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Thursday, July 10, 2014

Ch X: "Us"

Philip and I met in September, 1986 which was the height of the AIDS crisis.  We were introduced by a mutual friend who thought we'd be a perfect couple.  Where she got that idea, I'll never know!  Because we were as different as daylight and dark.  Our first "date", dinner and a movie, was an exercise in awkward...until the end.  There was something about the few moments after we parted that made me feel I'd met someone substantial, someone who would be a part of my life for the rest of my life.  I went to bed that night alone, unconvinced.  When I work the next morning, I was committed, enthralled.

It took Philip a bit longer but over the next several months, he saw the light.  We spent more and more time together, becoming acquainted.  This was a difficult as it may seem at first glance, though he lived in Houston and I lived in Honolulu.  We both worked as Flight Attendants for Continental Airlines.  In the spring of 1987, he transferred from Houston to Honolulu.  Our airline employer had flight bases in both cities, so the transfer was an organic transition for him and gave our growing relationship the opportunity to fly or fail.  Within months, we moved into a small rental together and our lives, living together as a unit, began.  In retrospect, wherever we were together has been "home" but the homes we've shared have each had a special character and played a special role.  There have been many homes but I guess the first is always special.  It was a tiny, 2 bedroom, 1 bath "o'hana" house (a cottage in someone's backyard) in the upper Manoa Valley of the Island of O'ahu:  paradise, both figuratively and literally.

In the tradewind-cooled tropics, windows and doors are often left open to welcome the breeze.  When I think of Manoa, I think of lying in bed, talking, planning, dreaming of our future together, while being caressed by the sweet-smelling breeze.  Mountain ginger, plumeria, and turberose are the scents I smell today, almost 30 years later.  I hear the cooing of the doves and the rustle of the leaves.  Our first days together were unhurried, unstructured, unimaginably, blissfully simple.  And so were we.  Everything we needed, beginning and ending with each other, we had.  In some way, those first days and nights layed the groundwork for the simple nature of our life as a couple.  Our commitment, though unsanctified in the classic sense, was strong from the beginning.  Time and circumstance combined into a fiery forge which has strengthened and solidified that commitment.

The first home that we purchased together was a "leasehold" condominium at Turtle Bay, on the North Shore of O'ahu.  Leasehold property was common at the time.  While one purchased ownership of the improvements (in this case, the condo) to the property, the property itself was leased for a designated term from a third party which, in our case, was the Campbell Estate.  Campbell, Bishop, Kaiser were familiar names as those estates owned most of the real property in the state of Hawaii, a legacy of the missionary days of the 19th century.  "Fee-simple" property signified ownership of both the improvements and the real property and was comparatively rare at the time.  Fee-simple homes were certainly much more expensive than leasehold and, as a consequence, were out of our reach.  

We began a pseudo-career of home improvement with that condominium, a career that persists through today, almost 30 years later.  When our Honolulu based closed in the fall of 1993, we left Hawaii, the place where our home ownership legacy began and moved back to Texas, to Houston, to start the next phase of our life together.

While surviving the typical ups and downs of the first decade or so of any close relationship, Philip and I bought, improved and sold several principle residences in the Houston area.  Our careers progressed.  The seniority we were accumulating as Flight Attendants meant that we could earn more, working less.  We found ourselves with the luxury of time and skill, so we considered the concept of a second or vacation home.  We've bought, improved and sold second homes in Maine and Florida.  Knock on wood, all of our real estate transactions have been profitable, some modestly, others fabulously.  We have been so very lucky in so many ways!

All along our journey together, we've enjoyed the comfort of pets, primarily cats, since they tolerate our strange work schedules better than dogs ever could.  Philip has always impressed me as the consummate "nurturer".  I had a sense of it from our first meeting but his nurturing sensibilities were confirmed with our pets.  It came as no surprise the day he mentioned that he'd been thinking about the possibilities of us being parents; adopting a child in need.  We discussed the idea, purely conceptually.  There were just too many obstacles in the way,  I had no particular feelings on the issue one way or the other which, to my mind, did NOT make me the best potential parent material.  In spite of the fact that, empirically, we agreed parenthood was not in our future, I sensed that Philip had a longing, a need to live the parent role.

Toward the end of the 1990s, one of Philip's older brothers who lived in Atlanta, Lars, was diagnosed with Stage 4 lung cancer.  Philip, along with several other of his siblings, visited Lars and his wife often at their home to help them with the numerous tasks which serve to compound the complexity of the waining days fo the terminally ill.  It was a chance for Philip to nurture but it was also a chance to rekindle a brotherhood which had grown distant, to repay overdue personal debts of kindness, and it was, quite simply, an expression of love.  In the process, Philip learned of the small, single-parent family of Lar's older daughter, one of two who had become the damaged detritus of a failed marriage and a mentally unstable mother who had abandoned her children and husband.  Lars' daughter were bringin her two young children, an 8 year-old girl and 7 year-old boy to visit before it was too late.  These children had no connection with and very little concept of their mother's extended family, living mostly in Pensacola, including Lars and Philip's aging mother, their great-grandmother.  Our future became entwined (or entangled, I have yet to decide).  We were soon together on holidays and school breaks, primarily in Houston.

