OUR GRANDPARENTS* TIME IN WARRENTON by Watt Childress I walk w ith my grandfather-by-m arriage down a narrow paved trace in Warrenton Papa s speak ing about spruce trees which move slow ly past us as we walk, about how these ancient-looking zyloid plants are stronger pound-for-pound than steel Such w ild local details astonish me more, perhaps, because I'm not a native Papa s father farmed here in this place called the Pacific Northwest, but my bloodroots are in a place called Appalachia Of course that's just our genetic, nomenclative te rrito rie s I glance across the w e t-w h istle d air at the hoary red face of my Celtic companion, and dote on less m a te ria lis tic reckonings of kin The beard moss blows from the spruce bowers w ith shadowy grace, like weather-dogged galloons hanging from the salty mast of some sea-seasoned galleon 'They make the fastest boats in the w orld for crew racing', says Papa aiming the arrow of his arm at the massive evergreen projectiles, 'the fastest eight-oared vessel, what they call a ‘sh e ll’, a racing shell1 When these men are moving together in training, or when they go to these big events in London or Berkeley or Pennsylvania, they have to be a unit These eight men have to be one When they all row together, they actually shout' They feel unified That's spruce heaven, if you want to put it that way How do we achieve the wonderful sense of community that these men fe e l7 It's a sp iritu a l experience “ Papa is a wise old s p irit He has a book of cards called 'Medicine Cards', w ith pictures of different animals Early Tuesday evening I draw the elk. card, which is identified w ith the key word “stamina" According to the designers of these cards, elk have 'a curious kind of w arrior energy because, except at mating time, they honor the company of their own gender They can call on the medicine of brotherhood or sisterhood In discovering the strength which is gained from loving the gender that is your own. you w ill feel the comradeship that arises from s im ila rity of experience This is a special medicine that allows the friendship of others of your same sex to overcome potential com petition or jealousy' The civic value or fra te rn ity Is an old one I re fle c t on the manner in which modern people fraternize over values For the natives here as w e ll as my own ancestral natives, animals are often used to illu s tra te values which are essential to c iv il coexistence Today, animals like plants are m ostly considered as commodities They hold lit t le meaning beyond their relationship to mammon Yet it s true that the elk were a lodge of livin g creatures long before it became the government-registered name of another Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Later, a fte r our walk, my w ife Jennifer and I s it around the dinner table w ith Papa and his w ife Margaret We ve been legally married for over 3 years, they've been m arried for over 60 As we taste the sublime m iracle of Mama's macarom-and-cheese, in a room paneled w ith reclaimed wood from the old Bumblebee cannery in Astoria, we discuss whether or not to attend tonight s OCA meeting That fellow named Mabon is speaking here in Warrenton, to a warren of citizens concerned w ith the warranty of c iv il rig h ts for homosexuals Jennifer is w illin g to attend the meeting, but Mama and Papa don’t want to go Papa says he's fa m ilia r w ith other meetings of this nature that ve been held in the Northwest He says that If we were to go. w ed likely find the things we heard 'disgusting' Like Jennifer and I, Mama and Papa have homosexual friends, many of whom have been in com m itted monogamous relationships for longer than the average heterosexual So we stay home w ith our grandparents Papa speaks to me while he watches me w rite down his words, and sometimes I speak back From a distance across the room, unaware of my w r.tlng , g m i t x f T w & t r « w iw Jennifer hears the conversation proceeding very slowly, lagging for extended periods and then flow ing along She says we sound like we re 'ta lkin g underwater", as she s its carding wool w ith Mama Their carding makes a rhythmic scratching sound And so goes a quiet evening w ith fam ily in Warrenton Later, for the hell of it, I read what is w ritte n concerning the Rabbit card in Papa s book The key word here is 'fe a r' A very long tim e ago Rabbit was 'a brave and fearless w arrior" who was befriended by a w itch named Eye Walker The two spent much tim e together, and were very close Eye walker has magic, which she offers as a g ift to aid her close companion Rabbit, who accepts But then Rabbit becomes fearful of the possibility that this magic could be turned against him. so he decides to abandon his relationship w ith Eye walker He divorces her. in a sense As a reward for dissolving their friendship, Eye Walker lays a curse upon Rabbit and his tribe which says ' from now on. you w ill call your fears and your fears w ill come to you' Now Rabbit is the Fear Caller He goes out and shouts, Eagle I am so afraid of you If Eagle doesn't hear him, Rabbit calls louder, Eagle, stay away from me’’ Eagle, now hearing Rabbit, comes and eats him Rabbit calls bobcats, wolves, and coyotes, and even snakes until they com e' The follow ing morning we drive to Astoria where I'm treated to some extra fine local v ittle s at the Columbian Cafe I learn that the place has been a civic gathering place since ,930. and has been operated by the present owner for the past twelve years S ittin g at the counter we watch him g rill French bread to accompany our soup He s wearing a button that says "Straight But Not Narrow", having attended Mabon s OCA meeting He says the event was fa irly low-key, and is grateful for an absence of violent confrontation Yet there is both regret and resignation in his voice when he says "Nobody's minds were changed The lines are drawn" Jennifer picks up a copy of The Daily Astorian, and reads on the front page of the OCA leader s pitch in Warrenton The fir s t three