Thursday, December 21, 2017

I've had many people ask about my infatuation with gilded glass beaded ornaments from the 60s and 70s this Christmas season.  Our living room tree this year features over 300 of the handmade, vintage pieces of all colors, shapes, and textures.  I think my love for these ornaments is one part sentimental and one part pure love.
Last year, I came across four of these beautiful ornaments in a vintage shop, located in Door County.  At $14/per ornament, I just couldn't bring myself to buy them.  I even stopped by that shop several times and tried to rationalize my purchase, but spending $60 on yourself during the holidays seemed both frivolous and selfish.  So, I passed on the purchase, but not without sharing my wish to buy them with my Sister.
Weeks went by and with the bustle of the season, I soon forgot my stops at the resale shop.  Christmas day found itself more quickly than normal, and my family gathered at my parents house to celebrate.
Shortly after everyone opened their gifts, my nieces brought to me two packages.  One, a small box, perfectly wrapped with beautiful, festive ribbon; the other a very large, round hat box.  With my nieces and nephews surrounding me, my Sister asked me to open the smaller box first.  Inside, I found nestled among tissue paper, two, absolutely stunning vintage ornaments.  I sat there, with tears welling in my eyes, with complete and heartfelt amazement that my Sister remembered how much I wanted those four ornaments from the resale shop.  Then, my Sister said, "Open the big box!"  Wondering what could be found inside, I gently pulled the top off the hat box.  Inside were 60 other vintage, glass beaded ornaments of every color and pattern!
I can honestly say this gift was my all time favorite.  Mostly because my Sister's love language is giving from the heart, and also because I knew right then and there, I would forever think of her when I decorated my living room tree.
You see, these ornaments mean more to me than you might expect.  When we were very young, my Mother would buy glass beaded ornament kits and have the three of us kids create them together.  We would spend weeks working on the ornaments and often wondered why we were making them in the first place. A week before Christmas, my Mom gathered us together to share why we had been creating the glass beaded Christmas ornaments:  they would be gifts for elderly residents of local nursing homes who often had little or no visitors during the holiday season!  Mom had contacted several nursing homes and inquired about which residents would not have family visiting for Christmas.  We would then visit each of the residents, proudly handing them our handmade ornament as a gift.  I vividly remember a frail, slender older lady, who sat in her bed as we arrived. It was my turn to give the gift.  Nervously and shyly, I handed her my small gift box, wrapped in colorful paper and a crimson bow.  Her hands were shaky as she unraveled the bow, and her eyes shown brightly in anticipation of what was beneath  the tissue paper.  When she opened the box and gently pulled from it the ornament we had made, tears began to run down her cheeks, as she exclaimed it was the, "most beautiful ornament I've ever seen, and I will treasure it forever!".  Better than her reaction to our gift was the warm embrace she gave me, and the sweet kiss on my forehead.  I asked my Mom why the lady cried as we walked down the hallway of that nursing home. Mom said, "Honey, there are many people in this world that don't have the same kind of Christmas that we do.  It's important to show them love and kindness, for the gift of the season is the promise that Jesus gave us: a life without pain or loss; a world were love prevails."
My life was forever changed by a simple act of gifting glass beaded ornaments.  And I will treasure that memory for the rest of my life.
So, as I gaze at our tree this year, I think of two beautiful and amazing women in my life: my Sister and my Mom.  I also remember the true lesson I learned from those ornaments: Christmas is the season of giving, yes, but when you give from your heart, you lift burdened and tired souls even here on Earth.

Monday, November 13, 2017

Through the Darkness, A Shimmering Light

It was 1994.  Two weeks before my graduate study began, I received an unexpected call:  while originally passed over for a graduate teaching assistantship, one of the finalists had declined the offer; making me a recipient by default.  If you could imagine a lottery winner's reaction, it would pale in comparison to mine at that exact moment.  Finally, after a lifetime of struggling for academic acknowledgement, I had one chance to prove to the world-- and myself- that I might be able to accomplish something big.  My goal was clear as a freshly windexed, gilded mirror:  I would prove to that selection committee that I should have been top choice in the first place!  4.0 and no social life became my mantra.  I contacted friends and family and gave them all the same message- don't expect to see or hear from me until my degree is complete.  I was motivated more than any other time in my life.  A committee of esteemed professors had given me a chance to become the person God always intended me to be-- confident, assured, WHOLE.

Little did I know this one opportunity would transform every fiber of my life, both professionally and personally. The experience would be exhilarating. Stressful.  Heart wrenching and heart breaking.  But most importantly, it would be transformative and life affirming.  The threads of my life would soon weave together into a tapestry beyond my imagination.