The boy grew closer to us.  The girl, older in more than just age, needed something different than what we could provide and grew more distant.  Where he was eager, she became reticent to spend more time with us and her visits soon ended.  When we became aware of her growing distance, we encouraged another of Philip's brothers and his wife in Pensacola to have her spend time with them.  It was to no avail.  Her ties to "the family" were supplanted by other, more immediate needs that she felt. Soon, only Philip's great-nephew, now nearly a teenager, was visiting.  He came to stay more often and stayed for longer periods.  It was clear that life "at home" was far from optimal.  Not only was it not fulfilling his basic needs, we had reason to believe that there were times when he was in very real physical danger.

Soon, our little duo of a family would become a trio:  the Three Musketeers, Three (very) Blind Mice!

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Ch 1: Smitten

I fell in love with a relic of the early 20th century from the moment I saw its picture on realtor.com.  Philip, my partner-in-all-things, did not share my enthusiasm.

The romantic cuteness of a 1908 "shotgun house" has its roots in simplicity, practicality and affordability, all of which were pre-requisites in our search for a part-time abode in Philip's hometown of Pensacola, Florida.  The name "shotgun house" likely arises from a common attribute of the architectural style.  Excerpted from historicpensaecola.org:

"Shotgun House- Long, narrow vernacular style of residence, commonly one room wide and several rooms deep.  The term “shotgun” refers to the layout where one could stand at the front door, fire a shotgun, and the blast would exit the back door without hitting anything in the house.  Alternately, the name could be a corruption of the African word to-gun, which describes a similar type of house."  

Due to their simplicity, practicality and affordability, shotgun homes are not normally found in more "desirable" neighborhoods. Philip's lack of enthusiasm for what was to become the vehicle on our journey of character-building was based largely on its location.  Philip suffered from the myopia of remembered neighborhood characteristics from his youth which, at the time, was over 30 years earlier.  Transitional neighborhoods are one thing; "don't be caught there after dark" neighborhoods are something entirely different!  The corner of Wright and Davis in the extreme hinterlands of the "Old East Hill" historic district was most definitely "the other side of the tracks" in the 1950s.

In the Pensacola of his youth, Philip was astonished by two "very smart" black girls from this very neighborhood who entered his grammar school at the dawn of the integration era; astonished because they helped to free him of the prejudices of ignorance.  Prior to the sweeping social changes ushered in by desegregation, it is unlikely that the three would have ever even met.  Though the entirety of their relationship was confined to just a few pre-teen years together, Philip, now in his 60s, can repeat their names and recall the impact they made on hiim.  Yet, his innate prejudice of the nieghborhood which produced them remained.  To put it plainly (and it pains me to do so), "proper white folks just didn't live there."  Like the impervious and oh-so-common kudzu vine, the tendrils of segregation and prejudice in the South remained and remain pervasive.

To my mind, shotguns were the like "mobile home" of the 19th and early 20th centuries in the South.  Requiring very little space, they were easy and inexpensive to build, often in very high densities (especially in larger coastal cities).  They were crafted of available, durable, inexpensive materials:  southern white and/or yellow pine, "found" stones for foundations and cheap tin for the roof.  Interestingly, while the metal roofs and stone foundations were prone to failure with the ravages of time, the native pine had a tendency to "petrify" over time, rendering it impervious to assault from termites and other destructive forces.  I once attempted to drive a common nail into a supporting member of what beame OUR shotgun, only to be thwarted by the stonelike wood.  Fire seems to have been its sole mortal enemy and took its toll, sadly originating from both natural and man-made, sometimes hate-fueled, sources.

Anyone with the means to "do better" than a shotgun, certainly took pains to do so.  While it was the very essence of the American Dream of home ownership, the shotgun spoke plainly of the limited means of its inhabitants.  Exceptions to the plain single-gable-over-shed-roof-porch are plentiful, some quite artistic.  But the very form and materials used to fabricate it can be summarized in a word:  humble. 

"Humble" is a word that generations of Americans from the very beginnings of our nation have embraced, even venerated.  Around the world, humility became known as the oxymoronic quality of our people, juxtaposed against the greatness of our nation.  
But humility seems to have somehow fallen from grace.  It has become the grist in the mill of more recent generations of Americans' "need" for bigger, grander, richer, better.  So, the accomplishment of home ownership represented by this modest home paled in the light of its relative humility.  The need for some to "rank" on others put the shotgun and its inhabitants "in their place".  

Even to one of the most accepting, loving, fair-minded humans I know, my partner Philip, the shotgun at 317 N. Davis was going to be one HELL of a hard-sell.

But the very obvious shortcomings of the shotgun house can also be the foundation of its allure:  simplicity, humility, affordability, security, practicality, accomplishment, community, pride.  Moreover, these homes epitomize a value which has become alien in the culture of our country:  personal responsibility.  "Living within one's means", akin to humility, is another typically American value that has become quaint, unnecessary, outdated, borderline eccentric.  In 21st century America, it is not only possible to acquire things which one can never hope to pay for, it is almost de rigueur to do so.

I was smitten by cute, sold on practicality, and destined to learn one of life's valuable lessons thanks to the realities of a free-market economy.  The shotgun house was for us, not just a home-away-from-home, it became the crucible of our morality and ethics; OUR morality and ethics.  Philip and I have always seen ourselves as two complete entities, one unique from the other.  But over the years, our partnership has grown almost into an entity of its own.  OUR mettle was to be tested, as was his, as was mine.  The funny thing about crucibles is that they test mettle to the point of failure or to the point where the product is superior to the simple combination of its components.


Ch X: Joaquin's Yard Sale

Ch X: East Hill Window Lights

Ch X: Post-Rental Wake-Up Call

Ch X: The Rental

Ch X: The Family