Part true, part fantasy--all erotic. Fun to have lived through, fun to have composed--lots of fun to read!
Tâwas the summer of 1963! Now, that is a long time agoâlong before most of you were even born. Things were different then. Sex was aroundâyes even back thenâbut it was a lot different. The sexual revolution hadnât hit the streets yet. People were still talking in hushed voices about the Kinsey Report; Playboy was still considered scandalous pornography by the oldsters; and gay sex wasnât even known as âgayâ.
Most of the revolution of the â60âsâ actually happened in the 70âs. Sure, there was the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley 1964; there were definitely civil rights demonstrations that literally got hotter in 1965; the anti-Vietnam War sentiment started to burgeon in 1967; and, at the same time, the drug scene was just beginning to creep into public semi-consciousness. But that was only the beginning of the forest fire that really didnât hit until â68 through about â75.
Yes, the early 60âs was more like the drab â50âs with a few little sparks starting aglow beneath the accumulation of ground fuel that was the âBaby Boomâ generation. All of the values were post-war (World War II, folks): staid, conservative, get-married-have-a-family-with-four-kids values.
Being known as a homosexual, (homo, faggot, queer, cocksucker) resulted in being immediately ostracized from the mainstream group of whatever environment in which you happened to be associating. And it wasnât just being looked at as different; it was actually being eliminated from whatever group that might be. Gay men and women lost jobs, and employability and apartments. Talk about second-class citizens?
Of course, there were compensations: AIDS hadnât hit the scene, gay men never thought of using condoms, gay sex had heightened excitement to it because it had to be clandestine.
I was a freshman in college in 1963. I was struggling to maintain a straight persona, though I didnât quite know it at the time. I dated girls but the pain of asking a girl out was compounded by the agony I felt while actually being out on the date. It was hard to talk to them; I didnât understand them; I didnât feel I was acting properly with them at any given time. Did they want me to make a move? If I made a move and my timing was wrong, would they insult me? Laugh at me? Slap me? If I didnât make a move, would they feel insulted because they thought I didnât thing they were attractive? Think I was a coward? Think I was âqueerâ? I wanted sex; they wanted funâwhich might or might not include sex. What a game!
I had sex with girls a couple of times. Frankly, jacking off had been better. I didnât know what I was doing and neither did they, except for that 22 year-old woman I met at the store. She was a (gasp!) divorcee who lived alone. She loved sex and we got it on a couple of times. But she didnât want to waste time on an 18 year-old; her taste ran to greasy auto mechanics that were older and married. Go figure!
I had gay sex a couple of times, too. That was when I was in high school. I had a buddy who would sleep over and we would play with each otherâs cocks, jack off, and things like that. We didnât suck each other off nor did we do any actually fucking. It was just playtime sex. But I did enjoy it.
So there I was in the summer of 1963, feeling strange, wondering what was going to happen to me for the rest of my life, trying desperately to get laid, and knowing that I was probably just going to wind up jacking off the rest of my life.
Now, I worked in a department store, not that I actually sold anything, or did stock work, or anything like that. I worked in the kitchen of the employeeâs cafeteria. It was grunt work, washing dishes, doing pots and pans, bussing tables, and just generally cleaning up after the slobs who ate there. But the pay was better and my wages didnât depend on commission. I just work hard and got paid O.K.
Part of what I did was to bus the tables. I had to go out into the dining area and clear off the tables, wipe the tables off, and take the dishes back to be washed. For some reason, the cafeteria didnât have a cart so I had to carry all of the tubs of dishes all the way back to the kitchen. This was practically a non-stop activity and--believe me--I hustled. âBetter Busy Than Boredâ was my motto.
I was in pretty good shape, even though I smoked. I was about 150lbs, without an ounce of fat, and I had a fairly good build. I didnât work on it; I was just built that way. Besides, who worked out back then?
âHey, Kirk?â The voice was from Brad, one of the guys who worked in the womenâs shoe department. âYou want to go to a party tonight?â
âNah. I donât think so.â I replied. Parties made me only marginally less comfortable that going out on a date one-on-one. I couldnât dance, I wasnât a good conversationalist, and drinking made me sick. To be honest, Iâd rather go to a good movie alone than try to put up with a party.
âAh, câmon!â Brad shot back. âThis is going to be a good deal. Mack knows this guy and it is going to be at a house up in one of the canyons. Honestly! Some guy in the movies, so Mack says.â
âGeez! Hollywood, huh?â I wasnât enthused. I didnât fit in with the âbeautiful peopleâ; I didnât have the money, the car or the clothes. âI think Iâll pass on this one, Brad. Thanks anyway.â
âAh, câmon, câmon.â Brad was pressing. âI know what you are thinking, kid. It ainât gonna be fancy. Itâs pool party for chirssakes! Hey, just go; have a couple of beers; see what the broads look like; and then, if you donât like it you can split.â
âO.K. I guess so.â I said as I waited for Brad to write the address on a napkin. âBut Iâm gonna drive my own car. I donât wanna get stuck there.â
I forgot to add that I wasnât much of a swimmer either. Iâd drop by but I wasnât really planning on going swimming or even having that much fun, for that matter. Well, at least I didnât have to dress to impress anyone.
That night I drove my beat up VW one of those narrow canyon roads that have been carved out of the hillsides above Hollywood. For the price of those neighborhoods, youâd think theyâd have better roads. It took me a while to find the house; I passed it twice before I found it--no streetlights up there and the houses were all set back, up and away from the road. I parked way off the edge of the road, right up against the hillside.
It trudged up the long driveway and, the closer I got to the house, the louder the music got. Jesus! It sounded like they had a live band! When I got to the house, I discovered I was right. I walked in the open front doorâthere wasnât anyone there to find out if I belonged there or not. There were lots of folks in the big, open, rustic looking living room, mostly facing the back of the house. The entire back wall of the house was sliding glass doors that had been opened to the yard behind. I could see through to the yard where bandstand that had been set up for this jazz quartet who were playing loud but mellow over the buzz of conversation.
I started looking around for Brad. I noticed that just about everyone was attired in swimwear. Some guys had on Hawaiian shirts; some guys no shirts. Everyone looked tanned and healthy. It was pretty clear that a lot of these guys worked out at least a little. I couldnât see Brad in this group so I started to move through the crowd to see if Brad might be in the back yard.
One or two guys acknowledged me as I threaded by way through the conversations on the way to the glass doors. I could see into the kitchenâno Brad, no one I knew, no broads, noâŚ..butâŚ.