PDA

View Full Version : Like Fallen Beads -- Atiq's Wadi Rum not-so-short story



NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 12:47 PM
I'll now try posting my 14,000-word true story of unrequited love in the desert of Jordan.

Will do this in sections to facilitate quoting in replies. This is an experiment; not sure if word limits will get in the way. I think it will take me a while to paste it all in. To anyone reading this as I post: please wait til I have pasted in the last paragraph before posting replies. Thank you!

The entire story may be downloaded as a Word doc at http://dahabmassage.com/pers/Like%20Fallen%20Beads.doc

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 12:54 PM
Like Fallen Beads
copyright 2009 Atiq Zabinski


Wadi Rum is an immense desert valley in South Jordan, renowned for its beauty and its historical significance as T. E. Lawrence’s operations in the Arab Revolt of 1917-18. It is one of Jordan’s top tourist attractions, along with Petra and the Dead Sea.

CouchSurfing.org (http://couchsurfing.org) is “a worldwide network for making connections between travelers and the local communities they visit.” It enables connections between travelers and their local hosts, and the organization of meetings of travelers and locals. Members have profiles stating whether they are traveling, wish to host or meet travelers, and leave references for each other based on their experiences.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 12:56 PM
------------------------------------------------------------
Saturday, November 14th. My interview today with the Dead Sea Holiday Inn just drove another nail in the coffin of the idea of my staying in Jordan. I need to call the woman back and cancel the followup interview I numbly agreed to while I took in the shockingly low offer.

My phone needs charging, and I'll grab a bit of electricity at Robin's before I vacate her place. She has other people staying over tonight, and so my time crashing here is coming to its end. Seems there's too little time to see whether the snuggles could turn into anything more serious, what with my feeling no other incentive to remain in the country and all. You can't ask a woman to give you a reason to settle in a country, especially not when she hasn't given you a kiss more substantial than the X's at the bottom of a text message.

The sun has already set and only now have I started looking for the next couch to surf. If nothing comes through, I can always go back to the 5 dinar dorm room at the Adha hotel. I have to ask myself, of the Couch Surfers I've met here in Amman, who do I honestly want to get to know better and spend time with tonight, and how big a factor in my motivation to couch surf is the desire to save the 5 dinars?

At first Yousouf is the only one I can think of, but he has other guests tonight, too. Maybe another night, he offers. Inshallah, would love to, will keep in touch. I say nothing about being a hair away from leaving the country.

“OK”, I say, “Hotel Adha it is.” Robin agrees that sometimes when traveling it's best to be alone.

Then I think of Skylar and Elke, the hippie couple from Amsterdam. I have their numbers from the Couch Surfing meeting last week where I almost talked them into hopping on a bus with me to join Amanda in Wadi Rum. I've never looked at their profiles and I don't even know if they host, but here at least are two people in the community whose company I think I'd enjoy more of, and there's no harm in trying.

“Atiq! Nice to hear from you. How was the desert?”

“I still haven't gone. I was on the bus when Amanda called and asked if I minded if we went to Aqaba instead, and I said OK.”

"That's funny! I like that you can go with the flow and change your plans quickly. Well, if you still want to go to Wadi Rum, then we can still take that trip together."

"I'd love to. And now we can do it the way we want to, and take a few days for it."

"Beautiful! Let me know when you want to go."

"Will do! It should be soon. But right now I have a favor to ask of you. Can I crash with you and Elke tonight?”

“Oh, I think that would be great. Let me check with Elke and call you back. I'm sure she'll be happy, but I have to ask, you know.”

It is Elke who calls me the next minute, warm, welcoming, and doing the duty of the one better at giving directions in English. I take a taxi up the steep streets of Jebel al-Ashrafiyah to the Armenian Church, and from there I call Elke to be led the way home.

Elke, tall with thick blond dreadlocks tied back in a headscarf, shaped like an Earth goddess, greets me with a hug. Around the corner a vacant lot exposes a stellar view of the lights blanketing the hills of nighttime Amman. We turn down a staircase of irregular stone slabs and turn again into a street like an alley, buildings perched in rows on the sloping hillside. Between two houses she opens a fence and we make yet one more turn down a staircase to a little patio. Their place is tucked in below their landlord's, small, cozy, protected.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 12:57 PM
“Welcome home!” Skylar rises from a plastic chair, tall and thin with bright blue eyes, his blond hair flowing thick in his beard, short and straight on the sides as if growing in from a Mohawk, and crowning him on top with a pile of curls. He hugs me and beckons me into the apartment.

“Thank you, it's good to be here. Your place feels very nice.”

His voice is soft, a bit high for a man and, like hers, has the sing-song cadence that can make the North European accents so charming. “It's a small place, but we think there's enough room for us all.”

“The landlord didn't think it was big enough for the two of us,” says Elke. “They will be very amused to learn we had a guest.” Her tone turns a bit apologetic. “We really didn't have a second bed but we put this together. We hope it's comfortable for you.”

I sit on the pile of thick blankets stretched over a broad camping mat on the floor. “Perfect! This is exactly the kind of surface I sleep best on.”

Skylar waves me into the tiny kitchen. “Feel as you are in your own home, take whatever you want, don't even ask. We've made a big pot of tea, would you like some?”

The tea is like a stew of herbs, strong and a bit odd in its chaos of flavors. My friends' style is endearing to me. Not since leaving Hawaii have I have been in a kitchen full of herbs for experimental tea research. It feels as if I've discovered family I didn't know I had, my Dutch hippie cousins.

I peruse a book lying out: "the Places that Scare You" by an American Buddhist writer. First book on Buddhism I've seen since I left the US. Yes, I am among kindred souls. Everything about them is extremely casual. They abide in a place of ease and invite you to join them there.

We sit in their bedroom, drinking port wine and listening to their record collection. They brought it, the turntable and the amp all the way from Amsterdam. Only the speakers were bought here in Jordan, which turned out to rather ruin the sound. “We also brought those two tapestries, and that's about it.” says Skylar. “We got rid of everything we had. Even the record collection is about a tenth of what it was. But it's great, we saved only the best of the best, so now we can grab any record and say, oh I can definitely listen to this again right now!”

They talk about their wedding, how wonderful a party it was and how they managed to do it for virtually no money.

They came out to Jordan with the hopes of starting a bread-and-breakfast, but like me have discovered that the Mid-East isn't home. They have quickly grown sick of Arab culture in general and Amman life in particular, and are feeling they're already on their way out of Jordan. I commiserate with them about this, and particularly on the Arab culture bit. I have a glass of wine in my hand when I first mention that I am a Muslim. They listen fascinated to the bits of my story I tell them.

“Here, look at my passport. Guys here joke that I look like Osama Bin Laden in that photo. A friend of mine warned me against wearing kufis in Egypt, so I lost that bit of the look before I even came out here. I kept the beard until I came to Jordan, and than I shaved it off. I got really burned out on religion in Syria, and now I'm happy to be mistaken for a Christian.”

Skylar is an ex-Christian, glad to have shrugged off trying to believe in heaven and hell, and recently turned on to Buddhist thought. Now we're on a favorite topic of mine, and we kick the Buddhist ball around for a while before Skylar exclaims how wonderful an idea it was for them to have me over. “It's so good to finally have someone we can really talk with. We've been getting so tired of the stupid chit-chat.”

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 12:59 PM
We talk about American and Dutch society, and I am impressed with what they left behind them when they came here. I must visit the Netherlands some time. We talk about our love of cannabis, how beneficial it's been to be away from it and how much we miss it.

Like everyone else, they can't believe I'm forty-one. Skylar challenges me to guess his age. I gaze into his eyes for a minute, summoning all my intuitive power. “I'd say... twenty-six.”

“Yes, exactly!"

“Can you guess my age, too?” asks Elke.

I repeat the Jedi mind trick, holding her gaze til the number comes to me. “Twenty-five.”

Skylar is deeply impressed. “How do you do that?!” I just grin. There's nothing to do but guess, and I happened to guess very well tonight.

Elke speaks of how isolated they feel here, how they have no real friends here.

"But I think we have one now," says Skylar.

They laugh easily and I laugh with them.

At one point in my storytelling, I mention coming out to a place somewhere when Elke interrupts, "Sorry, you said you 'came out.' Do you mean you're gay?"

The question shocks me a bit. Homosexuality is a topic simply not spoken about anywhere I've been traveling in these last three months, and her tone is so matter-of-fact, as if she is all ready to make a new gay friend.

"No, I meant 'come out' literally, as in I went there."

"Oh, I see."

I don't recall myself commenting further on my sexuality at that point, and I'm sure she makes no further inquiry about it.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:00 PM
"So while I was in Aqaba," I tell them, "I got to snorkel for the first time since I left Hawaii, and it was amazing. All this time I've been traveling I've really been getting stuck in my head. I know it, I can feel it, my consciousness shifting out of my body, and it's something I have to fix before I can expect myself to do bodywork again. Snorkeling started bringing me back to life again, and I realized I really need more of that. More swimming, and some hashish would make it even better! So I started thinking Dahab is next.

"But I also want to spend a stretch of time in a quiet place where I can just meditate and write for -- the number that comes to mind is forty days -- and I think it would make sense to do that before I get all stoned and dissipated. So I'm inclined to return to the Mar Musa monastery in Syria. I can stay there for a long time in exchange for a little work.

"Anyhow, like you guys, I'm getting a "Game Over" vibe about Jordan, but I can't leave without seeing Wadi Rum. Are you two equally interested in going?"

“It's very interesting,” says Elke. “But we might not be ready to go so soon, we have things to figure out. Like are we going to pay the next month's rent, or tell them we're going.”

Skylar and I feed each other with enthusiasm for camping and hiking in the desert. We pore over the Lonely Planet guidebook and discuss how we can get in and find trails without getting bilked by guides. Elke, though, says she's much less athletic than us and tells us we should plan to hike without her. Skylar can not persuade her that hiking in the desert won't really be so hard, and she insists that she can take shorter trails or will be OK staying in the tent while we're out.

