Beauty and the Beast

Beauty and the Beast is a fairy tale. It was made to make one feel good. It succeeds.

I had a lovely time watching the movie. The plot is run of the mill, the execution is fun. Having a stellar cast does wonders for a film that would otherwise not particularly stand out. It begins with a prince (Dan Stevens – I still remember him as Edward from Sense and Sensibility before he gained fame from his playing the romantic Michael in Downton Abbey) and an enchantment, a pretty (I cannot in all fairness say Emma Watson is beautiful) girl caught in a provincial town, her father (the very versatile Kevin Kline) and her vain suitor (Luke Evans, Bard no more) who pursues her without remorse.

The supporting caste is the most noteworthy: Sir Ian McKellen as Cogsworth, I was expecting a bit more from him, but whatever role he had he played it superbly. Ewan McGregor as Lumière is brilliant. And Emma Thompson as Ms Potts is astounding, I love Emma Thompson but here she excels, I didn’t even know she could sing!

The songs are wonderful. Some of the old melodies greet you like good friends and you smile when they are being sung. Kevin Kline’s character, Maurice, sings a few strains of the title track sung by Celine Dion and you wilt a little and flower a little when that happens. Dark undertones simmer briefly and they then burst with light. Such a fresh retake on what has already been done. My favourite song was Emma Thompson’s rendition of “Beauty and the Beast”.

There was a controversy over the gay character, LeFou? Damn, people still have a problem with – a few quips and a possible gay encounter in the end on a dance floor, for the blink of an eye? People need to just sit back and take a chill pill.

The special effects are good, nothing like Kong, but hey, if you make a musical of a fairy tale, it should look like this. This is what I expect musicals to be… I know what was going to happen, but that didn’t make the movie any less appealing. In fact, I don’t mind going for it a second time.

 

Me

I am gay. Lets not beat around the bush with this sentence. There are many incidences where people I meet talk to me about how being gay shouldn’t be important in the larger scheme of things, how I should pay more give more credence to the fact that I am of a different sexuality than what is considered the norm. I was a teacher, I am an editor now. I love reading, writing, photography, sketching, graphic designing, blogging, watching movies, et cetera et cetera – That is all well and fine, but I have to mention this fact: being gay has shaped my life, it has manifested itself in my choices, my fears, my hopes and my loves.

Being gay has made me see life through a perspective that I would not otherwise have had. It’s not a cliché you see, it has made me evolve as a person who appreciates differences and who realises that it does take all kinds of people to make the world.

I grew up in a lovely suburb of Mumbai called Bandra. I was surrounded by a joint family who sheltered my childhood. My dad is an alcoholic and never kept a job a few years since after my birth, so essentially, my mother was a single parent who provided for both my sister and me. Since we were in a joint family, I was adequately shielded from the blusterings of my father. Again, it was somewhat of a cliché that I had no great male role models to look up to, my family was dominated by hard working women, who loved and battled through life valiantly. Quite the amazon society.

I remember falling in love with Superman when I was five. Christopher Reeves, to this day, happens to be someone I moon over. I never knew why I liked him, perhaps it was the super powers, perhaps it was the eyes and the smile and the hair – oh, you get my drift. But five was too young for me to identify what I felt.

I vividly remember the phase of me wanting to wear make up, and women’s clothes. In my head, I had no real male model to look up to, I just had these wonderfully strong feminine personalities at home. The ones who dressed up in flowing saris, applied lovely make up, were fragrant and who handled the running of the household diligently – from my grandmother, to my aunts, to my mother. So if I wanted Superman, I had to be Lois Lane.

But it was more complicated than that. I yearned for male role models. I didn’t really know how to assimilate into ‘boy culture’. I thought cursing was wrong, I was never interested in sports. I loved reading and watching movies was a passion. I was a good looking child, but I entered my teens in the typical dork phase. I had glasses, I was as skinny as a twig, and I walked with a swish. I didn’t really think it was all that bad until my mom decided she had had enough of my dad and took us to a new home which she had bought out of her savings. I was thirteen.

At that time, I didn’t understand her reasons. I was taken from the sheltered atmosphere of a joint family and thrust into a home which was in a distant place that was the opposite of Bandra. From a household that was filled with people, I, most times, found myself alone throughout the afternoons and evenings. School life became a disaster.

