The bright spots were a few friends who didn’t judge me and found me funny. Like many an outcast, I found solace in being the class clown. I imitated faculty brilliantly and told dirty jokes in their voices to anyone who would listen. And I had mad crushes on almost every boy who paid me positive attention. If John Hughes had made a movie about a despondent gay boy trying to learn independence through co-dependency, I was living it without the cool 80s soundtrack or Duckie. (I’d have called it Pretty In Twink or Some Kind of Fabulous, by the way…)
A sea change occurred over the summer between freshman and sophomore year. When I came back that September, I suddenly popular. The boys who had bullied me exchanged simple a “Hi!” in the hallway instead of pushing me into a locker or socking me in the arm when nobody was looking. It was all so surreal, since my hair was overly curly, my skin was in full-breakout mode, and I had just gotten braces on. I’d been waaay cuter the year before. But I was willing to take what I got. Some of the guys even got oddly flirty with me. I didn’t think much of this. Guys, especially the teenage variety, have to flirt with something, after all. It was either me or one of the nuns who taught us English. Braces, acne, and curls were still cuter than a stern vow of chastity.
One Thursday a friend (we’ll call him Logan cause I feel like it) and I wandered the halls after computer class, talking about nothing. We’d flirted all day, in every class we shared. I knew something was up, because usually, we’d be shooting pool or listening to music loudly in the dorm. Instead we ended up behind the stage of the auditorium. Conversation hit that lull that it always does just before something’s gonna give. My heart was racing. And then he kissed me.
We made out until the dinner bell rang. (Yes, our lives were that regulated.) I floated through the early evening in a happy daze. After study hall (I told you life was regulated), we snuck away and made out some more. I was never a great student, but I did even less than usual that Friday in my classes. Before school let out and our parents picked us up, I slipped a note into Logan’s bag before he left. Not an hour passed before I got a phone call at home. One guess as to who was on the other line.
“Um, Jay?”
Barely containing myself: “Hi Logan!” (Surely this was where he was going to ask me to meet him at the mall or go over his house to
“I got your note about how you know, um, love me and stuff…?”
Me, still not getting it: “Yeah?”
“Um, I just needed to let you know that what happened yesterday…well, I was just really horny…and I don’t think, um, I don’t think it’s gonna happen again.”
Sinking in: “Oh. Kay.”
“Still friends, right?”
Lying: “Sure! Of course. Yeah.”
“Good - see ya Sunday.” Click.
I'd love to tell you I learned my lesson from that one. But I repeated the mistake of jumping in, tongue first, several times over the years before it sunk in.
Thanks for tuning in.
-J.
This post was sponsored by the Naked Baby Photos Committee.
4 comments:
Oooh, J, that is so sad and sweet at the same time. We all remember those akward times in our lives when we got our first kiss (man last week was great). So did you guys ever hook up again, or was it really just a one time thing?
That's the main reason I stopped 'dating' guys for a while. I would be 'in love' by the time I buttered a piece of bread at dinner.
Totally hillarious J.
FB - Loved your guest blog on BaT's. Being from a mixed race family I totally identified with the whole thing. Great job putting it all down like that.
I seriously have no idea what I would do without the two of you.
Wow, dude.
That was incredibly touching and extremely sweet.
Let's make out.
;-)
Pretty in Twink? Stern vow of chastity? Good lines.
Have you guys watched "Sordid Lives" yet?
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