The idea behind this blog is to show the world that HIV doesn't have to be a scary topic and it must be discussed. I talk about my life and how much of it I have to live. I welcome all comments and questions from followers and supporters out there.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
NEW YORK: GONE WITH A SPLASH
2013 is certainly giving us
reasons to celebrate in the American LGBT community: with DOMA being shut down
and Prop 8 overturned. However, there’s
also plenty of reason to mourn and help fight – yes, I’m looking at you
Russia. As important as it is to discuss
such horrific matters, the topic of conversation in this entry stems from
upcoming events taking place in my home of New York City. And more notably, the
closing of the staple club in Chelsea known as Splash.
Before I get into details let
me give you a brief history of my life as a gay man in this city. For starters, I was raised in Long Island, a
mere thirty-five minute train ride to the city.
As a family we frequented the city; I remember many-a-day-trips as a
young child in the early 1990’s with my father. One time we were on our way to
visit lady liberty (I haven’t been back since - what shame!) and I was so
scared to leave my father’s side that I remember grabbing the wrong man’s hand
and I cried until my father decided to finally come fetch me. My first gay bar experience
was in the city at the age of 19 when I finally came out of the closet as “bi”. It was 2002, I was home for college break,
and I went to a bar called Posh because this guy I was speaking to on Gay.com (yes,
Gay.com!) asked me to meet him there for a drink. Still to this day Posh is my watering hole of
choice, but at the time for years to come I spent half or my time in Chelsea
and the other half broken down between HK and the East Village.
Moving on.
Picture NYC in 2002. There were
half the gay bars in HK there are today, and Chelsea was “the place” to see and
be seen. I was a young twink so I never
really fit in there as it was covered with muscle heads; still I LOVED hanging
out in Chelsea, especially at the Big Cup and eat at Food Bar. Roxy, Heaven and
Avalon were still open. In 2004, I graduated from college and moved to Astoria,
Queens to be closer to the city I knew I wanted to call home.
Friday and Saturday nights the
conversations with friends were always, “Should we go to the HK area, East
Village or Chelsea?” And the response
was typically, “We always do Chelsea, let’s try something new.” Somehow, even if we didn’t start there, we
ended up in Chelsea. Splash bar was
frequented by me because I loved to dance and take my shirt off and I really
felt free- incidentally it was the place I experimented with “Special K” in the
downstairs bathrooms. (But, only experimented mom, I promise!)
What’s my point? With Splash now closing there has been so
many arguments as to whether or not Chelsea is a “has been” area or if New York
City’s gay culture is changing as a whole.
While I have comments I could add about both sides it seems to me that
online publications is taking well care of that so I’ll leave them to it. However, since this announcement arose there
has been something I can’t get off my mind: My generation is the forgotten
generation in the LGBT community (roughly if you were born between 1977-1987). That
can vary depending on the individual, so please don’t bite my head off if you
agree/disagree.
What do I mean the forgotten
generation? The quick answer is the generations
before and after me had advantages that we didn’t have and they don’t seem to
realize they had, whether or not they actually realized it at the time. The
world for gay guys 25 and younger today is much different than the world I
lived in before 25. The Big Cup in Chelsea was my “Grindr”. We had phones, but
it was only to call people – texting was still not fully launched. So people looked at each other in person
rather than a piece of equipment. I wonder if the young gay guys in NYC care
about the dying culture of the Chelsea area and the many memories people of my
age share with it. Then on the other side of the coin there is the older
generation. My heart goes out to them
because they’ve gone through so much to get us to where we are today and I will
be forever grateful for their efforts. They come from a world where everyone
around them was still dying of AIDS and they fought for not only LGBT rights,
but also civil rights for their health. Now, as an HIV positive man who wants
to be part of the future movement for help in that community (as well as LGBT
rights) my experience with most (not all) is that we are dismissed because we “weren’t
there.” They established these “gay ghettos” for us and I know they are
saddened to see some of them die, but when I want to share memories with them,
I am dismissed, just like I am dismissed from guys under 25. I wish I was my
age back then to be part of the disco years and to feel free and safe around my
peers rather than having to worry about getting run over by a baby stroller and
making too much noise. The point about
the older generation is they had the sense of community. I don’t have that feeling because we are all
not united in that way.
It’s bad enough that I see
these “kids” on Grindr that are around 23 years old and their headlines are “no
one over 27”. And older generations
still think me being 30 is kind of young and inexperienced. So, I’m stuck in
the middle drinking some wine alone while I type this blog – actually I’m so
old school that I had to write it down first before typing up the final piece. I
reminisce about my “good old days” - before there was Grindr and Facebook; Before
all the mom and pop stores in New York were being closed by corporations
looking to gentrify the city. So yes, I
can’t say I’m surprised that Splash is closing, and I will admit I was one of many
that heard about it stated that Chelsea is dying. But, when I say that statement I say it with
great sadness.
Sure, there is plenty of reason
to celebrate in New York that we are being welcomed by the rest of the city and
populations (mostly) and we can all comingle and live together and spread gay
run businesses throughout the city where the rent is relatively reasonable
still, but what was so bad about having a neighborhood dedicated to our community
where still to this day (whether or not gay men will admit out loud) they feel
the safest? What’s wrong with that? How
would you feel if you were told they are tearing down the house of which you
grew up?
Okay, so the management style
and the overpriced drinks, etc., wasn’t ideal anymore for attending Splash these
last few years. However, I’m looking at Splash right now as a symbol rather
than a business. It was one of the last surviving places I remember feeling gay
and free in my early days coming out.
And now my own gay history is slowly dying – and I know for many gay men
I’m not alone here.
I know we can argue that we
probably did the same thing when Chelsea was birthed for gays and we abandoned
the West Village, where it all began with Stonewall (Yet, the West Village is
still going strong for a certain population of gays – food for thought). And
then we moved from Chelsea to HK, and slowly to Harlem (and so on). One day
(and not so in the distant future) the same movement of closures will happen in
the HK area – and that’s a big WHEN not IF.
When Posh closes its doors for good I will actually cry. Who’s to blame – the city? Our community? Both?
Neither?
The culture of New York that
once was praised and envied by others is now dying and many don’t realize
it. It’s for the rich and also for a gay
community divided in their opinions and efforts. We just accept all the change
around us. While some of it good, some
is not so good. It’s time we as a community in New York start re-evaluating
what we want to see in the future of our city – and remember the large population
of us 30 and 40 year old gays who have been caught in the middle of all the
change – are begging to be heard.
Continuing down this path I
just very well may die here – as planned.
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