Mom shifted me into a new school closer to home and it was definitely not the kind that I was used to. I went from an all-boys school to a co-ed school (where the boys and girls sat in different rows) and I remember the first day I went to class. The teacher present there asked me to sit with the girls. I had to stand up in front of the whole class and claim that I was a boy. I still remember the laughter. I began figuring out then that I was truly an oddity.

It was during that school year that I realised that boys were both cruel and considerate. Bullying happened with name calling, but mostly, it was laughter that I heard all the time, at my expense. How I spoke, walked and excelled at studies were all fodder for student jocularity. I remember two boys being interested in taking care of me, they were both brothers. Each would be nice to me and talk to me and I, being starved for friendship, spent a lot of time around them. When they began asking me sexual favours, I didn’t understand it at first, and soon enough, I began avoiding them. My upbringing was such that sex had never really crossed my mind and having any sexual act seemed like a very bad idea at the time.

Around this time, my mom and dad had a reconciliation of sorts and he came to live with us. Promises of being better fell through quicker than a castle of cards under a strong breeze. He would be lying drunk at home when I returned from school. My first exposure to straight porn was it playing on the telly when I returned from school, while he lay passed out on the couch.

My father and I never had a healthy relationship, to say the least. I used to ache for a kind word to pass his lips, a shoulder I could use to lay my confused thoughts on, some guidance, some support… but that was not to be. In fact, since he and I were alone most times through the afternoons, he would deliberately pick on me. Some trivial reason would be used to pick a fight, and that would eventually lead to physical assault. He would bang doors, rail abuses, and eventually, all of it led to me retracting deeper into insecurities dealing with myself.

In the late 80’s, the only recourse I had to knowledge about what I wanted to know about sex was books. So I dived into those worlds right then. I remember reading The Lord of the Rings and wondering how lucky Frodo was to have Samwise – and how awesome it would be to have Gandalf the Grey for a dad. I immersed myself so deeply into other imaginary worlds that I found deep seeded solace in them. I didn’t want to face the real one. Each time I would think of school, I would get (what I know now) a panic attack. Mom and her parents thought I just didn’t want to go to school and play hooky. So, many times, I was forced to. I remember blacking out on my way down the stairs and a neighbour finding me on the stairs and bringing me home. Eventually, I begged my mother to have me admitted to another school. She agreed.

I went to a new school for my ninth and tenth grades. Nothing really changed. I just had to go through the fitting in process all over again. I thought I would have a chance to have a brand new experience, a fresh start. I had surmised that I was different, and differences aren’t accepted in the world, especially one dominated by teens. So I tried to be more ‘normal’. It began well, but eventually I was singled out as an oddity within a week. Differences cannot be hidden: another lesson I learnt. Teenages sniff them out like bloodhounds on the trail of a wound. I was isolated again. I did make one good friend in those two years of schooling. One friend who helped me through, without really knowing that he was somewhat of an anchor through six hours each day. His name was Anand Aithal.

By this time, I had delved into so many books, I began understanding the concept of sexuality. I remember one book that opened my mind completely about sexuality and how it occurs within different people. I chanced upon Nancy Friday’s Men In Love in the local library. The fantasies I read there were eye openers, literally. I began to  see the world differently and also realised things about myself. Why I was so different and that I wasn’t really alone in the world – there were others like me who felt and hurt and fantasized.

It was also during that time, I began understanding that I was sexually interested in boys. I developed a crush on the head prefect of the school. He was tall and handsome and the girls (and I) mooned over him. I never really spoke to him, and he never really noticed me. To this day, I remember standing in assembly lines and watching the back of his head. I’ll also never forget the time he spoke to me. It was at the very end of our schooling years. The farewell party, which is the equivalent to Prom, where he and his friends called me over to say hi. I went. He handed me his food plate and asked me to just hold it while he returned after getting a drink. He left me standing there with his plate and he never came back. It was a small thing, a joke, meant to be laughed off, but I still remember how it made me feel then.

Junior and Senior years in India are termed as Junior College years. Apparently I did not outgrow or outmaneuver my oddity, when I joined college. I easily got admission to the college I wanted to attend, I had no problem in deciding which stream I would like to be educated in. I loved studies. However, I did not care much for being excluded by my peers. I inevitably was. Maybe I was just a geek, but one incident reminded me that it wasn’t what I wore or how I looked that made me face the brunt of ridicule.