“You guys have a tent?”

Plans are postponed. We make snacks, and I wash the dishes against Skylar's mild protest. I have to get up in the morning to give a tryout massage for a possible future interview at the Grand Hyatt. I really don't have much interest in working in Jordan at this point, am regarding this as my giving a free massage, and trying to regard it as a dress rehearsal for something I really want. I bid them good night. No one has said anything about my staying any longer, but I'm happy to see if the offer comes in the morning.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:02 PM
Sunday, November 15th. My phone's alarm wakes me up. I have my tea, a bit of bread, and as they are still sleeping in the minutes before I must leave, I pack everything back up in my travel bags. Skylar wakes up just in time for me to ask him for a towel, and when I finish my shower he has left the house.

"He went out to buy breakfast," Elke says.

"Ah, too late for me. I need to leave like right now."

"Really?"

"Yeah, interview's at 12, and it's 11:30 already."

"Oh, I didn't realize you'd have to go so quickly..."

"Sorry to go unceremoniously. It's been great, I love you guys. Maybe I'll see you at the CouchSurfing walk tonight?"

"Yes, we should go. Do you when any information about it, where it is...?"

"No, but straight after I do this massage I'm going to the Rashid Cafe to do all my on-line stuff, and I'll look it up and call you."

"Great, see you then!"

I walk down the hill to where I can catch a taxi, my big travel bag strapped around my waist and chest, the day pack dangling from my shoulder in front. I see a little spiritual crossroads: I could regard with annoyance that I have to cart this stuff with me to the interview, or I can turn my mind to appreciate the bit of adventure and spontaneity; life is interesting when you don't know where you'll spend the night. And indeed I have no worries; a second invite from Skylar and Elke wouldn't surprise me and there is always the Adha hotel. I relish the memory of last night's sweetness, and my step is light as the ground falls before me.

Skylar comes up from the grocery store, bags hanging from his hand. "You're missing breakfast!" he cries.

"Sorry, but missing the interview would be worse. Thanks again for having me over."

"Oh no, thank you, it was wonderful having you stay with us. I hope you'll come back." We hug, and as I step out of the embrace I plant a kiss on his cheek. Why not, we're in the Middle East, it's one of their customs I like.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:04 PM
I falter a bit through the “interview” massage and am left feeling weird, knowing that there will probably be no offer from them. On the way out I take their brochure, check out the prices and wonder how much they can possibly afford to pay their therapists. Getting to the Rashid Cafe entails a fight with a cabbie spoiled by rich tourists.

I take my usual table on the balcony, order a pot of shayy wa marmaria, the sage-infused black tea that will cost me only one dinar, but justify my hanging around for hours on their Wi-Fi. The sky is clouding up, the wind starts blowing and already it's time for the hoodie jacket. I call Elke with the info about tonight's walk.

“Atiq, I'm sorry about how this morning went. We both wanted to tell you to stay longer, but we didn't get the chance to talk about it with each other before you left. I'm sorry you had to carry your bags all day. Do you want to come back today?”

Life is sweet. To know I'll spend the night with friends again!



Skylar is telling me how glad he is to have me over again. "I like how in Arab culture they say you're a guest for three days, and if you stay later you must be family."

It does indeed feel like home to me. The night is cold, and we hang around the electric heater in their room. When they want to smoke cigarettes they go out to the patio. It's not just for my sake, they insist, they prefer not to have smoke in the house.

"So," I tell them, "I was researching Wadi Rum on the Web today and I found an ad posted by the Bedouin Meditation Camp there. They're looking -- or at least, they were looking at the time they posted the ad -- for a few people to do a few hours of volunteer work a day, in exchange for tents in the camp and free food."

"Bedouin Meditation Camp!" repeats Elke with a laugh. "Sounds perfect!" Skylar is clearly pleased by her reaction.

"Has a nice ring for me, too,” I say. “You know I've been planning a time like a retreat for writing and meditating, and I thought I'd do it first thing after Jordan. But the desert might be the perfect place for it, and if I could find a sustainable way to do it here in Jordan, maybe I won't rush out of here."

I read them the PDF I made of the ad. There's a long list of possible ways the volunteers can help around camp, from Web design to gardening to cleaning, and Skylar and Elke comment on ways that sound like fun to them. The main thing they want to know is what commitment of time these people will want.

"So, shall we call them in the morning?"

"Yeah, I think so," says Skylar. "Anyway, the morning is the morning. What about now, the only time that is real?"

"I think a pot of tea would be nice," says Elke.

"Wa marmaria?" I ask. They nod and grin. "Cool. I'll go make it."

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:05 PM
And on to the next moment, and on and on; I easily fall in step with their way of taking time. My own inclination to make plans and follow through on them slipped away when I made my unplanned stumble into Jordan, this country from which I keep saying I am about to leave. Now it is the impulse of the moment that leads the way. Plans do not thrive well in this environment, and my push for Wadi Rum will soon stand the test. They remind me of people constantly stoned, and their presence is narcotizing. I, too, can easily postpone a decision until after the next snack, the next album, the next chat about this or that.

They pick up beer at the cheaper liquor store. "Nice thing about lots of Christians in the neighborhood: choices of alcohol!" I give it a test and my body gives the usual "no" reaction. I mention how nice last night's port was and they divvy up the last of it.

Time for a DVD, will I help them choose? They have a number of films they bought at the pirate shop and haven't gotten around to watching. We settle on Spike Lee's film about Malcolm X, a favorite of mine that I remember as one of the milestones in my heart's opening to Islam.

With a wave of his hand Skylar beckons me over to sit next to him in the big stuffed chair. As I sit our hands touch, and without a thought, as if it were the most natural thing, they close gently around each other. We sit like this, holding hands for a while. After three months in the Middle East I am used to this degree of intimacy with other men, but I know well that we are both Westerners, raised with a taboo we are casually, silently breaking. I am astonished at how good his hand feels in mine, nourishing and unexpected like rain in the desert. I wonder what he is feeling.

This lasts until his next trip to the kitchen, and then he sits with his wife on the bed.

The first disc comes to its end, and they are too sleepy to watch the second. So I say good night and retire to the bed they made me. Time to quiet the mind from the day's stimulation. I find myself imagining Skylar is lying here with me, our arms around each other. Like a child's teddy bear or security blanket, this image lulls me to sleep.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:06 PM
Monday. We sleep til noon.

“Coffee and a cigarette, the perfect breakfast,” says Skylar. “At least, that's what I think now that I'm here. I used to think it was coffee and a spliff.” I make a grocery run and prepare a mezze of hummos, bread, zattar, olives and oil, and bring it with a fresh pot of tea to them in their room.

"My God, you even heated the bread? You're so in tune with food."

"Just got a little inspired while I was in Syria. Everyone there understands food and its presentation so well. Not even the roughest men will serve hummos without first drawing a pattern with the edge of a knife and drizzling olive oil into it. No, I think in Syria I'd be embarrassed to present a breakfast as crude as this!"

"It's very nice to have such attention put into something offered to you."

"After breakfast," I ask, "Can we look at the camp ad and call the guy?"

"Sure."



I follow Skylar out to the patio for his cigarette break. The midday sun is warm and we are barefoot. One of the things I like about Skylar is how important philosophy is to him, how earnestly he speaks, heart and intellect intertwined. I have raised the topic of the will of the individual human versus the Divine will. Why I don't remember, perhaps it is arising from my growing awareness that getting anything done around here is going to take some concerted effort.

Skylar doesn't believe in the human will at all. “You can say, I choose to do this, I will do that,” he says, “but really, any thought is just something stirred by a motion, an emotion or feeling. And sometimes you have conflicting emotions, so you might change your mind and think a lot about what the best decision is, but in the end the decision you make is determined which emotion is the strongest. I look back every moment of my life and I can't see how anything could have gone any differently. Yes, in theory, there were times when I could have made a different decision, but really that could only have happened if my emotions at the time had been in a different balance. And of course they weren't. Things are always as they are, and everything unfolds according to how everything is already moving. There's no being standing outside of the movement, freely making any choices.”

I see his reasoning but I am uncomfortable with it. It seems to reduce us to automatons. Where in this worldview is the striving to do good, to be mindful, and to understand truth? Where is responsibility, the conscience?

“What role does consciousness play in this world view of yours?” I ask.

He looks almost stern. “What is consciousness?”

“Well, that's a great question we can kick around endlessly later. For now, let's just use as a working definition, 'that which is asking the question "What is consciousness?”'"

“Well, I think it's totally influenced by the emotions of the moment, too.”

I find myself in a strange position: I want to defend the existence of the individual will, even though this contradicts the principal teaching of my spiritual path: that the individual has no separate existence from the One, Allah. Should I stop arguing and just try to see things the way Skylar does? Points of view engender different emotions and actions. Where would this man's philosophy take me? to a place devoid of morality?

We are silent and locked in each other's gazes. I am calling out to Truth, and Skylar's gaze challenges me to attention. It would be cowardice to look away from these twin blue flames.

He speaks quietly. "You don't look away like most people do. You keep looking deeper."

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:09 PM
Perhaps I have failed to make it clear, but I do not want to call the man at the camp without the three of us around the phone, and now Elke is having some meditation time in their room.

"Damn good idea,” I say. We should all be doing that. I haven't meditated but once or twice since I started traveling. Really hard to establish such a discipline when you're always in different places. I think Wadi Rum could be a great place for it, if we find we can stay there."

"Yes, it should. Don't do the dishes, you made breakfast."

"No, I really don't mind. I actually like doing dishes." It is true, sometimes washing dishes is a solace to me, a meditation I can turn off my mind and submerge into, a task I can easily accomplish and see the results of, a symbolic victory of order over chaos. Perhaps I am being moved by this need to see that I am accomplishing something, answering the tension around the feeling that in this house time can disappear into a haze.

