Funerals are made for coming out
FINGERPRINTED / Thirty-year search for my Big Cuz
Daniel Allen Cox / Ottawa / Thursday, March 18, 2010
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The oldest keepsake I have is a beige audio cassette labelled “January 1979.” I routinely dust it off and listen to my three-year-old voice through the warble and static, singing You Are My Sunshine while beating a Fisher Price piano to its tinkly death.

Then comes the enigma that has baffled me for years.

“Do you go to school?” my aunt says on the tape.

“I go to school with Lulu’s kids,” I answer. “Lulu’s kids has a broken foots.”

“Tell me about Lulu.”

“She looks like Uncle Morris.”

Lulu was what I called my mom’s cousin Louise. I figured out there was something different about her by how my family pronounced her name. “Loueeeeze.” Somehow, I knew that drawn-out syllable meant she was a dangerous character. Later, I understood that my cuz Lulu, who I thought looked like Uncle Morris, was in fact the family dyke: outspoken, proud and taking shit from nobody.

Louise and I saw each other only a handful of times in my adult life, on the rare occasions we attended a family gathering together. We exchanged hellos under watchful eyes. She told me about her job as a social worker and always gave me a big bear hug.

But I never disclosed my sexuality to her.

Then came a family funeral that changed things. Death does stuff to me, makes me think about renewal. I was sick of a lifetime of missed opportunities to get closer to my Big Cuz. So, in a crowded knot of great aunts and uncles, amnesiacs, unknowns and likely closet cases, I came out to Louise. This was years after I had come out to everybody else.

Lulu’s not the type to bottle emotion. Not two feet from the corpse, she yelled, “Welcome to the family, Danny boy!”

She was referring to a different kind of family, of course.

Recently, Big Cuz and her wife, Dolores, invited my partner, Mark, and me over for dinner. On the drive to their house in the country, we saw hundreds of people windsurfing on a frozen but thawing lake, manoeuvring around holes that had melted in the ice.

After we had settled in the living room and wrestled with the dogs for a while, Big Cuz lost it. She was pissed.

“Why did it take decades for me to find out you were queer? I asked the family about you every few months and always got the same evasive answers. ‘How’s Danny?’ ‘Fine.’ ‘What’s he doing?’ ‘He’s a journalist.’ ‘Is he seeing anyone?’ ‘He has a girlfriend.’ ”

“But I did have a girlfriend,” I said.

“Ok, but why couldn’t they tell me the truth about you?”

She was right. Our family had been keeping us apart for years, if not expressly, then by omitting information they knew was important. Were they afraid that two queers were stronger than one? But it wasn’t just them. I could’ve made contact with Louise a long time ago, to show her she wasn’t the only fag in the family. To break her isolation.

Either way, it should never have taken that long.

We had a fabulous afternoon, pigging out on homemade lemon pie (Dolores is a mean cook) and catching up on the decades we were apart.

Big Cuz told us about Jilly’s, a Montreal dyke bar she called a “speakeasy.” She went pawing at the door when she was 16, wearing a baseball cap to try to look older. The bouncer let her in, on the condition she drink only Coke and stand beside the secret back door, in case they had to throw her out during a police raid.

“I’ll never forget the time a 35-year-old woman propositioned me at Jilly’s. I was terrified, so I excused myself to the bathroom and then disappeared out the window. How embarrassing to see her there again the following night!”

As reported in Xtra, police later raided Jilly’s, in 1976, as part of a pre-Olympics morality sweep, toting submachine guns and searching patrons. This was around the time I was born.

Back at Louise’s house, I slipped the beige cassette into my Walkman and pressed play.

“There’s something I want you to listen to.”

She pressed the buds into her ear and listened intently. Her face lit up, and I could see the resurrection of a 30-year-old memory.

“I need to know who Lulu’s kids are,” I said.

Louise explained she used to take care of physically disabled and hearing-impaired teens. I used to come over to her apartment to play with them, and, because most used wheelchairs, I assumed they had “broken foots.” I thought they were her kids.

“You sat in their laps and made them wheel you around the house. You were a real brat back then.”

“Only back then?”

Then she pointed out the big bay window and sadness came over her face. “One of Lulu’s kids was killed not far from here. On her birthday.”

Anee Khudaverdian came to Canada from Lebanon in 1963, when she was two years old, for polio treatment. A drunk driver hit and killed her in 2008. I had read about Anee, but had no way of knowing she was one of Lulu’s kids. She had probably even given me wheelchair rides.

Another death linking me to Louise.

But if tragedy is going to result in amazing things like reuniting me with my Big Cuz, then I’ll accept these bitter moments without complaint.


