S 0 0 0 14B - The Michigan Daily - Literary Magazine - Thursday, March 11, 1999 BLOOD Continued from Page 138 ing a little power now. "Wow, that's impressive, this is such a conservative area. Have they talked to you about the risks?" "Um, well, my dad is a doctor, but no, I mean, what risks? Wait. My part- ner and I are safe. We got tested for HIV, not because we were worried,,but just because I feel it's a good idea. We're both negative, we're safe." "Yes, that's good, but how do you know your partner wasn't with five other people last weekend?" Her eyes fixated on my forehead. We went to see a movie and then did homework together He was with me. I almost slammed my fist down on the little table. "But how is that any differ- ent in a heterosexual relationship?" "Please, keep your voice down. This needs to remain confidential, for your safety. The statistics are higher that homosexuals have multiple sexual partners all at once." "But we're monogamous, he is the first boy I've ever been with, and-" "Are you the first boy he's ever been with?" "Yes." I lied again. But what right did this nurse have over Steven's sexu- al history? "Anyway, isn't that question a bit outdated? I mean, 1977? Isn't it true that heterosexuals are the highest risk these days?" I was getting louder again. "Sshhh. Actually ..." and she droned on about statistics and suggest- ed I discuss the current risks with my father. I began to tremble ... September 1997 who is this boy from California? my first sight of him is at the dance club. ben introduces me to him, and I never think he'll remember me. but today, he just shows up. somehow,'he finds out that I am performing tonight. playing piano and singing, even. is that really him, in the audience? steven. what a lovely smile..... after the show, we are walking, talk- ing. now it's four a.m. I walk him home. we stand underneath jills rusty fire escape and exchange a handshake. he holds on and smiles, asks me what I'm doing the next day. nothing, I say. do you wanna do something? he says. I can't believe it but I say yes. he is making gentle little circles with his thumb on the top of my hand. minutes later, I walk home in the moonlight we meet in late afternoon. we walk towards the arboretum, safety among the trees. we skip stones along the huron river we play with dogs, we lay in the grass, talking, talking, talking. so much to say. so much to share. it's always been inside of me, Isay. but for years I've been afraid to let it out. got beat up in eighth grade, they called me a faggot. so I stuffed it down and packed it away. but still fell in love with men, fell in love with women too. it burned. I say all this. steven listens and tells too. of course it is a sunny day. we skip stones, we play with dogs, we follow trails. we listen we meet for dinner he brings me a sunflower. Ilove sunflowers. we talk in my bedroom. we are listening to tori amos. "oh, these little earthquakes, doesn't take much to rip us into pieces." hours later we are laying on my bed. he is talking, I am trembling. my lavalamp is casting pink glow. I say I don't know what to do. he says what do you mean? I say I don't know what to do now he smiles, looks into my eyes and says, matt, you can do what- ever you want, but you don't have to do anything at all. I think about this. I think about this more. I lean forward, rubbing my head sideways against my pillow and touch his lips. I move away. his socked foot making gentle little cir- cles on the top of my foot. he does not blink. I lean forward again, lingering a bit longer. I move away. he does not blink. my hand molds to his shoulder. I pull ever so slightly and lean forward again, lingering even longer. I stay there. he moves away ever so slightly, says are you okay? I answer by leaning forward again and staying there. he closes his eyes. I close my eyes minutes later I am sobbing. I rest my head on his chest and I am making his white t-shirt damp. he holds me, rests his hands on my back and pulls the tears out "So, I'm sorry, but I didn't make these guidelines. I must enforce them in order to ensure the blood supply is safe. I'll need you to sign the bottom of this form." Holding back tears, I gave up my signature. "Now, understand that you will never be able to give blood again. I suggest you call this number if you have any questions regarding the mat- ter. I hope things go well for you." the bitch tricked me. but I don't even care enough to rip up that goddamn waiver. now the fact that I've had sex, even fucking once with another male since 1977, the fucking year I was born, is attached to my goddamn social security number. there goes running for president. "Here, have a Kleenex. Oh, and this," she pulled out a role of stickers. She unpeeled an oversized red cross that bore the statement "I TRIED." (This is in contrast to the "BE NICE TO ME, I GAVE BLOOD TODAY" stickers they give to their successful donors.) I took it, and numbly placed it over my heart. "If anyone wonders," she loudly whispered, "just tell them that your temperature was too high." I was speechless. I wanted to say, "no, if anyone asks, I'm going to tell them the truth. I'm going to tell them you wouldn't take my blood because I'm