Enter, stage left, Brandon Hoefle.  Standing 6'2, with ginger hair and a casually-groomed beard, complete with a smile that could light up Manhattan, Brandon had a unique talent for electrifying your innermost passions and creating an almost false sense of empowering confidence in those around him.  His laugh, always part cackle, became a trademark experience in Coleman Hall. He, along with three other graduate students, would serve as that academic year's graduate teaching assistants.  And my life would never be the same.

Brandon and I immediately bonded.  Kindred spirits.  His yin to my yang.  Our graduate student colleagues often remarked that "wherever Brandon was, Brent would be."  And it was true.  While my goals in graduate school were to avoid a social life, deny new friends, and focus on my primary task, that being to receive top honors in my graduate school, Brandon constantly reminded me that, "we don't have an infinite number of minutes to live in this life.  Life is finite, dude."

Throughout our year-and-a-half serving as graduate teaching assistants, Brandon and I forged an indescribable bond.  I ended his sentences.  He forced me to live with the living.  I made him laugh.  He made me think philosophically.  I had never experienced a friendship so smooth; so comfortable; so undeniably perfect.   I vividly remember a snowy, winter day when I returned to my cramped, graduate apartment, to a simple voicemail message from Brandon:   "I hope you aren't just busy studying and researching that term paper, I hope you're outside making snow angels!"  Brandon always had a way of keeping things simple, and reminding me that life is only lived when it's lived.

One day, as I left one of my classes, Brandon stood outside, leaning against the wall.  Smiling broadly he said, "I will never be the teacher you will be. Don't get me wrong, I love the experience, but you are alive when you teach."  He made me promise him that day that regardless of what opportunities came in life, I would someday seriously pursue teaching as a profession.  I laughed at him that day, and probably made a remark about him "dipping" into my lecture, but nevertheless, I was truly inspired and touched by his affirmation of my abilities in the classroom.

Brandon's master's thesis was truly innovative for the time.  It was 1994.  A time when the prospects of allowing openly gay men and women to serve in the military seemed like such a "radical" idea, and Brandon knew it was time to begin the dialogue.  His uncle, an openly gay man, was someone he had always treasured.  He knew his uncle hadn't always had an easy life, and was fascinated with how he faced a world that often mocked and spewed hatred towards him.  Brandon's thesis studied, through qualitative means, how gay men "came out."   Brandon spent hours interviewing men-- both old and young-- and quietly captured their innermost reflections about how they came to realize who, at the core, they were meant to be.

Graduation came as quickly as our program started, and Brandon and I shared the stage together.  I had accomplished my task: 4.0 in my graduate studies.  You'd think that was the end of the story, but it wasn't.

Brandon moved to Chicago and began working for a theatre company in lighting design.  I started my first full-time job as a Direct Marketing Consultant for Lee Enterprises in Carbondale Illinois.  Being away from Brandon left me lonely beyond comprehension.  My yin had left my yang.  Knowing only a couple people in town, and working a professional job for the first time in my life, I was left desolate and abandoned. I forged forward, worked diligently, and pretended like everything was just fine.  But it wasn't, and I knew it.

In early November of 1995, Brandon called me with the most exciting news!  He and his longtime girlfriend, Coe, had just become engaged.  He wanted me to be his best man, and even better yet, wanted to come visit me for the weekend!  I was over-the-moon excited about the impending nuptials and, most importantly, the quality time I would be able to experience with my dearest friend, Brandon that weekend.  I spent the next several days cleaning my apartment in preparation for our adventurous and celebratory times ahead.  Finally, my "kindred spirit" would be there to see, firsthand, my life in Carbondale, Illinois.  And finally, I might be able to share with him something I had never shared with anyone in my life.  After all, if I couldn't tell Brandon this, who in the world could I share it with?  Surely he would understand.  In fact, I had a complete Hallmarkish-experience mapped out in my mind when I finally divulged the one thing I had kept from every single living person on Earth.  Brandon Hoefle was the only person in my life that I knew, without a single doubt, would not only refrain from judgement; he would be the beacon of comfort and acceptance I so desparately needed.

God had different plans that day.  It wasn't meant to be.  On Friday, November 10th, on route to Carbondale from Chicago, traveling on Interstate 57, my friend Brandon veered off the highway and drove off a steep cliff during torrential rains, hitting his head against the side rail of the windshield.  He would die four days later. He was just 24.

When I was very young, a bully once took his foot and kicked me, right in between my legs with the force of an atomic bomb.  I fell to the ground, retching, blinded by a pain I had never experienced, as the bully yelled, "you stupid faggot!  Look at him, he's crying now!"  I never thought I'd experience a pain that would come close to comparison, but losing Brandon was far more devastating.  And to make matters even more devastating, I would be forever alone... with my secret.

