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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 2011)
O REG O N S LGBTO NEWSMAGAZINE \ / I /"N OCTOBER 7. 2011 35 ------------------------------------ 1 V U IO fc îo 1 --------------------------------- The Scent Of Autumn remember to breathe “Hey, babe?” Sunday morning in Ladd’s Ad dition, and the first rain of the autumn taps against the windowpanes, cleaning the summers dust from my boyfriend’s apartment building. “Good morning, handsome,” he calls from the kitchen over the drip drip of the coffee- maker and the hiss of bacon on the stove. Through the doorway I can see him, shirtless and barefoot in his jeans, tending to our breakfast. I sit up with the white comforter over my legs, rub sleep out of my eyes. “Just checking where you were,” I say, noticing the gray sky through the trees outside. I lay my head back down onto the pillows, close my eyes again and breathe in deeply, stretching lazily. For the ninth year in a row, the scent o f Pa cific Northwest autumn fills my lungs. Every year the scent is the same— the ozone scent of the rain, the leaves turning musky in decom position, the dust of the dog days running off the trees into the river. Every year it is the same, and every time my lungs fill with the scent it shocks me. I hear my boyfriend walking across his bed room floor, smell beans and bacon over the autumn. “Your coffee’s on the dresser, baby.” “Thank you,” I tell him. I take a sip, taste that he’s put two sugar cubes and a splash of milk into it, exactly the way I always take it. I sigh, gratefully. vintage mustard-yellow corduroy coat that was constantly soaked through with rain. I ran all turning musky in decomposition, the over my college campus in the soaked jacket that autumn, chain smoking cigarettes and playing dust of the dog days running off the pretentious poetry games with art majors, eating trees into the river. hum bao and staying up all night trying to heal Along with the scent, every year autumn in my youthfiil melancholy with frantic Christian Portland comes with a distinctive emotion. I Science prayer. Years later, in the middle of a look outside, see how the gray clouds make Northern California storage unit, I unpacked a the sky seem impossibly close to the treetops. box and, crushed and battered beneath the dross Air blows in through the open window, runs of my late teens, was the corduroy jacket. I pulled over my bare shoulders and chills me; I shiver it out, my eyes wide, and was smnned by the and I pull the blanket up to my chin. The feel scent of musk, leaves, ozone. It smelled like au tumn, that first autumn when I was wild and sad ing settles over me. I think back to this time last year, walking and free, and the feeling settled over me again. along SE 11th Avenue in my cut-off jeans, tipsy W hat is the emotion that comes with the from mid-afternoon beers. A familiar smell cut season? For eight years, when the dog days of through the exhaust and dust of the street—the summer cooled, I thought it was dread. A scent o f autumn, I thought, looking up and see quiet sadness would creep into my bones like a ing smoke rising from a chimney across the threat, and I would shiver with fear that it street. Gradually, like the low clouds blowing in would expand to fill the space o f my life the from the west, the feeling came over me with way the clouds fill the sky in late September. I the arrogance of Portland rain, quietly boastful would rush frantically to numh it with parties, that it was coming home to roost. with projects, the ten thousand things avail I wasn’t prepared for the autumn when I end able to those who are young and smart and Nick Mattos still has his tattered corduroy coat in a box ed up in Olympia nine years ago. The ingénue I terrified o f feeling sad. Autumn came, again somewhere. Reach him at nickmattos@justout.com. i---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 B Y N IC K M A T T O S Every year the scent is the same— the was, I didn’t even own a raincoat— I lived in a ozone scent of the rain, the leaves new H O LE SIM PLY A LL ADULT M jj Cruisy Ricade SJffSSS— w w w .m rp e e p s .c o m and again, bringing with it the scent o f rain and trees, melancholy— and I fought it, again and again, losing every time. In this big warm bed in this small Southeast Portland apartment, with the percussion of the rain against the windows and the smell of Sunday morning breakfast, the familiar feeling comes over me— and I know that, all of these years, I have given it the wrong name. It isn’t dread that comes with the autumn, it is sur render, the world teaching me again and again that the light and the dark give forth to each other, that the rain will run over the trees and down to rejoin the river, then back to the clouds to fall again. The autumn comes, just as it always will, and I stop fighting it, breathe it ' into my lungs and my bones. My boyfriend walks into the room, plates o f bacon and eggs in his hand. He sits on the bed. Today, the autumn has come, dark and sensu ous, collecting slowly like the rain on the win dowsill. We sit on the bed quietly, letting the cold air blow in from outside, across the skin o f our shoulders, eating slowly. Outside, the clouds . roll unbroken in the sky, dropping their rain across the city. We eat our breakfast and watch them roll, warm in our bed, smiling. 1 SHOWGIR Open 24 HRs 7 Days a Week! Peep Hole 709 SE 122nd Ave., Portland. OR 97233 503.257.8617 M ANAGEM ENT! W E’R E I MAKING I CH A N G ES TV UPGRADES ROOM U PG R AD ES HOT TU B UPGRADES B U T S O M E T H IN G S W ILL S T A Y T H E S A M E ... O U R P R IC E S jÄ ’ NDTO UR F R IE N D L Y S T A F F ! IT’S G ETTIN G HOT! c o i r r ^ s e e the d iffe ren ce / 8232 NE Fremont St 503 - 251-7283 Portland, OR 97220 www.Aparaphilia.com S T E A IVI T U A M 2885 NE Sandy Blvd • Portland • Oregon • 97232 • (503) 736-9999 • www.steam portland.com