gay." But I stood, and quickly left the room as the tears started sizzling down my red hot cheeks. "Good luck!" Aimlessly, like a disembodied soul, I floated around campus. I laid in a patch of dead, headless dandelions. I cursed the clouds because they looked like sterile cotton balls. I wished they would just produce a little snow to cover me. An- old acquaintance from high school walked by, then stopped The Michigan Daily - Literary Mag Blood and Water By Matthew Schmitt and turned back. I stood up, forgetting what the word embarrassed meant. I burst out in tears again, he leaned for- ward and hugged me. I pulled it together enough to tell him what had just happened. He gave me his phone number, told me he would be willing to listen more later, but his girlfriend was waiting for him so that they could go and give blood together. He wasn't sure if he wanted to anymore, but I told him to "do it in my spirit." We laughed a little, and later I would appreciate the significance of how easily I came out to him, the quintessential Jock of my high school. I never would have dreamed of sharing this, and yet, he was incredibly supportive. Later that night, that strangely warm February night, my college house- mates, Steven and I would be working through this event. We discussed the possibility of a lawsuit, but after research we would find that despite the negative sentiment from the nurse, my legal rights had not been violated. I played it out for them several times. It was a process. "And then she said, 'well, how do you know your partner wasn't with five other people last weekend?' and I- "I think I'm going to go give blood tomorrow," Steven interrupted, "and I'm gonna ask for that nurse. When she asks me that question, I'm gonna say, 'does it count if I had sex with your husband five times last night?" The laughter that followed cooled me down. Oh, Steven. Two nights later. Irony crept in through a discharge. First I noticed a small spot on my favorite pair of box- ers. Then an incessant itching. I told Steven at 2 am. The next day I did not go to class. I had not slept. He brought pamphlets and literature back. "Is it clear or is it yellow?" "It's pretty clear. I don't know." My voice is remembering it's higher pitch- es. "Well, then it's probably not gonor- rhea. It could be syphilis or chlamy- dia." "Do you have any symptoms? Have you ever?" "No," he answered, "and it says that chlamydia can be dormant, and never show symptoms. But it's still conta- gious. Are you sure you didn't have it from Lyndi?" "I doubt it, she was tested for it right before we started dating, and she did- n't have anything." We arranged to go and get tested ourselves the next day. The doctor started us on antibiotics for chlamydia, and told us the other test results would be ready in a few days. I slept that night. it was antonio. and jim. and an entire fleet of red cross nurses. we were in a boat. it must have been sinking since everyone was wearing life jackets and jumping ship. they looked back at me before they went overboard. some were crying, some were looking con- cerned, but many were waving their fingers back and forth and tsk-tsking. I started running towards them but I was sliding backwards. the ship was tip- ping up. I slid down into the water and the sinking vessel sounded like hissing laughter. it went under, and the water turned to blood.... I woke up. "Steven! Wake.up!" He was clear on the other side of the bed. We had been avoiding all physical contact with each other while we were on medication. We still slept together for some sort of solace. "What? What?" See BLOOD, Page 15B June 7, 1998 In the spring of my twenty-first year, I find myself taking comfort in the pres- ence of Lake Winnipesaukee. Here at the heart of New Hampshire, a place I've never known, I've found a natural space to allow my mind and my soul a little time to catch up with my body. The lake's contained vastness, the hushing quiet it promises, the moist taste of pine in the air. On the surface, insects glide like figure skaters and the sunlight scat- ters into millions of dancing flares. A mist, somewhere between cooling and chilling, rises and sprays my face. It mingles with my sweat. The water is everywhere. It dampens the inside of my temporary home, a cabin fifty feet behind me, and it clings to all of my clothes. Even these books feel a bit heavier, these voices from New England saturated with a little bit of the lake. I carefully close Dickinson, Emerson, Kinnell, and Doty. I gaze beneath the bright insect show and listen to the beckoning rhythm of the waving peb- bles. They silently echo ancient truths, resonating like a memory I've never known. I sit here, on the dock, and pon- der evolutions, ponder relationships. I pick up my fountain pen and begin to draw maps. Such as, for instance, maps of the inti- mate trails between water and me. I know of the pumps and pipes that run like arteries out of the undulating lake. The water travels through the filters, then winds around this camp and out these faucets, into my flask, into my mouth. Water, with a capital W, does not come from some magical and distant city factory here. It is right in front of me. It surrounds and numbs my