I was completely convinced that God had taken Brandon from me because I intended to share my deepest secret with him that fateful weekend.  Convinced that God was punishing me for planning to share with Brandon something that weighed on my heart, mind, and soul for approaching two decades, my stomach and mind retched with guilt.

You see, it was the 90s.  A decade where the first President of the United States actually uttered a word never-before-heard on a State of the Union Address:  "gay."  A time when being open about your sexuality was still a decade away. Isolation was a common challenge for those still "in the closet", and I was a textbook example.

And here I was.  Alone again.  No one to trust.

For ten months, I experienced some of the deepest, darkest valleys of despair.  My entire family tried everything they could to lift me out of the gray haze that seemed to encircle my every thought.  I went to a grief counselor.  I talked to anyone who would listen.  My Sister sent me cards with uplifting messages every other day, for months. (I still the cards Natalie sent me that year, tightly bound in a red rubber band, tucked away in an antique dresser)  I knew I was loved.  I also knew people cared.  But would they ever fully understand the private pain I carried in the loss of Brandon?  Would I ever muster the courage to share the one secret that was locked in my heart, behind padlocks of unbreakable steel?

In late July of 1996, while driving down a country road in torrential rains, with my radio on full volume, something miraculous happened. Suddenly, as if mother nature had pressed the pause button, the rain stopped.  The sun shone bright.  And the clouds... they sparkled in the sky like diamonds. To make this dramatic scene even more spectacular, the most magnificent rainbow I've ever witnessed covered my windshield in a splendor that literally caused me to pull the car aside.

I sat in that car, with tears running down my face, and began to pray.  God spoke to my heart and reassured me the promise He gives us all-- that we will all have eternal life and unyielding hope in a heaven void of darkness, pain and sadness.  He also told me that the defining principle of His message is one of unconditional and unwavering love for all of His children.  I praised God for giving me life.  I praised God for bringing Brandon into my life. I praised God for making me who He designed me to be-- and for allowing Brandon to do the lighting design I witnessed in the sky that night.  And then, after a short silence, the song that Brandon's fiance sang during his funeral began to permeate my car speakers. I knew then, without a doubt, Brandon was there, too.  God knew I needed my guardian angel to send me a final message:  to embrace my own rainbow, and find the pot of golden grace of peace at the end.

And so, I did. Within a month, I shared the one secret that had only a year before seemed so frightening, with several of my closest friends.  By August, I met a tall dark haired, handsome man named Rich, who 21 years later remains at my side. I became a college professor, just as Brandon encouraged. I have traveled more than I ever imagined.  I laughed as hard and as frequently as I could.  I even made snow angels with Rich, under the St. Louis Arch in the middle of the most brilliant snowstorm.  And I loved deeply. 

21 years later, I sit here yet once again on the anniversary of his exit from our Earthly stage, with tears running down my cheeks, thinking of the precious friendship God blessed me with in Brandon.  I've often said that every person you meet in life serves a purpose.  Brandon's purpose in my life is something very few can claim:  he gave me the courage to love myself enough to be truly happy.  And, most importantly, he taught me that life truly is limited in its scope.  You're right buddy, life is finite!  I only hope mine continues to make you proud.  Thank you for giving me your gift of friendship.  The rewards have been endless and will remain in my heart forever.






Sunday, September 17, 2017

I always tell my students that they control the brush that paints their life.  It's probably because, at the heart, I am an optimist when it comes to seizing the opportunities that exist around us.  My niece, Savannah, has recently experienced a summer in New York City, working for top Broadway producers and costume designers.  Shortly after her internship, she boarded a plane for Florence, Italy, where she will enjoy a full semester abroad, gaining valuable personal and professional experiences in the fashion industry.  My Mom called me recently to tell me Savannah might want to extend her stay in Europe for a few more months; back packing and exploring the splendor that only Europe can provide.  I instantly responded, "she should go for                                                               
it!  You're only young once, and that kind of opportunity only presents itself once in a lifetime!"
I live by the philosophy that we are only here on this Earth for a short while.  Seizing the day and living for the moment are among my most cherished beliefs.   In many ways, while I have lived a full life of adventure, I often find myself wondering whether or not I truly follow the advice I give my students.  While I do control the brush, the painting that I've created seems a bit incomplete.
There are so many things I still want to experience.  And so many people I wish to share my life with...  while the painting is in progress, I know the strokes I make will make lasting difference.
So, as you think of your life, is the painting something that you feel is complete?  Do you still have passions and dreams yet unfulfilled?  I say, when you find something that beckons your heart and soul, go for it! Life is short.  The adventure is exhilarating. Forge forward, knowing only YOU control that brush.  And the final product, in the end, will be something only YOU can create.