonwealth Avenue I looked out the window at the long-haired hippie girls of BU. They had been the inspiration for the Standells’ 1965 hit DIRTY WATER.

We arrived at the Jesuit seminary in Brighton ten minutes before our appointment. Like my father my mother was as devoted to punctuality as she was to God. We parked before the Order of Jesus' main building. Snow covered the lawn. She said nothing.

I got out of the car. The cardinal lived on these grounds. He chanted the Rosary over the radio every evening at 5. My mother joined his raspy voice along with thousands of other Catholics around Boston. He had anointed me on my Holy Confirmation and awarded me my scholarship certificate. I lowered my head hoping that he wouldn’t see me and walked to the building. My father accompanied me up the shoveled waalk to the door.

“You’re my son. I will always love you, but you know how I feel about God. Please have an open mind.”

“I'll try.”

"You're not coming in?"

This is all on you. One more thing. Don’t slouch in the chair.” My father was a stickler for a good impression.

“Yes, sir.”

The diocesan shrink had an office on the second floor. A chubby man in a black robe met me at the door.

"I'm Brother Bob. Please sit down.” He pointed to a pair of leather chairs and shut the door.

I sat, but said nothing. The fat man's head was covered by a thick mat of hair. The color didn't match his sideburns.

"We both know why you're here." Bob sat next to me. He was sweating as if his soul was burning in Hell. “I’ve read your file. I see this problem all the time. Normally we let Satan have the apostates, but it concerns the Cardinal when a gifted boy loses his faith. You were an altar boy and attended a few retreats for boys with a calling."

I looked at the huge crucifix hanging on the wall and then out the window. The room was too warm and the chair was too comfortable for a meeting about a young man's soul.

“Do you believe the Bible?”

I remained silent. Saying nothing. No words could be used against me.

“Are you going to tell me why you don’t believe in God?” He leaned forward and his swollen fingers rested on my knees. The tips massaged my lower thighs. I pushed his hands off my lap. He was shocked by my rejection. Suddenly a greater sinner than a juvenile heretic.

“I see you.”

“Jesus loves you and His truth will set you.” His right hand righted the wig on his head.

“Why should I tell the truth to a man who lies to himself about being bald.”

"Bald?"

"Yes, and you're wearing a rug." I stood up and ripped the toupee off his skull.

“You’re damned.”

“You only believe in Jesus, so that He will cure your baldness.” I threw the wig in his face and exited from the office.

I walked back to the Olds defiant faithful to my lack of belief. I spotted my mother in the Olds. She was praying for my soul and my father stared into the snowy distance. I had rejected the Holy Trinity, heaven, purgatory, hell, The Eucharist, the Infallibility of the Pope, the Blessed Virgin, and all the teachings of the Holy Roman Church. My duty on Earth had ceased The Baltimore Catechism's essential edict to love, serve, and obey God for years.

My birth had taken twenty-two hours. My mother had gone down to the Valley of Death to bring me life and I wished that I was still a six year-old boy in a white communion suit. Chaney had worn a similar suit for our Holy Communion. We fought that spring day. He had made fun of my red velvet collar. My mother had ordered me to say that I was sorry. I did just that. He was my best friend and still was. Dead or alive.

I opened the door and sat in the back seat, knowing the next few minutes would be hell on earth for at least two of the three of us.

“How did it go?” My father started up the engine. The 88 had a big V-8. It wasn't loud enough to drowned out my answer.

“Not good. The man said I was damned.”

“Damned?” The word struck my mother’s heart.

“He’s not a priest. He can’t damn me.”

“My son damned by the Church.” Her hands covered her mouth in shock.

"I’m sorry.”

“Sorry is not going to save you from Hell," my mother cried into her palms.

“The man touched me.” My only defense was the truth.

“Touched you?” My father turned around and studied my face for deception. He had never lied to me and I tried to return that gift to the best of my ability.

“He touched my leg and not in a nice way.”

“You’re saying he touched you.” My father tightened his fist. “No one touches my son.”

My father had nothing against queers. Arthur across the street lived with a friend. They had served in Korea together. Arthur took care of his mother. Neighbors whispered that he was not like the rest of the men in the neighborhood, but that didn’t stop my father from playing tennis with him or our swimming in his pool.

“Are you telling the truth?”

“Yes, sir.” I felt bad. I was an atheist, not a snitch.