paragraphs of the a rtic le read as follow s Lon Mabon. the leader of the Oregon Citizens Alliance, wants to turn back the clock to his grandmother s time ‘ I m 46 years old and I ve seen very dramatic changes in society, some bad. some good," Mabon told a gather ing of the Clatsop County OCA Tuesday night When I was growing up we didn t have the gang or drug problems What we believe 1s that those things are occurr ing as we move away from our basic standards as a culture Now there's less respect for life, each other s property and for traditional values than ever before," he said I can agree w ith many of the words used here, as I believe we are suffering from a decay in cultural heritage and traditional values we've squandered our natural resources, created mountains of waste, and replaced h isto ric fam ily farms and local businesses w ith chain developments Cheapness has been substituted for quality we consume much and produce lit t le These problems stem from a disintegration of community in this country, and it is c ritic a l that citizens come together to act upon the civic values which w ill turn th is situation around unfortunately, people like Mabon appear to be more interested in creating hateful distractions from this real work, searching instead for easy scapegoats upon which to vent their fears 'The attack isn't against individuals." Mabon continues "I think homosexual behavior is wrong It's against nature and what 3 right and wrong in our universe Evidently, the people who attended the meeting were about equally s p lit in opinion, for and against such double-mouthed statements from Mabon Jennifer and I chose not to go. to stay home honoring tim e w ith our grandparents in this eleventh hour of fear for American communities, we can derive stamina from our ancestors By remembering the best of our human heritage we can overcome today s misguided digressions into bigotry, and learn to row together as one Cries to Remember by Mary Anne Radmacher - Hershey The manicurist is Arsenia from the Phillipines Stateside relatives are in Texas although most of her "families' are still in the Phillipines She met her best fr tend in Texas in 1980 Aga, man She said they were like sisters 'You know. s is te rs So many ga, men ar e like that, sensitive, like a woman That s why we get along so w e ll, rW know She speakes 'you know", assuming a greet deal about me She seems so sin cere- - I don t mind They moved to San Francisco together and he started his own salon He «as a hairdresser l was a man »cur ist This is how we m et. of course * Her girlfriends were all so jealous of her He was so good looking So sexy "We have our own lives Each of us We are just friends, but they dn not accept t, as I say Even though I say we are friends only, they still believe we are involved So," (she blushes)'I let them think as they w ill ’ She is fourteen years in America and she still deals with most events m the present tense Her fr lend is now itead over two years. although she describes him in the present tense "He is my best friend The best friend ever I have He is so kind We are very close He make a poem for me This poem he "moke", he wrote on his own It was so good she first thought he had just copied down the words, but his name is on it He read it in a competition No, she is certain he wrote this poem all by himself This poem is treasured, safely folded and tucked into the inside told of her small date book "The poem he makes is about life About living just this day It is very touching" She pauses She is obviously moved by her recollect ions She continues, then, to introduce me to this dear friend "Very sweet He is very giving His birthday is July 18 A Cancer, you know?" She quest ions - - wonder ing if I understand the sweet Cancer nature I think of the July-born friends I know Swaet? Yes Tenaciously loyal. funny, creative, affectionate I under stand how one would claim such a fr lend as "best' I nod She goes on, now speak ing about his m em orial service Here she uses past tense "A fter he died " In fact she uses "died so many time I finally tactfully frame my question Was it an accident ’ " 'Ob. no1" she responds with speed and sur pr ise that I would even have to ask He died from AIDS Yes. AIDS, of course ' I have fought the impulse to categor ically assume that a young gay hairdresser living in San Francisco had to have died of AIDS There are, after a ll. other diseases, car accidents and violent crimes 'No, no accident It wasAIDS" She continue; the manicure and her story "He asked for his asties to be scatter ed across the bffy His parents rent a boat and his fr lends. all of us, we are on this boat All of us soy something No one knows about this poem No one knows I carry it since he die So I recite But someone else finish Someone recite for me because I cannot finish I cannot because there is too much weeping "From this poem, which no one knows but me. we hear him We all know these are words he makes himself because they are so much like his sound Not just me Everyone cries Everyone cries to remember " She is sorry to excuse herself She dabs at her eyes She pulls her purse from a cupboard behind the manicure tapble Hopeful and then disappointed - - she has left her calendar and. therefore, the poem at home She tells me she felt badly about carrying the poem around in her calendar As if there wasn t enough dignity in that She is hoping to find a special way to preserve it "I go to the card store where they have this machine that, you know, says what you want It says what you tell it But I cannot do it It is wrong to place his words in a machine So I find some artist who w ill make his words beautiful Until I make such a find I w ill keep it where I know it ts safe I w ill keep it close to me ' I noted the tremble of her lips and her utter earnestness That poem is kept so close it w ill never be lost It is kept in the deep chwnber of her heart where she cries to remember her friend Her best friend who, of course, died of AIDS CASCADE