"Anyway, Elke just needs to have some time alone right now."

"We all do, it's crucial."

"Thanks for letting us have our time alone together, too."

"It all works out fine, I get to have my time alone that way, as well."

"You really share the space very well with us, it doesn't feel at all a burden to have you here."

"Has it been three days already, or do I get to join your family sooner?"

"I think you're our brother now!"

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:12 PM
When I next visit them in their room, they are in the big chair, Elke crying, Skylar's arm around her shoulder. They eyes indicate I am welcome and I quietly take the seat against the next wall.

After half a minute she says "sometimes I just need to cry,"

"It's good that you let yourself do it."

"Yes." She smiles. "Thanks for letting me, too." Slowly she tells me about the stress they are going through. It was such an extreme break they made with their old life, their family and friends, and nothing has come out as they'd hoped in Jordan. She's goes on to say how much energy seemed sucked up by disappointment with the Middle East, and how anxious she is about how they don't know where they're going next.

Things changed with their relationship earlier this year. They were going to have a baby, but Elke miscarried... Skylar is motionless, looking at his wife in silent support.

She expresses mixed feelings about the Wadi Rum venture and how much less athletic she is than us. She told us to feel free to hike together but lately she's been asking herself how she would really feel right now if she were alone in a tent out in the desert. I assure her Skylar and I won't go anywhere without her.

So, it is best we didn't rush the phone call. We must let all the feelings come out of hiding and be sorted out before we can really plan anything together. I must respect the pace of how things are done.

So on to the next moment and whatever impulse proves the strongest in guiding it. As such things happen in repetition, with little change from day to day, that now as I struggle to remember the details of what happened I find my memory of five days is a blur, a timeless hazy dream.

We listen to music constantly. Often one of them will identify the tune we're listening to as having been on the mix for their wedding. And often the song is dark, cynical, or obscene. Nick Cave's "Staggerlee." Rammstein's "Du Hast."

Willst du bis der Tod euch scheidet
treu ihr sein für alle Tage?
Nein! Nein! *
---------------------
* (Do you want, until death separates you, to be faithful to her for all days? No! No! )

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:14 PM
I remember again getting locked in Skylar's gaze until he makes a quiet pronouncement: "Yes, you definitely have a different look than most people."

I break the sober atmosphere with a warm smile and his gaze softens, too, a bit of light shining now on the blue waters of his eyes. I step forward and we embrace. Our respective heights bring my head to his chest, and as we hold each other I can hear his heart beating hard. Straight men's hearts don't beat this way when they give a pal a hug.

Another CouchSurfer calls seeking hospitality. Rudolph the Belgian, who we met at a CouchSurfing gathering last week. We'll meet him at the film tonight and he'll come home with us. I get an SMS from Robin inviting me to a dinner party, and I reply sorry, I'm seeing the film with my hosts.

The film is about the struggles of three Malians to illegally emigrate to Europe, one of them dying in the desert. I appreciate that it makes my problems seem so petty.

Robin has Yousouf SMS me an invite: there's leftovers. I talk about it with my friends and the general feeling is that we're not in the mood for a large group dynamic. They encourage me to go off on my own if I don't want to miss Robin's party, and while I do feel a little bad about not seeing her, the stronger desire for me is to stay with my new family. Skylar seems pleased with this and we link arms as the four of us walk back up the freshly rainslicked streets of Jebel Al-Ashrafiyya.

I get an SMS from the Dead Sea Holiday Inn asking if we can postpone tomorrow's followup interview. Shit, I meant to cancel it altogether. I've been meaning to call for two days now and keep forgetting to do it. My mind has become utterly scattered.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:15 PM
We all hang out in their room that evening, sometimes sharing a single conversation, other times splitting into pairs. They talk again about their wedding, the endless spliffs, the supportive presence of all their families.

Skylar tells me about how his relationship with Elke evolved from what had already been a platonic friendship for a few years. Then he and Rudolph go to the kitchen together, and alone with me Elke continues the discussion.

"Actually, it wasn't even until he started dating his last girlfriend that I even realized he was bisexual. Before then I had only known him to date other men, and I just saw him as gay. I think he was also just figuring out that he was bisexual, too."

This news comes out of the blue and it strikes me that she seems to have grabbed a private moment to divulge it to me. I think about the exchanges I've been having with Skylar and the sound of his heart beating hard against my ear. A married man whose wife I regard rather like a sister, as I do him a brother. And I can't imagine he would cheat on her. We are both restrained from doing anything sexual with each other... is there danger in these hugs and silent, lingering gazes?

That night I again find a teddy bear in the image of Skylar in my arms. Against the opposite wall on his own camping mat, Rudolph continuously wakes me up with his snoring.

Another day passes as do the others. We decide to call the camp, but they have just filled all the volunteer tents. They invite us check in again some other time. On to the next pot of tea and so flows the day.

Added now to background of easygoing haze is a tension of unspoken thoughts. Has she told him that she informed me of his bisexuality? Are they wondering about my sexuality, as she so casually inquired into that first night?

I look back on the days when I actually sought out men for partnership. How I would have loved to have had a boyfriend like Skylar back then. None of the men I dated were hippies, and most of them had that attachment to the gay identity that never really jibed with me. I get the sense Skylar was never like that. He would have been too authentic, too much in tune with his true self.

I can see myself with him, running my fingers through his blond curls -- what circumstances of my life would have had to have been different to make this happen? I would have had to find the guts to travel much earlier... but of course then Skylar would have been only a kid at the time... I suddenly realize how deep in reverie I've drifted and pull myself out of it.

A little voice inside asks if I have fallen into a soft trap. Maybe the healthiest thing to do is tear myself from this warm bewitching place. The voice proves easy to ignore.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:16 PM
Tension breaks one afternoon when Skylar and I are alone in the kitchen and I'm telling him about Robin.

"She's always been so warm with me, and seems to take such an interest in me. But you know, that's the way it is with very extroverted types, you get one impression of what they think of you when you're alone with them, but then you see them working a social scene, making everyone feel that way, and you have to wonder what you really mean to them."

He nods and smiles in sympathy.

"You remember the day of the ravine cleanup. She and I rode the bus up together, and we sat in the back of the bus, half asleep, and started holding hands. We snuggled a bit, too, as much as could be considered borderline acceptable in public. And we've kept up that level of contact. When we're alone together we will sit on her couch holding each other. But I've never gotten the impression that she wants anything more than that. And you know, I've never really figured out what I want from her either. I am attracted to her, I'm quite fond of her, and I really, really enjoy her company and conversation. But I ask myself, is this woman someone I'd want to get tenderhearted with, show my vulnerable side to?" He nods, appreciating the difference.

"I asked Amanda what Robin ever said about me, and she said she liked having a man she could cuddle with without it turning into a public scandal. So, I think that was all she ever wanted from me, a friendship on the level of so many friendships she already has, with the added benefit of chaste cuddles."

"Yes, I could see how a single woman could really want that."

A leap of courage overtakes me. I rinse the soap suds off my hands and face him to say, "And I, too, appreciate the rare times I find a man I can feel safe cuddling with."

Again he takes me into his arms and again brings my ear to his pounding heart. But then he pushes me away again, saying, "but I don't feel safe with it."

"OK." I answer quietly and step away, returning to my dishes while he continues chopping potatoes.

Quietly I ask, "Is it erotic for you?" He is silent. All right, I will continue in my bravery. "Well, it can be for me."

"Can be?"

"It is. With you. But you know, I respect your marriage and I know nothing could happen between us."

"Well, you know, it's actually not because we're married. We got married, but our relationship is still the same as before. She is free to see other men, I am free to see other men. But our relationship always comes first, and we keep no secrets from each other. And one rule I always follow is: not in my house. My house is just for my marriage and I always want its energy pure that way."

"That's very wise." I say. "And look, I don't want a homosexual affair myself. It's just something that never works for me. Figured that out years ago. And I would really hate to screw up our friendship."

"I don't think there's ever a reason for anything to get screwed up as long as everyone remains very clear and open."

"But Skylar, doesn't this arrangement of yours create jealousy?"

He tosses his hand open to the heavens. "Yeah, there can be a little jealousy, but it's not as big a problem as it would be if we were always feeling bound some rules we imposed on each other. Now, though, this would be a bad time for me to have another lover."

"Yes. I can see the stress you two are carrying." I think of Elke's crying jag the other day, and what she said about the miscarriage. She seems a bit fragile to carry the weight of her husband seeing another man. I wonder about this agreement they have; is the option for side affairs something she really wants at all, or is this an accommodation she makes in sacrifice to him?

At any rate, having this conversation has left me feeling as if a stone were lifted from my chest. Two stones, actually: carrying an uncomfortable secret, and not knowing my attraction was reciprocated. The one makes me more comfortable with my friends, the other makes me feel a lot better about myself.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:17 PM
One day Elke gets the wireless password from the landlord, and my laptop is put to the service of everyone. Elke wants to find the ad we answered too late. I tell her where to find it and when she returns the laptop to me, I see posted right below it an ad from another camp at Wadi Rum. Neither of us say anything about it. I post a query on the Amman CS site asking if anyone has a good Wadi Rum trail book they can lend me.

There are two weeks left on the thirty days Skylar and Elke have paid rent for, two weeks to decide on whether to stay or go. They are thinking of going to India, but are very unsure about it. If they could get another offer from a desert camp, could they imagine leaving the place in Amman completely and try living in the desert for a while?

It's possible, Skylar says. They have too much to think about. He suggests it would be easier for me to make my own plans and not count on their coming along. A feel a pang in my heart. For the first time I imagine going separate ways and realize just how badly I'll miss these two.

Rudolph suggests we go bowling. Everyone agrees but me; I will go hunting for a trail book and some warm clothing. In the used clothes shop the delicate tones of Sheikh Saad Gamidi's Quranic recitations rekindles something in my heart. I think in the desert I'll get back into the habit of doing salat five times a day. Yes, it's a decision: I'll be "out" as a Muslim among the Bedouins.