“I have to make a phone call.” My father drove to the nearest phone booth and parked the car.

“Who are you calling?” My mother asked softly.

“Uncle Jack. He'll know what to do."

Uncle Jack was a lawyer.

"We can't sue the Church."

"No one is suing anyone." My father got out of the car.

"Now see what you've done?"

My mother cried into a handkerchief.

"Yes, ma'am," I answered, but breathed easy. I was closer than ever to attending a public school.

Several days later my Uncle Jack and I sat in the hallway outside the principal’s office. He was prepared for a fight. He looked at me and sadi, "I was young like you once."

He was probably thirty-five.

"I was taught by the nuns, I was an altar boy, I went to Boston College High School with the Jesuits. I was just like you> I had my doubts. Not like you, but I never really worried about God, until I was sent to Korea as a First Lieutenant."

"In the Marines." I wanted to join the Corps. Not to fight Communist, but to get out of my town. Only Kayla was keeping me here. "I don't talk about the war or God, but we were sent to the frontline. It was winter. Colder than here now. two-hundred plus soldiers and ten officers. A colonel ordered us to hold the line. I was scared, but not praying to God scared. Then that night the Chinese Commies attacked in the thousands with bugles blaring. Coming at us from everywhere. I started praying to God. Help me. Help me. Men died. I killed men. I never stopped praying. In the dawn we were down to seventeen men and I was the only officer left. Thousands of dead bodies lay in the valley. God saved me or my prayers did. I fought for you. But also for whatever you believe."

Thanks."

"And you still don't believe?"

"100%."

"And what you told me about the brotehrs touching boys is true?"

"Yes."

"Then I'm ready for combat."

The door opened and the Dean of Discipline waved us inside. Brother Valentine sat with the principal, who asked us to sit.

"We'll stand. We are not going to be here long."

The ex-Marine told Brother Valentine of the freedoms of speech and religion guaranteed under the Constitution. He loved the idea of fighting the Church on this issue and his record in court was well-known throughout the state of Massachusetts.

Only the previous year Uncle Jack had won $500,000 for a deaf girl in a suit against the nuns for torturing their students. Surrender was less costly than fighting accusations of molestation and the brothers folded like a wet newspaper.

My religion teacher changed the F to a B+. Brother Karl’s D+ remained a D+. It was an honest grade. My scholarship was reinstated to half to seal the deal and Uncle Jack advised to keep my atheism to myself.

"Especially around your mother and Nana."

Yes, sir."

I wished that the brothers had stuck to their guns and I had been thrown out of school, but my girlfriend was happy that I remained at Our Lord’s Health. Kyla liked her space. We stayed together until our senior year and religion had little to do with our faith in each other. I attended Mass with my parents until graduation from high school. After that only on Holidays.

Uncle Jack became a judge. My mother prayed for my soul to the end. My father stopped attending church only because he disagreed with a priest's sermon against queers. MY youngest brother was gay. was sick.

Over the years I have explained that my lack of belief does not subtract from my spirituality. In 1995 I had visited the most holy sites on Earth to expiate the sins of my deceased baby brother as well as mine ven swimming in the ganges at Varanasi and in 2008 I was proud upon hearing President Obama mention non-believers in his inaugural speech.

Our numbers within the USA have grown to 20 million strong since 1971 and we are getting stronger, despite IN GOD WE TRUST on the dollar.

Two summers ago I was at a pool party at my doctor’s house on Staten Island. We had attended a big Catholic college in Boston. Nick was BBQing burgers and Italian sausages. I was glad to be out of Brooklyn and intended on sleeping over in the basement bedroom.

After three Margaritas and a glass of wine I told his wife the story of my scholarship. Her religion was a comfort to her and I said nothing to disparage her devotion, so Rose laughed at the funny parts. We knew each other over twenty years.

Her husband told me to cool it.

"I have a hard enough time getting my four children to attend Sunday Mass without you preaching the beauty of sleeping later on the Lord's Day."

"I can't blame them." Sleeping late had been my favorite refuge from religion as a teenager.

Two parents had overheard my discourse against organized religion and the father said, "Our ten year-old son is a non-believer."

"And you want him to be a believer?"

"No, we were wondering if you could you talk to him, so he knows he’s not alone.” said the mother, despite her obvious concern her son's divorce from the norm.

"Are you believers?"

"Yes, but we have tried everything with Charlie and we want him to feel good with his choice."