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Reader Comments


 
Family
Dan, Louise... coming from the same family I have a general idea how hard life is with "us". I might not be the same exact situation as you both, but I know what it's like not to fit our family's "mold". I'm just relieved that there's a good portion of our family with open minds, or rather not blinded by things they cannot see past. I love you both greatly, and keep in mind family is blood, and blood is forever. Hope to see you both soon. xoxox Kimmy
Kimmy, Montreal QC
03/18/10 8:57 AM EST
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Yes, we are all different
Hi Kimmy. I’m so grateful that our family has a whole faction of non-conformists, including you. In using the wide-brush descriptor “family”, I was looking to avoid singling anyone out, though I realize it can also have the effect of lumping everyone together. Which is inaccurate of course, given how wonderfully different we all are (and how many have no problem with me and Louise palling around!) I’m happy to have you in my life forever. I hope this article points out that “chosen family” is forever, that as we grow older, we have the option to (re)build and refine our family circle with people we love, growing closer to friends, lovers, and certain blood relatives while disconnecting from those who who don’t share our values. Looking to hang out with you, too, Little Cuz.
Daniel Allen Cox, Montreal Quebec
03/18/10 9:42 AM EST
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yup
This is a great heartwarmer. It works as a cautionary tale. Good on you for sharing.
Lina, Montreal QC
03/18/10 10:41 AM EST
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!
Beautiful essay. And yes, the lemon pie was amazing!
Mark Ambrose Harris, Montreal QC
03/18/10 11:49 AM EST
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Family
What a great story! My step brother, whom I suspected was gay when we lived in the same household, came out to his mother with his NYC supermodel boyfriend several years before my dad died. Sadly,this was kept from me for a long time. Unfortunately, since my Dad's death the family has fragmented and differences have permanently seperated us. I have tried to make contact but have never received a reply so I guess I will never get to see him again and tell him my story. I am sure he doesn't know about me either... SIGH! I'm glad to hear some family stories do have a happy ending!
Robb, Ottawa ON
03/18/10 11:59 AM EST
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A lovely story
Thanks for sharing your story, Daniel!
Brian Lam, Vancouver BC
03/18/10 12:39 PM EST
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Reflection
Beautiful, Daniel. This makes me think about my other gay and lesbian relatives, they have been through alot in their lives and for me I feel they have made my life alot easier with being who I am. So yeah...a gay native family reunion is needed about now.
Akwiratékha, Kahnawà:ke Québec
03/18/10 8:53 PM EST
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Slice of the story
While visiting Daniel last week, I was lucky enough to hear a part of that tape and taste a piece of that pie. I feel so privileged to be connected in a small way to such a great story. Fabulous column, Daniel!
Dallas, Montreal QC
03/18/10 9:29 PM EST
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Awesome
Great story. Worth waiting all these years to hear it.
Dave, Victoria BC
03/18/10 10:42 PM EST
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love rules
Kimmy-thanks for sharing that, and for your acknowledgement that "our" family has not always been so open. But know that most and enough of them were and that is what allowed mw to always be who I was, and be proud, from a very young age. I don't know you well, but I look forward to catching up with you soon. Know that I love you too........family IS blood. Big Cuz
Louise, Vaudreuil Quebec
03/19/10 2:44 PM EST
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beautiful story
It reminds me in a way of my family but things turned out different, growing up I always suspected my oldest sister was a lesbian, it only became more obvious as she got older, when I told her I was gay I was expecting a big hug and to hear she was also a lesbian but was greeted with stony silence instead, by the time she did confirm it we had gone our different ways and rarely connect any more. Also my cousin who I used to hang out with at family parties, we used to make grand stories explaining to each other why we were the only single cousins at those events she'd say "Oh my doctor boyfriend had to rush off to France to do a delicate surgery that only he could do" and I'd come up with elaborate stories too about why my fabulous girlfriend couldn't be there either, then we'd giggle and laugh at ourselves, when we were younger we used to dance together to ABBA songs too, our productions of Dancing Queen were my favourite, we were always a pair, today she has a "roommate" with whom she's bought a condo and are always together at family gatherings for many years now, her roommate is totally part of the family even and they are never apart. Everyone in my family, even my mother, believes they're lesbians and a couple but when confronted by sister who told them about me and her they still felt they had to deny they were lesbians, their part of the family is very conservative and religious, mine tried to be but it never stuck, especially with two out of four kids being queer. I hope someday me and my sister and me and my cousin are able to reconnect in any open and honest way again too. Your story was very heart warming and I'm glad you shared it with us.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/21/10 1:34 PM EST
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People come around; either way, we have each other
Thank you, all you beautiful people, for reading and sharing so richly. Robb, your story touches me. I’ve found that estranged people in your life will often make contact out of the blue, for all kinds of reasons. Not sure I believe in happy endings as much as happy plateaus; moments of rest and peace where you reconnect with someone, no matter how briefly. Dallas and Mark, the lemon pie was sweet, wasn’t it. Akwiratékha, I would love to be invited to the reunion you speak of (or at least send pics and stories). And Rich, you have broken my heart. Delicate surgery, I bet! May you all reconnect under a giant disco ball one day. What I’ve learned is that if you stay open, people come around. It’s a game of patience. Feel free to send out this story, if you think it’ll help. I’d just like to point out to everyone reading that in my life, failures of communication have mostly been mine, and I am humbled by the openness of others. And if, by some chance, we don’t find the connections we’re looking for, we still have each other. Not so bad, I guess. Louise, you simply rock. Keep the stories coming, my friends.
Daniel, Montreal Quebec
03/22/10 10:52 PM EST
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