I bring the laptop and on the way back home stop at Rashid Cafe. On the site I find the ad from the other camp. Their offer is very similar: tents and food in exchange for a few hours' work a day. Fewer, more specific duties, mostly cleaning. Limited to three people. I call up the proprietor, a Mr. Muhammad, and tell him about myself and my friends. He tells me that I could come any time, but if my friends want to come along they'd better come tomorrow; another couple expressed an interest and might well show up any time.

I return home with new energy. My mind is made up, I'm going. If they don't come along, I'll miss them, but at least I'll be out of this lethargy; one way or another things will shift now.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:18 PM
I arrive in time to share the meal they've cooked with Rudolph. Traditional Dutch food they're surprised I enjoy. At a suitable point in the evening I share the news.

"He says he's got an American woman working there for the past seven months. I took that as a good sign."

"And what kind of time commitment does he want?" asks Skylar.

"He just asked me how long we wanted to stay. I said if I loved the place I might want to stay for a month, and that you guys might be interested in staying for a while, too, but that we all needed to visit the place first before we could commit to anything. He was fine with it."

"Well then, let's go," he says.

"Really? You're ready? What do you think, Elke?"

"Yes," she answers slowly. "Why not, if we can try it for just a few days. There's still plenty of time to decide about the apartment."

"Cool! I'd have missed you two. Can we try to get there before sunset?" At this point we've talked about Wadi Rum enough they know the drill for getting there: we will take the public bus to Aqaba, making sure the driver knows to let us out at the Rashidiyya turnoff on the highway. From there we need a microbus, and Mr. Muhammad has assured me that micros still run from the turnoff in the afternoon.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:22 PM
They teach me the game they were playing when I came home, a card game they brought with them from Holland called Kuhhandel, meaning Cow Trade. It is simple in its rules and complex in its strategy, based on buying and selling farm animals at auction, and sometimes betting your gains against your opponents' in blind bidding battles. Winning skills include bluffing, shrewd deal making and keeping track of your opponents' assets as best you can. To mismanage your money is to wind up having your animals stripped from you for peanuts, and thus I find myself at Skylar's mercy with every round. The experience resonates with my inner emotional life. I am playing a game in which Skylar has all the power, I have none, and am only figuring out the rules as I play. I watch him relishing the game. A bisexual man with a woman who lets him play with other men. He has everything he needs, nothing to lose and can have fun playing, calling the stakes as he likes. How much power that woman gives him!

But I am enjoying the game, too, and with a newfound attitude of acceptance am looking at the power-play aspect of love relationships. The kind of thing that fascinates some artists -- I could be a character in a Fassbinder film at this point -- but which has always repelled and frightened me. Now at least I can say: it is as it is, and has its part in the beautiful grand scheme of things. I put Tom Waits on the iPod and draw their chuckles, hoarsely singing along as I deal the next hand.

If there's one thing you can say about mankind
There's nothing kind about man
You can drive out nature with a pitchfork
But it always comes roaring back again

Misery's the river of the world
Misery's the river of the world



Naturally I am the one who sets an alarm to get up. I make a pot of tea, strong wa marmaria, and set four glasses on a platter with honey and a glass of milk. First dose goes to the doctor. Thus girded, I first go to work on Rudolph.

"Rudolph? Care for tea?"

He murmurs assent, then rolls over on his stomach.

OK, time to knock on their door. "Darlings? Ready for tea?" I knock on the door and from their bed they call me in. I leave the tray with them and set to work on last night's dishes. Eventually Rudolph gets up and asks where the tea is. He gets his from their room but they stay behind the door. I am starting to worry. With people this impulsive, it's easy to imagine them having a change of heart about the whole idea. Reluctance to waken alone could break the deal. Better to let them sleep longer? I don't want to arrive in the desert at night.

I am in need of more stimulation than caffeine alone. If I were by myself, I'd be blasting Metallica right now. How far out of my way should I go to let people sleep who really should be awake by now? A reasonable compromise: Rammstein on my laptop, all albums, and shuffle play for the element of surprise. Soon they are up and lethargically singing along in German. We seem to move with reasonable speed, but I am chagrined at the time we wind up on the bus; we will arrive after dark.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:24 PM
Since we won't take the bus to the end we stow no bags but take everything with us on the bus. I wind up sitting next to Elke's bag, and my friends choose to sit all the way in the back. I notice the emotions quietly stirring in me. Loneliness, and foreboding. At one point I hear the sound of Skylar's voice as he walks up the aisle toward me. My heart leaps. There's too much emotion flaring. What is happening to me?

Mr. Muhammad calls to check in, and is disappointed that we will arrive after dark. Further dialog with the bus driver fails to calm my nerves until we are off the bus. When we arrive there, a van parked across the highway flashes its light in beckoning. The driver mentions Mr. Muhammad and at first I assume he works for him. But he's just an independent driver staking out the last bus from Amman and taking advantage of our situation to charge us ten dinars to take us to Mr. Muhammad's office in the camp.

I do not feel like haggling, but Skylar holds his own. We may need the taxi, but the driver needs us, too. He has only one other fare, a local guy, and he will have to wait as long for more fares as we will for an alternate ride. We can try hitching rides and see if he brings the price down. I admire Skylar's strength, and ask myself where mine's gone. I realize that I destroyed it in self-flagellation over not getting us out here before dark.

The night is cold, but no colder than Amman, and without the moisture in the air. Our clothes are just warm enough. We win the waiting game and for five dinars are soon through the gates, and switching vehicles for a bumpy, swerving Jeep ride through the desert. At the camp we are shown the comfortable looking tents we'll call home. Goatskins and tarps stretched across metal frames anchored in concrete blocks, carpets and mattresses stretched across the sand floors. The kitchen and bathroom are a more permanent structure, with concrete walls built next to an enormous rock over which its solar panels and water pumps climb. The dining area is a huge rectangular tent extending from this structure. There are delicious leftovers for us, and we are introduced to the Sudanese chef Mahmoud.

The desert is utterly silent but for the sounds of wind stirring, and the occasional bellowing complaint of a camel far away. The stars are brilliant in the moonless sky, against which we can see the black profiles of distant jebels.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:26 PM
Then we are led to a large tent with a fire and chimney. This is the place where everyone, guides, drivers and tourists alike, gathers after dinner. There is always a kettle of Bedouin tea in the fire, and endlessly re-used glasses litter the stone walls of the fireplace. Tonight there are no tourists in the tent, only us and a few Bedouin guys who after the lazy "welcome" greetings are silent and pay little mind to us as we speak quietly in English.

I make my friends laugh, offering "After all these years, mankind has not come up with better technology than fire."

Skylar notes the sand around here is very firm, with lots of pebbles and rocks. "It will be easy to hike on. Perfect."

"Yes," says Elke. "This is a perfect place. Thanks for getting us out here, Atiq. I know it's not easy to get us to move."

Skylar laughs. "That was so perfect how you did it this morning, first bringing us tea, than putting on Rammstein!"

Elke is tired and bids us good night. I toss another log on the fire and Skylar pours us more tea.

"I think the desert might be really good for all of us." I say.

"Yes, I think you're right. So peaceful and quiet."

"I hope it will be healing for Elke."

"Healing?"

"She seems to carry a lot. I often think about what she said about the miscarriage."

He sighs and stares into the fire. "It is quite a thing, to have this being, this person you were both bringing into the world, suddenly dead in the toilet. It happened in the morning. I just went to work."

"You went to work?"

"Yes, you know, what else is there to do, you could go crazy or you can go on with the everyday things of life."

"You didn't stay with Elke?"

"No."

I take time with my words. "I can only imagine what it's look to be a woman. Can an experience like this hurt her esteem as a woman? You know, the way certain failures can hurt our sense of manhood?"

"What do you mean? What kind of failures would those be?"

I try to come up with an answer but give up. I can't explain to a guy who needs to ask. Skylar admits they don't talk about the miscarriage much, and perhaps he needs to talk to her about it more. He thanks me for giving him something to think about regarding Elke's suffering.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:27 PM
From across the fire he is giving me another of his compelling stares. I wonder what he wants from me when he looks at me this way. I start talking about David and why I can't let myself have another homosexual relationship. I am counting on the Bedouin around us having fallen asleep or not knowing enough English to follow us, but Skylar interrupts: "wouldn't you rather talk about this outside?"


There is still no moon and though marvelously bright, the stars don't give enough light for us blinded by fire to find our footing but by the stumbling of our feet. As the sand beneath us gives way to rock, we step into each other, gently steady ourselves with hands on each other's backs, and climb what emerges as a huge rock protruding from the sand as an outcropping from which campers must have watched the sun set before we arrived. We find a place to sit, huddling together in the cool night with our arms around each other, conversing in fervent whispers in each others' ears. I continue my story:

"We moved from New York to Australia hoping that the move would breathe some new life into our relationship. But our problems just followed us, and trying to settle in Sydney and get work was really hard for us, and put new stressors on the relationship. But for me, just to have gotten out of America, and having to deal with a different culture was doing me good, helping me grow, and I didn't want to leave. And one morning he woke up and said "that's it, I can't take it anymore. I'm going back to New York." And I said "OK then, you go and I stay."

"Is that when you broke up? He came back to the US?"

"No, we stayed together a few months after that. In the end I was the first to return to the States. But that morning was the first time I realized that if I had to choose between my growth and our relationship I would choose my growth. It was the beginning of our breakup. Later I spent a week in New Zealand to get my Australian visa renewed. First time I'd traveled alone in a different country since I was 19. I got to re-experience myself, I felt that I had lost myself in the relationship and forgotten who I was. I met women I was attracted to and really felt like I'd cut myself out of life.

