floating in a tin can
I would like to watch you sleeping, which may not happen. I would like to watch you, sleeping. I would like to sleep with you, to enter your sleep as its smooth dark wave slides over my head

and walk with you through that lucent wavering forest of bluegreen leaves with its watery sun & three moons towards the cave where you must descend, towards your worst fear

I would like to give you the silver branch, the small white flower, the one word that will protect you from the grief at the center of your dream, from the grief at the center I would like to follow you up the long stairway again & become the boat that would row you back carefully, a flame in two cupped hands to where your body lies beside me, and as you enter it as easily as breathing in

I would like to be the air that inhabits you for a moment only. I would like to be that unnoticed
& that necessary.

- margaret atwood

June 2017

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Posts Tagged: '1969.01'

Oct. 30th, 2013


[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey

[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey

WE NEVER DID TOO MUCH TALKING ANYWAY


[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey
January 28, 1969
It's freezing outside, the kind of bitter cold that dries out your nose hairs and makes it hard to keep your eyes open. Michael's teeth can barely even chatter. Most of him feels numb, unsure of what just happened and sick from adrenaline and shock. People pass by him in strange blurs, hurrying through the chill. How can they move so quickly at a time like this? How do they know where to go?

He stares at nothing for an undetermined amount of time, breathing foggy heat into the air, ears ringing.

Usually he starts to walk at times like this (although there has never been a time like this)—walk and walk, only stopping when he's exhausted himself—but it's too cold and his suitcase is too fragile and burdensome. He doesn't have a choice at the moment, he has to travel, but he has no destination.

Cabs go by over and over. It seems like the same cab. He should probably get in one, but he hates cabs. They seem unreachable anyway. Distant, out on the road. And where's the subway station? Shouldn't he know? Where's anything?

He starts walking.


Again, he doesn't know how long it's been, but Michael can no longer feel his face, or his hands, or his feet. His mind is blank, full of static. People give him strange looks that he doesn't notice.

Eventually he passes a payphone and looks at it. It brings an image to mind: the payphone in the hallway of the Chelsea, just outside Lee's room. The one she always calls him from.

Lee.

He goes into the booth, singleminded. Setting his suitcase down, Michael wrestles some change out of his pocket and fumbles around with the phone for a frustrating minute, attempting to dial a familiar number. Eventually the other end starts ringing, and he closes his eyes and stands still, the sound becoming his whole world.

“Hotel Chelsea,” someone grumpily says as they pick up.

“Lee. I need to talk to Lee. Lee Taylor,” Michael says, halfway to himself.

“Hold on,” and then the receiver thunks against something—maybe a desk—and Michael tries to hold on.

Oct. 26th, 2013


[info]lunistice
[info]spaceodyssey

[info]lunistice
[info]spaceodyssey

it's a mixed up muddled up shook up world except for lola


[info]lunistice
[info]spaceodyssey
January 6th, 1969
Lee is not having a good week. He's been cagey all week and everybody knows why, and the fact that they find it funny only makes him more irritable. He sulked about it for a few days, but he is so tired of worrying and fretting and going in circles of indecisiveness that, after yelling and throwing something at Rich, nearly missing his head (he seemed more entertained than angered by it), Lee has got it in his head to do something about this.

So.

Near as he can tell, they have two major obstacles keeping them from being together: first, location. It's the trickier of the two to solve. They can't go to Michael's place, mostly time reasons, Lee vaguely thinks. Michael's father lives there, neither of them wants to be walked in on like that. And Rich's suite at the Chelsea is always teeming with people, whenever they get a moment really alone without people in the other room talking, something's always come up. Lee isn't able to fully relax, expecting at any moment for someone to barge in through the closed door. If they'd explained the situation to Stanley, he probably would have just given them a key and told them to go to town, but when they tried in another, random hotel room over New Year's, Lee had hated it. So, location. He's still working on that one.

Second obstacle: logistics.

Frankly, Lee just does not know what to do. He understands in the broadest terms how sex works between men and women, and what its purpose is for, and generally what happens. But two men? Homosexuals? What do they even do? Lee's not a man, not any more than he's a woman, which means neither of them are really homosexuals, but those are the bits God gave them and he doesn't think there's a word for what they are. His first idea is the library, where he goes one morning and looks at every single book they have - health, anatomy, human biology, even psychology. They are all either frustratingly unilluminating or infuriating or both. If they even mention homosexuality at all, it's only in vague terms and they never mention what actually happens. He shuts the last one with a decisive, angry thud and gives up.

Okay, so books don't have every answer. He sulks about this, too.

His next option is the Stonewall Inn. A squat little building in Greenwich Village, it's the place in New York where Lee feels most comfortable with himself: there are people like him there. Drag queens, transsexuals, young hustlers, the homeless. It's also the only bar in New York for people like them where dancing is permitted, which makes Lee considerably less comfortable. But nothing's perfect and it's not like he has to.

One gets into the Stonewall through presenting themselves through a peephole in the door. You either look gay, or they have to know you, or you have to be with someone they know. They know Lee, he never has any trouble getting in, and the bouncer claps him on the back as he shuffles in quicker than strictly necessary. Lee is shivering and accuses the bouncer (his name is Roger) of leaving him out in the cold longer than necessary, which he doesn't deny. (Why is everyone always teasing him?) There's a book you are supposed to sign your name into for some reason Lee is uncertain of, and like everyone else, he uses a name that is faker than his current one.

Lee looks like a handsome young man today, his hair twisted up and pomaded to keep it in place, making it look much shorter. He's wearing a sport jacket and trousers that would be scandalously tight anywhere else. He still smells like L'Air du Temps, though, and there's still something feminine about his face he can never hide well enough. The Village and Chelsea are the only places he can do this really - play with gender like this - and it's still in a limited area. He can't afford to be outed anywhere else.

He makes a beeline for the bar, downs three shots of vodka in a row, then takes a glass of terrible red wine with him and sits alone at a table. He raises the glass to his lips as he scans the bar, unusually dark due to the dim lighting and the black walls, looking for a familiar face. Any familiar face.

Oct. 17th, 2013


[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey

[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey

WE'LL MARRY OUR FORTUNES TOGETHER


[info]jewsinspace
[info]spaceodyssey
December 31st, 1968
Things have been going unbelievably well for Michael Ginsberg lately. His girlfriend (girlfriend!) must be a good luck charm because a week ago, he'd gotten a huge promotion he'd been sure he'd never land—Peggy's old job, copy chief. He knows Cutler must have been against it every inch of the way, so how he managed to secure the position in the end is a mystery to him. No use questioning it, though. He doesn't want to think about how much pressure he's under. (How he's certain one mistake will get him demoted or even fired. How his workload is ten times greater than before, because now he's managing other people. How he is utterly not cut out for this, Cutler is probably right, he's terrible and will fail.) The deed is done, it's a holiday, he's spending it with Lee, and they're going to celebrate.

There's a party at the Chelsea (there's always a party at the Chelsea) and although it's bound to be as wild as usual, for once it suits the mood. Folks there know him by now, for better or worse, and they know about him and Lee, unlike his coworkers. The downside is they never stop giving him shit about it; it's like running into his father everywhere he goes.

“Heeey, moon man,” calls a noise musician named Lyle in an amused greeting. “Happy New Year, brother. Good time to reinvent yourself, you know? Become a man, man! Don't tell me you're still doin' that monk thing!”

“Fuck you, Lyle! How about you stop playing recordings of trash compactors and bagpipes at three in the morning!” Michael calls back, earning a chorus of laughter. Who they're all laughing at, he's not sure.