It was a day, when boys and girls send candy to each other with notes, dedicating the sweets to the ones they cared about. The felicitations were being read out in an Economics class. I heard my name being read out, and a tittering followed. Apparently, I received a bunch of sweets from an unknown admirer, who happened to be male. The messages that were read out were not affectionate, or laced with admiration or ardor. They were meant to humiliate and deride. I bore the recitations remarkably well, smiling frozenly; inside, all I wanted was to run out of that class room. Later, as I walked out of class, the class representative strutted up to me and asked me, “Harpreet, are you gay?” I looked him in the eye, and countered, “Why? Are you asking me out on a date?” He walked away, and I remained standing.

I think that was the turning point for me. I never gave in after that and I walked ahead and through the people that bothered me.

It was in the course of this year, when my mother asked me one evening, if I was gay. I wanted her to know how I felt about boys. I wanted her to accept me for who I was. My father certainly was not about to do so. She was all I wanted approval from, if I had her on my side, all of the pain I had gone through would just be a memory. I wouldn’t have to carry it like a burden. So I would talk to her about the boys I liked, and one boy in particular, who I had a thing for. She noted that I talked of him incessantly, and so she was prompted to ask me about my sexuality.

Coming out is a process for some, for some it happens on the spur of the moment, for some it never manifests. For me, it was a process. Through the years, I didn’t even realise it but the way I was prepared her. Ultimately, when she wanted it said, she asked me. I would have told her myself if she would not have asked me, but since she did ask, I merely replied with a “ yes, ma, I am.” She nodded her head and continued cooking. I don’t really know what went through her mind at that point. I didn’t ask. I let the topic be. I knew she needed time to process the information, and she took a couple of months. But she never asked me to change, she never asked me how or why. She just accepted it, quietly and gracefully.

Backed by this feeling of hope, I grew into my own when I got into Degree college. In great part, I found pleasure in the subjects I chose to major in. Sociology, Psychology and English Literature became strong supports and by the time, I reached my final year, I had a group of friends I cherished. I stopped thinking about why I wasn’t accepted by guys and I just went with the flow and became friends with those who wanted to know me more. I met my best friend around that time, and to this day, she remains my bestie.

I think the highlight of my final year was when I wrote and directed a play with my entire class being a part of the production. The English Literature department supported the endeavour and in the first half of the play, I had boys dress up as girls and vice versa. Everyone agreed to do so and for me that was a coming around full circle. In the first half, one of the parts I played was of the character of Cleopatra meeting up with Shakespeare, played by one of the girls. I still remember working hard on the costume and my mom helping me out with it. When I walked on to the stage in front of an audience that was filled with my peers, I was a nervous wreck. The moment I stepped on there, there was a collective gasp from the audience and then the room resounded with applause. I was no longer the boy who wanted to fit in, if I didn’t fit in, it was no longer a problem for me. paradoxically, it made no problem to the people in the audience as well.

Then, I avidly set about looking for other gay people. Up until my 20th year, I had not met a single gay person. I hunted for clues, and I found the name of a person who ran a gay magazine in my city. I found out his number and called him, but he was too busy to speak to me and suggested I visit his office and subscribe to his gay newsletter. So I did that. And I found a classified section in it. I decided to put up my advertisement in it. I had no other alternative back then. Today, things are easier with social media and telephones and computers.

to be continued…

My Children

I am stressed. And I am tired. Recuperating after an illness and taking care of three furkids. Zachary, who is this beautiful Virgo brindle boxer, who came into my life when I was in the depths of agony at having lost my girl, Zoe. My family bundled me up and took me to Pune to meet him, they disregarded their own grief as they shuttled me there because I was inconsolable – when I think about her I still hurt.

3034_105279913184_1963865_n
Bonzo and I, 1982 (?)

It hurts when I think about Bonzo, the spitz who saw me through childhood, who put his head in my lap through those horrible teen years when I was estranged from society and did not know where to go or be.

Undesired I thought I was until he wagged his tail when he saw me, and in many ways, I was cruel to him, as we all are in matters of neglect caused due to life or human pain and all he did was love me. He was a part of my life when I was four, and he lived with me until I was 20.

Rolfe and Diana came into my life when Bonzo left it. We got the siblings from a family in Dadar.

Rolfe was the last of the litter and Diana was the stronger one with beautiful eyes. She was a burnished brown and he was a dappled fawn. She and he started my love affair with boxers. I remembered the first time Diana smiled at me. I thought she was snarling but she was actually baring her teeth in a simile of a smile. I remember the good times, I remember falling in love for the first time and they being around me, the walks we shared in those days were so filled with a crystalline life. It sparkled.