"When I got back home I couldn't believe how constrained I felt. I could see the problems David and I were having and asked myself what it would take to work through them, and I could not find in myself the will to. The will wasn't there because I'd cut myself off at the feet, denying my deepest desires -- to have a wife and a child. I left David, and it was like tearing out my heart, knowing that I needed to tear it out in order to live. And I couldn't go through that heartbreak again, or put another man through it. And this is why it's so difficult for me when I feel attracted to another man. Not the passing, petty admiration of a handsome face or a sexy body, those come and go all the time, and they're are no problem, but once in a rare while, I feel something much more emotional..." There is a catch in my throat. "And it has been a very, very long time since I wanted another man's touch the way I want yours."

Unexpectedly, a sob breaks and I collapse in a ball. He puts a hand on my shoulder and brings my head to rest on his thigh. My face feels the heat radiating from his crotch. Too intensely sexual. I sit up and lean my head on his chest, listening to his heart pound. We sigh in turn, we sigh together.

"Oh, Skylar, my brother."

"My brother, Atiq."

"I have been longing to run my hands through your hair," I say as I take the liberty of doing it.

He caresses my cheek and brings our foreheads together. His lips an inch from mine, he whispers, "You have to respect that my marriage comes first."

"I totally respect it. And if you didn't have Elke, I wouldn't dare touch you. I would have run away by now."

"We talk about everything, you know."

"I'm glad about that. I'd have a problem if I thought I was being a secret you were keeping from her."

"She asks me if I think you're in love with me."

Nervously I laugh. "Really?"

"After the first time we met, she said you seemed to be flirting with me. I hadn't picked up on it." Funny, I don't remember flirting with him that night, either, or even feeling this kind of attraction to him then. I guess things have been happening on a subconscious level with me for a while now.

"One more thing. You have to be careful you don't get your heart broken."

"I'll see if I can avoid it."

"I don't think we should have sex."

"No, I don't want to have sex with you. It would be really bad for me. And I don't need it. I get so much from your touch alone. I'm so grateful to be able to touch you, and tell you how I feel, and if I could just -- "

I give the first kisses. Very softly and gently, on his cheek and neck. Then I return my head to his chest and we share another deep breath. He begins nibbling my neck. My breaths turn to gasps. He brings my lips to his and immediately sticks his tongue in. I'm actually not ready for this but I try engaging his tongue with mine. It doesn't really raise my ardor the way it did just to touch and kiss him.

He asks me what I find attractive in him. I try to describe his eyes to him, how they burn like blue flames.

"You sound like you're in love."

I want to deny it. These words have not come to my mind once all this time. "It's so hard to know what's going on at the beginning." I say. "Of course it is," he says and kisses me again.

"Tell me, " I beg, "How do you feel with me?"

"Actually, you make me nervous."

"What?"

He laughs a bit."Really. The way you look into my eyes, I feel that you're looking at my soul, and you can read everything about me."

"I see nothing about you I don't adore."

"Even so, you make me nervous," he laughs and draws me to himself again.

I am having a powerful sensation in the center of my chest. My heart chakra is making its presence undeniably felt. It is like a radiating sun and at the same time a flower that won't stop opening, ever more petals peeling back to expose ever more still.

"I just can't believe how much my heart is opening up to you," I cry. There is no better way to describe it.

"You're trembling. Oh my God, I know the way that feels..."

We are interrupted by a bedouin, who comes out of the dark seeking company. "Why are we pulling apart?" asks Skylar as the footsteps get louder. "Oh that's right, we're in Jordan." We act natural for the length of the conversation about the trouble the guy's having with his girlfriend, and how before he can continue talking with her he needs to return to his car where his cell phone is recharging in the igniter outlet.

When Skylar says good-bye to me he congratulates me on how I look shaven. "It's the right idea. You're not like those other guys." He strokes my chin and we share a goodnight kiss.

Sleep does not come easily. As soon as I lie down, my nose fills with mucus and I can only breathe through my mouth, which quickly dries and leaves me coughing. That night I dream I have a working-class job where I am disrespected by the people I work for. I feel I can not afford to lose the job so I take the humiliation.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:29 PM
I wake just before sunrise, and step out to see the desert emerging from the dark. The iron-red sands and the jebels towering in the distance are painted and repainted in every shade of purple and crimson. I am delighted, so grateful to be surrounded by such beauty. And I feel it reflected, recognized by the great beauty within. Every cell of my body still tastes the sweetness of his touch, and I feel where my heart chakra flew endlessly open last night. That opening is there, a hole that catches the desert breezes and sings. My soul now knows life in a way it has long been deprived of. I get my camera, take pictures, and bask in the moment, even as my mind says there can be no painless way out of this.

A cry like a tropical bird. It is the Sudanese chef Mahmoud, Mad Mahmoud as I begin to call him. With signs and Arabic he conscripts me into helping prepare breakfast. While he works he dances and shrieks to African music only he can hear. Then he turns and chants a riff of wordless syllables while staring at me in strange earnestness, as if expecting me to recognize the melody and join in. I fake it and dance with him in between chopping vegetables and carrying platters.

Skylar and Elke are up and in the dining tent as I am bringing breakfast in. There is some awkwardness as we ask how each other slept and trade appreciation of the scenery. We wonder how long we'll stay, I say we'll soon see about the work situation, and mention my dream.

Elke breaks the silence: "So, Atiq, I need to have a talk with you."

"OK, but could we go somewhere more private?"

"Of course." I lead her around the way I wandered in the sunrise, on the other side of the huge rock from the kitchen, bathroom and dining tent.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:30 PM
She is calm and smiling as she says how Skylar told her that we had been kissing and holding each other the night before. "And that's very sweet. You understand that we allow each other to be with other people, and that we tell each other everything?"

"Oh yes, he made that clear. And I really appreciate it that you two are so open and communicative. Otherwise I would never have felt right being at all intimate with him."

"And you understand that our marriage comes first."

"Oh, of course I do. And as for myself, I just want you to know, that for me the worst thing that could come out of this would be if our friendship were damaged in any way." I feel obliged to add "meaning yours and mine as well as mine and his." She gives me a blank, probing look and in her silence I hear doubt that this friendship between myself and her is real.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:32 PM
Jeeps pull in to camp, and we quickly meet some fellow workers up from the office in the village. The American woman turns out to have an Arabic name, Saboora. She asks which if us is going to the office and who's staying and cleaning tents. "Two have to stay behind."

And so I accompany Saboora back to the office and get to speak with a native English speaker about the camp. The guides who work on a semi-freelance basis speak enough English to do their job. They generally don't stay at the camp in the evenings, so I am now getting a lot more English exposure than I can expect on days I stay behind at the camp.

On the way to the office, Saboora asks me if I speak Spanish.

"Un poco."

And so I am drafted as translator for three tourists from Spain, accompanying them for the rest of the day, zipping through the desert in a jeep, stopping at one stunningly beautiful place after another to hike, climb rock formations and run up and down dunes of red sand. It takes up more of my day's time than I bargained for, but is more like playing than working, so I don't complain. I feel like I could see the same landscapes day after day and never tire of them.

I keep wishing the two of them were here to share this with, and realize that I miss him. My God, a few hours' separation and I miss him. I'm afraid he might be right, I am acting like one in love. I mustn't tell him how I missed him today, no matter what I do.

My cell phone is out of range, but I compose a text message to send David later. It begins "I am in the most beautiful desert and in the most dangerous emotional waters..."

I ask Faris, our driver, where the qibla is and I pray dhuhr while he makes shayy wa marmaria on a campfire for us.

To my surprise we arrive back at the camp before sunset. I leap out of the jeep. Where are my friends? I find them bringing tea to guests. Elke warmly accepts my hug, but Skylar holds his tray and gives me a disconcertingly distant look.

"I thought you weren't coming back til later."

"So did I. The route Mr. Muhammad showed them this morning ended with us watching the sunset somewhere south of camp, and then coming here for dinner, so I was surprised when we just pulled in here. So, how was your day?"

"It was actually pretty boring. We cleaned out two tents as they asked us to, and then we were here by ourselves for the rest of the day. We're thinking of leaving."

"Didn't you go for a walk or anything?"

"Skylar did."

"Well, I'm going to go serve the guests tea," says Skylar and walks off to the fire tent.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:33 PM
When I next see Skylar, I am washing dishes. He brings me dirty glasses and is about to walk away without a smile.

"Skylar!"

"Yes?" He looks at me coldly. In the awkward pause that follows, my poise evaporates. "Hey man," I hear myself saying. "I missed you today." He is silent, and his eyes are icy blue maelstroms that freeze my blood.



Like a maddened ant I march back and forth over the rock where we made out the other evening. When I finally find the spot where my phone gets reception I send David the SMS. Some friend has to know what I am going through, at least where things were at the point when I wrote that message.

I do the maghrib prayer, and have trouble concentrating. I do not feel I have Allah's ear.

Next Mahmoud shepherds us into the kitchen to chop vegetables. They take one counter and stand side by side, backs turned to the counter left for me. They speak to each other in Dutch, with spirit and laughter. What a harsh-sounding Germanic language. It's all right, I tell myself. Surrender to the moment, whatever it brings. Stop telling stories about it. Be cool and let them have their space. Do absolutely nothing right now but simply cut the vegetables. I try to reduce the world to the vegetables I'm cutting, but can not ignore the tightness behind my eyes and twisting in my stomach.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:35 PM
I go my own way as soon as relieved from duty. I next see them in the dining tent as dinner time approaches. As I come in they are sitting on the bench where the food soon will be brought, directly facing the doorway where I stand frozen as they stop their conversation and look up at me.

It is upon me to speak. "Is there a place for me on that bench?"

"Sure," says Skylar and beckons for me to sit next to him. When I do, he turns a sniper's gaze on me and coolly says, "but I have to hurt you."

So, this is it already. Never in my life have I felt all my composure, pride, and sense of power all vacuumed away in an instant, like air from a ruptured space ship or submarine. I melt into tears.