"You do?"

"Yes. Do you mind talking with him?"

“No problem.” I walked over to the young boy playing a video game in a poo; chair.

The other kids were cannonballing into the water.

Charlie looked like he was winning his game, which probably meant killing thousands of aliens or zombies.

“Your parents wanted me to speak to you?” I flashed back to the shrink in 1967.

I still had a full head of hair.

“About what?” he sighed, as if he had more than one problem.

“God.”

He lowered his head and sighed with resignation, “Are you a priest?”

“No, an atheist. I don’t believe in God and I wanted to tell you that not believing won’t kill you.”

I kept my spiel short and sweet. Ten year-old boys rarely want to hear anything from a man in his fifties. I certainly hadn’t at his age, but I didn't have a sweep-over.

"Everything will be fine." It had been for me.

“Thanks mister.” Charlie was genuinely relieved when I stopped talking.

Religion and especially lack of religion was a private matter best left to the soul.

“No worries. I just wanted you to know that you aren't alone."

"I already know that." He motioned to two kids at the end of the patio. They were Goths.

"Then have a good life."

I took off my shirt and bellyflopped into the pool. The impact wave washed over the rim. Nick's children screamed with delight and I almost felt like Moses parting the Red Sea, but only almost like Moses. The prophet had a big beard, but was reputed by Exodus to be bald. I got out of the pool and pushed back my hair. The kids screeched for a repetition of my feat.

“Only if we do it together.” I pointed to the young atheist.

The others called Charlie by name.

He put down his video game carefully to not let it get wet.

“On the count of one, two, three. Cannonball.”

Our combined impact created a wave to rock Noah's Ark and I broke surface with a smile. Charlie too.

It was good to be a kid again. I only wished that Chaney was with me, then again he was with me always, because memories of the Here-Before live forever in the Here-Now.

I only have one photo of Chaney Noyes. He exists always as the boy who showed me a basket of baby puppies, ran through Falmouth Foresides, Maine without a care in the world and he lives with every day.

That is the beauty of eternity.

Foto from Pine Grover Primary, Falmouth Foresides, Maine 1960

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Sieg-Heil Trump - Elon Musk

A day after theocracy replaced democracy in America. Elon Musk, the world's richest man, thrilled the inaugural audience by twice sieg heiling after his speech. Joy enraptures the true believers, while the fallen moan their present fate.

There is a need for concern.

Trump won the election by more than a million votes, as Democratic voters abandoned Kamela Harris for her vague message, support of the Hamas genocide, and the fact that most American males will not vote for a woman.

It was no landslide, except in the Electoral College, a unique institution dating back to slavery days and slanted for the GOP thank to an aggressive campaign to gerrymand the congressional districts in their favor of a return to God.

Elon Musk responded to criticism by the media. "Frankly, they need better dirty tricks. The 'everyone is Hitler' attack is sooo tired."

Most of my Jewish friends voted for Trump, provong that some German Jews vote for Hitler.

A photgrapher friend texted that he couldn't beleive how much the religous right hates transgender people.

I wasn't. I had lived in the 1960s. By 1968 I was twisted, more a sexual adventurer than a queer, but I never accepted gay-bashing. Just recently a longtime Jewish friend of mine was arguing with his twelve year-old daugther that he didn't hate gays.

"I have gay friends."

"But you said if he touched you, you would punch him." She was more than mad. It wasn't my place to interfere with a discourse betwen a parent and a child, but I knew him well and said, "First, I know you almost fifty years. I've never seen you throw a punch. Secondly I do hate gays. I don't mind you lying to yourself or me, but don't lie to your daughter. It will bite you in your ass. Lastly don't fuck with a trannie. They will fuck you up."

The infamous John Spacely according to Wikipedia

feld LA to the East Village where his drug addiction got to the point where he was unable to work. He then returned to his life of hustling, focusing on the St. Mark's Place, where he became a popular street personality. Around this time, he got in an altercation with a drag queen, who along with some others attacked Spacely with chains, injuring his eye. After this incident, Spacely most often wore an eye patch over his damaged eye, because he did not have enough money to have the surgery needed to correct the eye.

"Never fuck with a drag queen."

Elon Musk should take heed.

He is a big guy, but a drag queen will beat a man senseless with her high heel. I've seen Kathoeys do it in Thailand. I cheered them on. Sie gesund, transfroys. ie Yiddish for trans woman.