427635_10150736870348185_1529266096_n
Diana, having a rest after a session of play on our terrace.

Diana developed mange around the same time my heart broke. She and we braved the plethora of vets we made our journeys to and fro. She was misdiagnosed, mistreated medically. Chosalkar who just had a mobile clinic then said it was an infection caused by heat since it started around her muzzle. When we met Dr Chavan she had reached the end of her tether. He brought her back through rigorous treatment and her own sheer dent of will. Scorpio child.

When Rolfe fell ill with a stomach infection, it was a mild case of diarrhoea and vomiting. Diwali time. Dr Chavan was out of town. When I took him to the dispensary at Khar, they injected him with wrong medicine on an empty stomach and he flew into convulsions. They abandoned him and asked me to rush him to the SPCA hospital. I did not know that that would prove to be a fate far worse.

They refused to treat him until I admitted him. I did. They did not give him treatment but waited for his blood work until the next morning. I left him there. There are very few things in life that I regret, and the regrets I have I can count on one hand, and all of them have to do with my kids’ medical treatments. I still remember going home. Diana wondering where he was. We thinking that he would be okay – it was a pet hospital after all.

It was a Friday, his condition had not improved. I still remember the small cubicle they had kept him in. I couldn’t imagine how I could have allowed it. But he was my second child, first time at a hospital, I thought it was for the best. They tested his blood and the blood work would come back the next day. Fees were taken. IV drips were given. He was lucid and we walked around the compound. We stayed from the time the hospital gates opened to the time they shut at 6pm. I left him again.

428771_10150736858893185_400449645_n
Rolfe and Diana, the very first day I bought them home.

Saturday we find that the lab had misplaced the reports, there were none. So the tests were retaken. IV drips were adminstered. We stayed. To find that the test results would show up on Monday. The lab was closed on Sunday. Two days were spent in agony. By Monday, Dr Chavan returned and surreptitiously asked us to have him discharged. But by then my mom, sister, Anand and I wanted him out. I have never yelled at “doctors” the way I yelled then, I had him discharged and I brought him back home. I knew he was dying by then. He couldn’t walk. I got him home at 5:45pm. Rolfe met Diana and in a few minutes of lying on our hall floor passed away. I remember. They say the death of a dog you have loved is like the death of a child. I agree. It will never cease to pain. He was with me for six years, 1995 – 2001.

10400493_33587583184_2634_n
Diana, at 8 and Zoe, at 1.

Zoe came into my life in April 2002. She was a Bandra girl. Her mother was Becky, a beautiful fawn boxer with a large face. Apparently, she was a star, said her owner, she had acted in a movie with Anil Kapoor. I smiled. And when I went down into the litter of pups, I noticed Zoe bundling towards me with her pink nose spotted with black spots, she had such lovely markings. I picked her up and it was love.

When I got her home to Diana, Diana accepted her with no fuss. No jealousy, no tantrums. She was a calm, beautiful natured girl. My Diana. When Zoe was three, Diana fell ill at night. She had trouble breathing, and on consultation, the doctor said to give her electrol water and keep her calm. But she was calm. Her breath was laboured. I kept her company through the night, and fed her water, and held her and soon I dropped off to sleep. Mom woke me and told me that she had passed away. Hers was a death I could bear. I was with her, she was 10, she came in my life in 1995 and passed in 2005.

(I took a break right now, I couldn’t keep up with the emotional upheaval and went and hugged my mom who was busy doing paperwork. It’s nice to save a few hugs for people, too.)

1383170_10152032868708185_771538919_n
Zoe, in 2012.

Zoe came into my life when my relationships flourished. It was a good time for me. I had settled in a career. I had a good bunch of friends. I had found a footing in the life that I had chosen. She was my golden girl. She was possessive, bossy, obedient, loving. She had beautiful markings and people stopped and asked about her. Everyone wondered on how beautifully she behaved. She was intelligent and sassy. Most of all, she loved me crazily. I used to sing “Zoe, I love you”, to the tune of the old Hindi film song, “Bhool gaya sab kuch, yaad nahi ab kuch” from Julie.

She also saw me through the toughest times of my life, post 2005. I learnt a lot about life when she was in it. That stretch of a decade was when I grew up. I learned that life comes with a lot of heartache and pain, and the good times are fleeting and rare, but they are what make life worth living. I always used to count her as one such good thing in my life. Her time with me was hers alone, I didn’t share it with another kid, after Diana. So it was her and me against the world.