Almost indifferently he states, "You are in love. You can't even be alone half the day without missing me. And this is not comfortable for me. And it's not comfortable for Elke, and it can't be comfortable for you."

Uncomfortable as a knife in the heart, you smug dispassionate bastard. I catch my breath and answer slowly, "OK. It's all right. It's not a surprise. Knew it was coming. I've been tasting this pain for a long time. It's always been mixed in with all the sweetness. And I have to say yes to it all."

"Good. It's good that you accept it. And there is something else. I need some distance from you now."

Suddenly I have to gasp for more air and my voice is reduced to a whisper. "How much distance do you need?"

"I don't think you should touch me again while we're here. And maybe when we go it might be better if we just said good-bye until we happen to meet again."

"No," I beg. I have been through this before, this is a nightmare come to life again. "That would not be good for me. Please stay in touch with me."

The bedouins start bringing in the food and give me passing looks of curiosity. Oh, couldn't they at least have granted me some privacy for my pain and humiliation? Why did they have to make this conversation happen here and now? They're leaving and they don't have to worry what people think, and they know that I want to try living here.

I get out, scramble around to other side of the rock, and at a point steep enough to warrant grabbing the rock with all fours I throw my face down. One sob rips through me, and in fear I wonder if the sound was loud enough to echo back to the camp. My sense of self-preservation takes over. I say to myself no, not one more sob. I rise to my feet praying for ease surrendering to the moment, to experience the moment's hidden mercy and to have the ability to bear the pain with dignity and control. I pray for Skylar and Elke's happiness and murmur a formulaic blessing on the Prophet Muhammad.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:37 PM
I run to the bathroom, wash my face in cold water, and jog around to the dining tent where I find them waiting outside.

"Hey, listen," I declare. "Don't regret anything."

"I don't." His tone is flat. "Nothing could have happened differently. I hope you don't have any regret, either."

"No, I've found my way back to gratitude. I'm grateful for it all. In the end it will all be good for me."

“I think we've all handled this well.” He gives my back a rough slap.



They sit apart from me at dinner. The tourists sit in their respective groups. With rare exception, they bond with each other in a way that they do not with us; because we work at the camp, they assign a different role for us. This evening the Arabic speakers sit together and I sit alone relating what just happened in an 11-word SMS to David.

I am in the fire tent when they come in, silently acknowledge me and then sit apart from me and speak in Dutch. Only now do I realize how lonely the desert can be.



Back on the rock. Finally -- there's signal. Damn, no messages. I send David one more: “Please send me an SMS. I am so lonely.”

I wait for a while then finally drag myself to bed. Again, as soon as my lay my head down my nose fills with mucous and I can only breathe through my mouth. My throat dries quickly and I cough. I feel as if I'll smother. I imagine how it would feel to die this way, and am gripped with the sense of my mortality. I fear death as I've never feared it before, fearing that when it comes my life will have led to a time like this, a time of privation upon privation, devoid of sacred presence or spiritual redemption. I could die unmarried, childless, my old friends gone, my spiritual path abandoned. Finally sheer exhaustion overtakes my racing mind and I fall into a sleep of nervous dreams.



I wake at four tense, knowing there will be no more sleep for me. I find a better spot for cell reception up the hill behind my tent. David's message reads: "Love you, buddy."

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:40 PM
I pray fajr and go down to help Mad Mahmoud make breakfast. He shrieks and caws, we dance.

I want very much to use the Internet, so I volunteer to go to the office again today, but the van leaves without me while I am getting things together in my tent. On my laptop I write a mass e-mail to friends and family telling them about how wonderful the camp is but it remains to be seen whether it's going to be a good environment for doing my writing. I do a bit of journal writing and my battery gets dangerously low. There are no electrical outlets at camp.

Elke makes an appearance and we share news. They're staying another day. There has been no conversations about what any of us are supposed to be doing, so we figure we'll clean two tents apiece in the course of the day.

First I want to shave my scalp and face. They have taken seats on the big rock as I go to use the outdoor sinks. We can see each other out of the sides of our eyes, but no contact is made. He is shirtless and has a pink towel wrapped around his head like a turban. This, my first and only sight of his torso unclothed, arouses no desire in me, and this confirms to me how the nature of this attraction is so heart-based, nearly devoid of sexual lust. Emotionally he is clad in armor, so what difference does it make how little clothing he has on.

I hear them arguing in Dutch. My nerves are a bit raw, and I feel fear as I wonder what may be going on and how it might come back to me. I seem him walking alone as if entranced, the pink makeshift turban a psychic helmet. A little later he walks up toward me without looking at me at all.

"Hey Skylar," I say nervously. He walks by without a word.

I get on with cleaning a tent, silently fuming and preparing words I'd like to tell off him with.

But then Elke asks me if I'd like to join them in a game of Kuhhandel and Skylar apologizes for having been distant this morning. "There are times when I just need the the whole world to stay away from me." Nonetheless I call him on not returning my greeting. He is surprised, says he totally failed to hear me, so successfully did he wall out the world. I tell him how angry this made me, "I'm not just anybody. I'm your brother." My anger seems to disturb him.

We play out on a large rock below the sunset view rock. Later Skylar will observe that we have found the perfect place to dodge from work, it is so well hidden from the camp.

This time I have picked up some skill at the game, and Skylar is really not doing well. It looks like I'm winning, but I make a fatal error or two and the victory goes to Elke.

We play another hand or two, Skylar regains his edge and someone starts the round of appreciations that things are getting back to normal between us. I tell them I think it will be a lot healthier for me this way, for the last of my time with them to be like this. Lounging between rounds, Skylar sits a measured distance from me, close but out of reach.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:42 PM
Mahmoud finds us and enlists our help preparing dinner. We fold up our hands so that we can continue the game later. I realize I have not done salat since the morning, and am about to be late for maghrib, which knowing me, likely means skipping it altogether. Baaad Muslim. Well, there I go again, my observance comes and goes in waves.

Cleaning up after dinner with Elke in the kitchen, I talk about our time in Amman and how she and Skylar had made me feel like their family. How I loved that feeling so much I couldn't tell heed the voice saying I had fallen into a trap. I guess this was the first time they had had something like this get so dramatic? No, she said, there was one time a man she'd pegged as a one-night stand fell in love with her. They'd been through this all before.

She asks if I want to finish the game we started, and I agree to meet her in the fire tent. We wait a while for Skylar to show up, then I decide I'll check my phone for messages.

I do my march over the rock, eyes glued to the phone screen as I hold it aloft. I almost stumble into Skylar, who is sitting here in silence, when an SMS comes in from David. He is going through similar heartache, having cut things off with the boy who never really opened his heart to him. He tells me to abide in love for myself. I sigh and sigh again. What excellent advice from a true friend and fellow sufferer. I used to be so tuned into that Love; where has that connection gone?

I sit next to Skylar at a respectful distance, and look off into the stars, wordlessly praying. Then I realize Skylar is meditating. Am I intruding? Well, I must have been when I was stumbling over the rock, but now I'm sitting in silence, same as him. Yes, my presence may be a distraction, but I've long adopted the attitude that distractions are inevitable when meditating and praying, and that they all come from Allah to test us, so if I allow something someone is doing to distract me, I can't ask them to stop as long as they're not directly engaging me. I do not feel moved to leave Skylar here and wait with Elke for him to finish. Right here and right now seems the right time and place to stop and do some deep searching and listening.

I observe my breath. I hear his. I return my attention to my breath with the prayer that he and I can share this space harmoniously, each being completely himself and letting the other be completely himself.

I am not meditating with a focus, I want completely empty hands, no mantra, no practice. Let mental noise be quiet in recognition of what it is, and in such recognition let higher consciousness emerge.

The Love that requires no reciprocation is here. This pain has served to expand my heart to let more in. The people and things we love in our limited way serve to prepare us to let this Love through. The expanse of the cosmos bears witness to the Love's endlessness.

After a while I lie down to swim with the stars for a bit. Then I get up to allow Skylar his solitude.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:43 PM
I return to the fire tent feeling charged with blessings. I tell Elke that Skylar is out meditating on the rock, and that I just sat with him for a while. She seems puzzled. Skylar soon joins us and we talk for a while about the experiences we just had. Yes, at first Skylar was distracted and a little annoyed by my presence, but then he saw he could overcome that non-acceptance, and then better return to the pursuit of Oneness. I explain why I didn't leave and am gratified to hear that Skylar didn't remain in annoyance. I try to express in turn what I experienced. I felt that Skylar and I were working in parallel, each approaching the grand Unity while maintaining the earthly separation and distance we needed. I go on a bit too long about how Skylar's presence and distance felt, and Elke gets up, about to walk out.

"What's the matter?" asks Skylar.

"I am going to let you two talk about this with each other,"

"But you don't need to go."

"Please stay with us," I add.

She sits but says "I am not comfortable when you talk like this and look at Skylar that way. I feel how much in love you are with him and it makes me feel... I don't want to say threatened... but yeah, kind of... I know I'm not threatened, but the feeling is as if I were."

Skylar and I try to reassure her. I emphasize that I know fully well that I can hope for nothing but friendship with Skylar, that I am healing from my heartache, and that tonight's experience was about being at peace with saying good-bye to him. It is a difficult conversation. I get choked up at one point, and at another point feel it is I who needs to walk out, but they call me back as we did for Elke. The Bedouins watch our drama with great puzzlement. Finally we settle down and return to our game, and when it finished with Skylar winning yet again we bid each other a warm good night.

Alone in my tent, I chant the Jerrahi wird, allowing myself the wishful thought that it's Thursday night and my fellow dervishes are chanting the same litany. No matter how much water I drink my throat remains dry and my voice cracks and rasps. At times I read the English translation, at other times I let the sacred music of the Arabic poetry carry me. When I finish the tent is charged with the spirit of the soul seeking God, but my way to sleep is disturbed by thoughts. I wonder about what came of the man who fell in love with Elke, and what, if anything, the two of them learned from the experience.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:45 PM
I sleep late in the morning. For the first time since coming here I have slept well and awoken refreshed. I hear Saboora's van come and let it go without leaving my tent.