left foot. And I know that it allows me to drink, clean, and survive. I speak with it everyday. It reminds me of its gift, and then whispers past secrets about wombs and births. In the ripples I see an embryo with tiny neck slits. And I wish we had not lost our gills. I know not to enter the lake alone. I know not to drink the warm water. I look around, after having learned of the severe ice storm that hit New England last winter, and notice the lingering aftermath of tree carnage rotting along the forest floors. It is 1998, the Titanic is on my mind, and so is Thoreau's descrip- tions of shipwrecks in Cape Cod. Pieces of dead bodies washed ashore. In the back and forth of the waves, I see the give and also the take. A mosquito interrupts my solitude and I startle her halfway through her feeding. She frantically alights off my skin, but leaves behind an open hole in which a tiny glistening dot of blood is exposed to the fresh air. I am fascinated by its color in the light of the sunset. It is almost orange in the pink ambiance. My thoughts turn to inner landscapes. This blood currently holds molecules of the lake. It carries Winnipesaukee around and visits each one of my cells. It keeps me breathing, thinking, writing. And yet, they say my blood is dangerous now. Well, it's been said before, so to speak. My dad, the doctor, fascinated my sister and I with bedtime stories of the human body. Sometimes, he showed us medical journals with detailed dia- grams that looked like maps. It was my introduction to poetry, the flowing vital- ity that courses through our veins that he explained was like trains carrying cargo to each part of our bodies. I fell in love with blood. But when I was six or so, I was cutting apart blue construction paper to make a card, or maybe just cut- ting. I paused, picked up the mirror sharp scissors and carefully opened and closed the two blades, back and forth. I was so entranced by the perfect move- ment, the impossible nearness with which the two edges passed each other, that my fingers lost their concentration and loosened. As gravity would have it, the scissors fell sooner than my ankle could get out of their way. I cried out as the bright red streamed down my leg. The blood immediately darkened when it reached the beige carpet. My mother must have heard because she was in the room shortly thereafter. "Matt! How did you get those? Oh, come quick, to the bathroom!" I got up, and on the way she picked me up and carried me, little droplets falling here and there. Within minutes she had stopped the bleeding and was explaining to me that I would be fine, but "those scissors are my sewing shears, you should not use them at all, okay honey?" I nodded. Later, I would hear her talking on the telephone as she scrubbed, "my brand new carpet just got stained ... blood, yeah, Matt got into my sewing drawer." There was a downcast tone in her voice that hinted for the first time that my blood was not always like poet- ic trains. In 1984, or somewhere thereabouts, I learned about AIDS. It was the year the Detroit Tigers won the World Series, and the photograph of Kirk Gibson growling on the cover of the papers in victorious joy inspired me to play baseball. I was a small boy in grade school, though I also remember the photographs of Ryan White marching away from seas of bold yet frightened reporters, his mother at his side. He was also a small boy in grade school. The headlines panicked and, in large print, warned a nation that there was something new to be afraid of. CHRISTOPHER TKACZYK/D They discussed blood, and introduce me to words like transfusion and que and straight. Overnight, my love f blood disintegrated and I was terrified Once, during recess, Anton Rodriguez and I were running dov the hall. He tripped and hit his nos on the base of a large crucifix. H blood dripped down off of Jesus' fee and since my immediate reaction wa to reach for him, that blood drippe all over my hands. I paused in th middle of helping Antonio up, gaspe and like a zombie, searched for th nearest bathroom. Completely forge ting about my friend, I scrubbed n hands senseless, all the while prayir to God that I would not become tl Ryan White of Our Lady Queen o Martyrs Elementary School. I did n want to see Beverly Hills, Michiga printed in the national papers. Mr Ryan took care of Antonio. Later, I would play baseball. With few minor stints as a second-baseman, usually wound up playing left field. was not horrible, but I often four myself pondering the dandelions out i the grass more often than the count, o my stance, or what inning it was. I fout the little yellow, spongy-petaled head beautiful, and wondered why they wen considered weeds, why they were s despised. But no one knew this. I wa able to snap out of it with every crack o bat hitting ball. " LiteIra ry Magazin e A special edition of Weekend, etc. Magazine Editors: Aaron Rich, Will Weissert Literary Magazine Judges: Jessica Eaton, Aaron Rich, Christopher Tkaczyk and V Photo Editor: Margaret Myers Photographers: Louis Brown, Bohdan Damian Cap, Jessica Johnson, Kelly McKin Tkaczyk Cover: Photo by Bohdan Damian Cap Arts Editors: Jessica Eaton and Christopher Tkaczyk Editor in Chief: Heather Kamins