She developed bladder stones during Diwali of 2008. She stopped peeing one night and I went crazy. She was diagnosed by Dr Chousalkar who by now had a clinic in seven bungalows. After he eased her discomfort, I began oscillating between him and Dr Chavan, who now had bitten the commerical bug and taken a clinic for himself at Vakola.

887073_10152098374603185_1984177093_o
Zoe, looking up at what used to be our old flat, to her it wasn’t just an abandoned, old structure.

We shifted homes in 2012, since our home was going through redevelopment. We moved a block away. Zoe would run to our old compound on our evening walks and look up at the broken building where our flat used to be. She remembered her childhood. I was trying to forget mine. Mom was diagnosed with cancer in 2012 and began her therapy. In the midst of all the turmoil, Zoe’s last year with us was fraught with tension.

She developed Degenerative Myelopathy at the end of September, 2013. Slowly, she lost control of her hind legs. I ordered harnesses for her. I would carry her down and she would try and keep up. I knew the end was near. I used to believe in God back then. I used to pray. I remember standing under the shower one day and saying, “if you are around, take her, don’t make me do what will pain me the most.”

965800_10152102531628185_1955091579_o
Zoe, one night in October, 2013, wearing the first harness I helped her walk around with…

On 27th October, post dinner, she started retaining urine. She was in extreme discomfort. She couldn’t stand, obviously. I couldn’t help her urinate because she couldn’t. I spoke to my doctor friend, he suggested I try and use a catheter and try help ease the urine out. We tried. This happened around 2am on 28th, and she lay in the bathroom, with me trying to help her and she looked at me and kept looking at me – I know she knew I was trying to help. She just looked at me.

I gave in to fear and love. I took her to the SPCA hospital at 4am. The ward boys there checked her and went and woke the doctor there who didn’t want to treat her without me admitting her. I told them I was not going to do that at any cost. So the doctor, tried using a metal catheter and poked her vagina. I stopped him, after a few seconds, because I knew she was in pain. That brought me back to the same space I was in with Rolfe years ago… I told him that was inhumane and he said he wouldn’t touch her then unless I admitted her. I told him to fuck off and picked her up and brought her to Chosalkar’s clinic. At 5:30am.

I waited for two hours, until the doctor came on my request a little early and inspected her. He helped ease a bit of urine out, but said that the doctor at the hospital had hurt her and it was best he didn’t investigate. He gave her a saline drip and a pain killer. Her urine eased out.

I brought her home.

When she began retaining urine again in an hour, I knew it was time. My friend, Bhavesh, brought his own vet to check her and he suggested I let her go. At 2pm on 28th October, 2013, I have made one of the hardest decisions of my life. I asked him to put her to rest. When she died, so did my belief in anything supernatural. I had to take her body back to the SPCA hospital for cremation. But as luck would have it the electric crematorium was not working, so they built her a pyre, and that was the last I saw of my golden girl.

Zach (brindle) and Xena (fawn)

A week later, Anand found Zach on OLX. We drove to Pune and found his home. I met his mother and all of his siblings. When I got him home, he was aloof and distant. That was his character. He was one of the most handsome boxer pups I have ever seen. But he took his time to thaw towards me. He is loved by everyone who sees him. He is gentle and has a kind heart. He is my big boy. But I didn’t want to have just one this time. So I found Xena via a website. She was in Bangalore. She has the perfect face. Wide, deep intelligent eyes and big droopy ears. The dominant one. The bossy one.

It’s not easy for me to see any animal in distress. If I can, I help. That is what being human amounts to me. When I heard Bilbo crying out in distress, last Sunday morning, I had to go down in my pajamas to see what was happening. When I saw him cowering in a corner surrounded by men with sticks, all I had to do was bend down and open my arms. He ran right in to them. He could have perceived me as one of that species that was trying to harm him. He didn’t. He noted the compassion and that makes him a far more empathetic species.

16806827_10155046553693185_4280035653477167056_n
Bilbo

Dogs complete my family. I love them. I will not have children of my own. I believe I was not meant to have any. So be it. But these dogs are my children. They have given me what a child would give. Affection, acceptance, understanding, company, satisfaction, heartbreak and love. Many times I am faced with the question of whether the heartbreak is worth the love. But I smile. That’s like asking me why do I live when I know I am one day, going to die.