Skylar and Elke are staying another day. We play more rounds of Kuhhandel. Things seem OK but Skylar and I are both a bit cranky today and take snipes at each other in the course of the game.

I want a shower but the water has run out. I call the office and Mr. Muhammad tells me to ask Mahmoud to get the pump running, but I can't find him. I call his name and give one of his bird cries. I hear a reply and chase after it to find it was Elke playing with me. I am not amused, and get further annoyed when Skylar advises me to stop trying and just wait til the water is fixed. "Just some free advice." I bite my tongue, about to quip "glad I didn't pay for it."

Later in the afternoon I cheer up and invite them along with me for a walk in the desert. They'd like to later, they say, and I know better than to wait. I go out barefoot; I never replaced my sandals and shoes are too heavy in the sand.

I walk alone in great openness and overwhelming beauty. The beauty holds a promise; that everything is being created by the most brilliant Artist. All is beautiful, and one's self and life are an inseparable part of it. All pain is redeemed. My heart can touch the jebels distant on either side. The sun pours light into it and the light is reflected in all directions. I almost succumb to the impulse to sing out. What would I cry? Allahu akbar, allahu akbar. Yes, my faith is one born of the desert. Something within, much older than the forty-one years this body has encircled it, recognizes its home.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:47 PM
I return to camp as the sun sets. My Dutch friends are watching it from the big rock. They see me carrying garbage I've collected and they smile. I tell them about what I experienced out there, and they listen with appreciation.

They tell me they are starting to like the desert, too, but still feel they should be doing something more significant than cleaning a few tents and hanging around. They are still planning to leave the next day.

"You know I'll miss you. Thanks for staying these extra days."

I take the cigarette from Skylar's hand and take a deep drag. “You don't smoke!” he is astonished. “That's right, I don't.” I answer quietly, without further explanation, and hand it back to him.



Skylar doesn't show up for dinner. I ask Elke about him and she tells me that he went for a run, as he often does in the evening, but he is taking a long time to come back. The first day we were here, a similar thing happened during the day. He went out for a walk without carrying water, and she got worried when he was late in returning. Turned out he'd fallen asleep in a cave. Skylar is like this, so we must try not to worry.

The tourist who's chatting with us changes the subject. I think about Skylar's impulsiveness and how selfish chasing one's moods can be. In the dark he could have tripped over something, or maybe he found a snake or scorpion. Or maybe he just took a scenic route because that's just what he felt like, and at that time that impulse was stronger than any concern for the people who love him. Bastard.

I collect the dirty dishes and bring them to the kitchen, but then go to the big rock where Elke is calling his name out into the dark expanse.

Does he have water? No. A flashlight? No. I am thinking over what I know about snake bites and first aid.

Damn it. This is awkward. If it hadn't been for all this emotional shit between us, I would think nothing of going out and looking for him. Goddamn Skylar.

"Should I go and look for him?"

"If you feel like it. I wouldn't go too far; suppose he comes back while you're out and then you get lost?" I go to my tent to put on warmer clothes and my shoes. If I feel like it, indeed. She's the wife, and I'm the guy who has to act cool all the time, in fear that any passion I display will scare him away from ever speaking or writing to me again. If I feel like it, indeed.

But just as I am rising to go, I hear his voice calling her name, and I am spared having to write up a real life experience that would read like contrived melodrama. Time to do the dishes. Elke comes running. "Atiq! You're still here! Skylar came back!"

"I heard." I answer without turning around from the sink. "Good. Now I don't have to get pissed at him."



"Hey, Atiq." I am mopping the kitchen floor, he is standing in the doorway with his used dinner dishes. "I don't want to ruin your cleaning."

"Then I'll ruin it for you," I say, walking over and taking the dishes from him.

"Thanks," he laughs.

"Afwan." I stiffly reply.

I do his dishes as he explains. "I got lost. It's hard to judge distances in the dark. I recognized the big rocks, but couldn't tell how far away they were or from each other. I thought the camp was over there," he points, "and went too far that way."

"I see," I say, and walk back to the door, mopping up my footprints.

"Elke says you were about to go looking for me."

"Yeah."

"Thank you," he says and gives me a rough slap on the shoulder.

"De nada. I think you would have done the same for me. Maybe tomorrow you'll do your running during the day."

"Sure."

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:49 PM
My last time sharing a fireside with them, they bring up the subject of a documentary film they saw about penguins. I don't remember what gets them on the topic. Skylar has on other times extolled his philosophy that humans are just another kind of animal and that the vain belief that we are in a different category than the animals is what enables us to commit acts of cruelty to them. Maybe this comes up again, I don't remember, and I'm sure he never says what makes the lives of penguins so relevant to him right now, but he speaks about the penguins with fervor, as if I mustn't fail to catch some vital point.

"They were the only animals that didn't leave the South Pole as the warm age ended and it froze. Their bodies aren't really adapted to the cold, just their behavior. You can see them in zoos everywhere in the world, they're quite happy in any climate."

"Yes, I've always wondered that penguins displays weren't full of freezing water, and whether the penguins felt hot."

"They lay only one egg in a mating season, and they take turns sitting on the egg, keeping it warm. It's so cold that the egg will freeze in seconds if they lose contact with it. They sit for months without eating, doing nothing but keep the egg warm. The mother and father take turns, and when it's time to change turns one rolls the egg to the other. And sometimes when they do this the egg breaks. The film captures that, the egg breaking. And when the egg breaks the parents cry. They cry just like humans. They've sacrificed for months and now they have nothing. It's the saddest sound in the world, the penguin crying."




Later that evening I climb the hill behind my tent and call David. I had Saboora pick up a phone card for me in town today, and now I'm going to blow it all on one call to Australia. At last, a chance to really talk.

Skylar strikes David as narcissistic. He asks me, why do I want to be friends with these people, anyway?

Now I'm stirred up again. Memories and questions teem and churn in my mind, and again I am slow to come to sleep. I remember Skylar seeming so full of tenderness that first night here. What did he want from me in the first place? It wasn't sex, apparently.

Over and over my mind replays his chilly pronouncement "you are in love." How devoid of compassion he seemed. Was he enjoying his power?

I did indeed fall into a trap. They knew I could fall in love with Skylar before I even realized I was attracted to him, and it had all happened before with the man who fell for Elke. If they really were my friends, how could they allow this to happen to me?

I think of how my fear of losing them as friends has stalked me from the beginning, and how Skylar utterly terrorized me by suggesting that we break off all contact. Since then I have been holding back anger, sweeping everything under the rug to keep the drama reduced, make things as comfortable for them as possible, anything to keep their friendship. And does anyone but me believe in this friendship? Do I still?

I wake up angry. They are still sleeping when the van comes and takes me to the office. I get my laptop and phone recharged but can't use my laptop with their internet connection. And so I am using the office computer when a second van brings them with all their gear.

"So, you're really leaving this time?"

"Yes, we will try to catch the next bus back to Amman."

They have a number of loose ends to tie at the office, so I show them around and get back on the computer as they talk with Mr. Muhammad. When the moment comes for the final goodbye we have the audience of Mr. Muhammad, Saboora, a tour guide and a new crop of freshly arrived tourists. We are stiff and formulaic. We must be in touch. I don't have anything to write your e-mail address on, but send it to me over CouchSurfing. Will do, you do the same. Well, take care and good luck with everything. Yes, you too; enjoy the desert. One rapid hug apiece.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:52 PM
The days follow a grind. Up the hill in the hopes of receiving SMSs. Help with breakfast, clean up, take a walk or do my own housework. Help with dinner. Hang out with the tourists and Bedouins in the fire tent. Go to sleep. Throughout the day I check for SMSs. Though I know it won't happen, I can't help imagining how nice it would be to get one from either of them, just checking in to see that I'm OK.

The tourists seldom stay more than one night. Most engage with me very little, few interest me in any way.

Most of the Bedouins speak very little English, but call me sahbihi, my friend, and repeat my name affectionately. They ask me how I'm doing, I say alhamdulillah, but they won't buy it. You look maybe sad, maybe you have problem, you tell me, sahbihi. We fill each other's glasses with tea from the pot in the fire and I decline their cigarettes.

Some days I feel like I'm getting better. The ache in my heart seems duller, generalized, a cry for love detached from the form of Skylar. I resume meditating. Twenty minutes, once a day. I think that this all must be very good for me.

But meditation is so difficult. Whenever I close my eyes I see his face. My mind teems with memories, questions, scenarios, fantasies. The camp is saturated with echoes of the recent past. I am chopping vegetables and suddenly remember the sound of their chattering in Dutch behind my back, and again I feel my stomach tighten. The sight of the sunset from the great rock is interrupted by the feeling of his thigh against mine and his arm draped around my shoulders.

Thanksgiving is approaching. Must remember to call Mom.

With the daily coming and going of tourists I grow more antisocial, inclined to share less and less with the only people who speak fluent English around here. I observe good-looking young men and women, and feel no desire of any kind. Rather than getting used to my lot, I feel with only greater acuteness the pain of unfulfillable desire.

I try to write. When my laptop battery approaches death I use my notebook and pen. I don't dare write about what just happened, but try to bring my diary up-to-date. I get up to where I'm thirty days behind, placing the narrative up to where I first came to this country, whereupon I lose inspiration and can no longer tell myself why I am writing.

I think with melancholy about the approach of Christmas and Thanksgiving, the latter of which is only tomorrow. To be here without family or friends...

My sadness is unconcealable. I accept a cigarette from a Bedouin. An additive-laden commercial cigarette, just the thing I never smoke, but I take it in the spirit of accepting his sympathy, and actually relish every toke of it.

I must go into the village tomorrow and get my visa renewed. This is a fixed idea which I only question as I am writing an SMS about it. Is this really true? I don't have to, it's my choice to stay. I could leave.

Hope stirs in my heart, a voice cries Yes! Let's get out of here!
The monastery comes to mind. I had been thinking it would be a great place to be for Christmas. But there I would be even more isolated, in terms of the Internet. My heart sinks again. I'm not fit for any of the ascetic settings I've been imagining for myself.

Then I remember Dahab, where I keep getting tempted to go, and which I most recently imagined as the place to segue from writing to working. I think of the beach, the sea, cheap and plentiful hashish. Most of all I'll be back in Egypt, the only country around here where I have good friends. I'll have to pay for my accommodation, and there may be more distractions from my writing than here or the monastery, but maybe sweeter medicine is what the sickness calls for now. I will make my final decision in the morning. But my mind is made up about leaving here, and it feels good. For the first time since I came here I feel happy.

NotLostJustWandering
Oct 30, 2010, 1:54 PM
I move into a beach camp in one of the last remaining quiet spots on Dahab's shoreline. Whenever I ask someone where I can buy some hash or ganja, they give me some. Sometimes they ask for money, usually they just give it to me.

After four months of traveling in this smokey part of the world without once buying tobacco in any form, I finally find pure shag tobacco. I buy a pack and begin smoking every day. Initially it's just to roll the hash in but soon I am smoking it straight. I have never so appreciated tobacco and its anaesthetic properties. It numbs the emotions.

Days blur one into the next. It takes me a few days to realize how depressed I am. I seclude myself in my room and into a haze of smoke. I have no inspiration to swim, to clean my room, or even shower or shave. I do nothing but smoke, listen to music, and stare into space, often in imaginary conversation with him.

I have difficulty admitting to myself how much it bothers me that he's chosen not to keep in touch with me, that no e-mail will come saying how are you doing, hope you're feeling better. In the whirlwind of repeating thoughts this one has been added: "He really doesn't care about me at all. I have fallen in love with a man who doesn't care about me at all."

I try to meditate. It's very hard. Some mornings I wake feeling not so bad, and then I meditate and feel like I'm in hell again.

My worst terror is that I see no way to prevent this, or something as painful as this, from happening again. I see no way to live at peace with my conflicting desires. Is there no better position for a man like me than to have a woman as patient and sacrificing as Elke? I could live like Skylar, be the man at the wheel and let other pitiful souls take their turn as roadkill...

At this point, writing this story seems the only way to deal with the deadening depression. I need to come to terms with what happened, to make what sense I can out of what led me to this state.

The limits of my memory are a torture to me. There is no video to play back and forward, only a jumble of impressions and images like beads fallen from a broken rosary. Putting them back in order I often must fill in some missing piece from my imagination and so I weave this story out of what facts I recall and feel regret the stitching I must give the holes. I despise my handiwork, and fear that in the story I tell I must unconsciously portray myself in a better light than I deserve. What makes it so deadly serious is that this is not just the story I tell you, my friends, this is as close to the truth as I have.



Copyright 2009 Atiq Zabinski

tenni
Oct 31, 2010, 12:12 AM
Thank you for sharing your experience and your thoughts. I can relate to several passages and give them personal meaning to me. I've copied some of the particular passages that meant something to me.

A few over view thoughts. I think that when we come into contact with people of either gender that we bisexuals may have a capability to experience a connection to them that is not gender based. We may connect deeply and emotions may come into play. It doesn't matter whether they are male or female. I can not help but think that this may have been your experience. You might have just as well developed deeper connections with Elke over Skylar. How might that have changed what happened or not? Elke and Skylar have developed a tight and closed bond that they profess to be permeable but really is not. They speak of being brothers, sisters and family but frightened by your "love". They seem to "play" with other's emotions and their genuine connection may have been shallower that your connection. They seem to be fearful about permitting deeper connections with humans as if it will destroy their connection between themselves. I think that this mainstream rigidity/ belief is the most threatening for bisexuals to truly find peace and happiness.

As a bisexual, I believe that I am able to connect at times with a person regardless of their gender. I can grow to develop an emotional connection that may or may not have as explicitly a sexual component. (vice versa may also happen...ie all sexual and no emotion) I'm sometimes uncertain as to when a platonic attachment is there rather than a sexual attraction. (not always but sometimes) (ie. Distinguishing between a love friendship attachment to a person from a sexual attraction attachment with emotional connections.) I think that is what happened between you and Skylar. Elke mentioned the one night stand that she had misread as probably not having an emotional connection and was bothered by the point that the man established a connection beyond the physical sexual connection. They seem to be only partially open to exploring their connection with other humans regardless of the gender. They hold their own bond as a couple as sacred. They tell those singles that they come into contact that this is the rule. When they feel their connection with another human that is not their partner growing, they retreat.

Overall, though, I think that you have had an enriching experience with these people. Your connection to Skylar was deeper though than the connection with Elke. I hope that you are able to see it as such.


post 14
"I look back on the days when I actually sought out men for partnership. How I would have loved to have had a boyfriend like Skylar back then. None of the men I dated were hippies, and most of them had that attachment to the gay identity that never really jibed with me. I get the sense Skylar was never like that. He would have been too authentic, too much in tune with his true self. "

post 15
"At any rate, having this conversation has left me feeling as if a stone were lifted from my chest. Two stones, actually: carrying an uncomfortable secret, and not knowing my attraction was reciprocated. The one makes me more comfortable with my friends, the other makes me feel a lot better about myself."

Several ideas come to my mind reading passage 15. a/ the friendship relltionship between men and the affection between these men versus the sexual affection that may exist between bisexual men. Is there a distinction between bisexual men as to when friendship and fondess exists compared to a sexual arousal between bisexual men?"

post 18
"I am playing a game in which Skylar has all the power, I have none, and am only figuring out the rules as I play. I watch him relishing the game. A bisexual man with a woman who lets him play with other men."

post 21
"I totally respect it. And if you didn't have Elke, I wouldn't dare touch you. I would have run away by now."

post 23
"And as for myself, I just want you to know, that for me the worst thing that could come out of this would be if our friendship were damaged in any way." I feel obliged to add "meaning yours and mine as well as mine and his." She gives me a blank, probing look and in her silence I hear doubt that this friendship between myself and her is real."

post #29
"I talk about our time in Amman and how she and Skylar had made me feel like their family. How I loved that feeling so much I couldn't tell heed the voice saying I had fallen into a trap. I guess this was the first time they had had something like this get so dramatic? No, she said, there was one time a man she'd pegged as a one-night stand fell in love with her. They'd been through this all before."

post #31
"The Love that requires no reciprocation is here. This pain has served to expand my heart to let more in. The people and things we love in our limited way serve to prepare us to let this Love through. The expanse of the cosmos bears witness to the Love's endlessness."

post #30
"She sits but says "I am not comfortable when you talk like this and look at Skylar that way. I feel how much in love you are with him and it makes me feel... I don't want to say threatened... but yeah, kind of... I know I'm not threatened, but the feeling is as if I were."

void()
Oct 31, 2010, 6:41 PM
"Is there a distinction between bisexual men as to when friendship and fondess exists compared to a sexual arousal between bisexual men?"

You've left this open in a public forum, tenni. Perhaps, this view is not significant but it is mine and you've posed the question.

I think we as human beings, indeed have control over emotions, no matter how base or primal they be. That isn't to say no cases in which those same emotions sweep us away, don't exist. But even then we are the masters or mistresses of them.

To suggest emotions capable of forging control without regard to consequence, accountability is madness for sure. And this comes from personal experience. I have in the past gotten direly angry. The rage welled causing me to black out. Weeks later I was made aware of nearly killing someone using my hands.

Of course, I'm known to get fits of severe melancholy, depression as well. And then bliss or satori occur at times also. It is a constant struggle maintaining any semblance of an even keel. Nonetheless, these emotions are not me. Yes I'm accountable to a degree for them, fully if on tack. We all are, or ought to be.

So, in responding to your question, I think we are more than able to distinguish between friendship, love, lust. It is in how we respond to our emotions which cause us headaches, putting it mildly.

Atiq,

Thank you for sharing your story. It confirms to me, even the better of us are not always saints nor sinners. Not sure how I would have responded in the same boat as you. Possibly would have been crushed just as you. Again, thank you.

MarieDelta
Oct 31, 2010, 7:04 PM
Such a bittersweet experience.

Thank you for sharing it, Atiq, I did find it enlightening.

I am sorry that this relationship did not turn out the way you hoped, but perhaps it is for the best?

onewhocares
Nov 1, 2010, 1:42 PM
Thank you for sharing your story. I enjoyed reading it and do like your style of writing.

Belle

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 12:08 AM
I agree with David that these people seem very narcissistic.

I'd be interested in where you see that.


You should have respected their marriage and talked to them both before making a move on the husband.

Actually it was "Elke" who inquired into my sexuality (post 5 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186417&postcount=5), bottom), let me know about "Skylar"'s bisexuality (post 14 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186426&postcount=14)) and clued her husband into my attraction to him before I had even become conscious of it myself (post 21 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186434&postcount=21))

"Skylar" disclosed the terms of their marriage to me (post 15 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186427&postcount=15)) and let me know that anything we said he would repeat to her. I don't think you can say I did anything in secret. As to my making a move on "Skylar", I guess you can take fault with my flirtation in the same post and my giving the first kiss in post 21 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186434&postcount=21), but I never tried to get him to have sex with me, and I think there are some gray areas in the matters of blame here.

Who here thinks it would be fair to characterize me as aggressive in my exchanges with "Skylar"?


You barely even knew these people at all

I wouldn't say so. It's not like we met for coffee on lunch breaks. I stayed in their home for five days, and during that time we spent most of our waking hours together.



and you somehow fell in love with the guy, that's not a good sign. I can understand becoming friends with someone fast but love, actual real love takes time. You were just infatuated and full of lust.

Full of lust? No. It was a very emotional and only slightly physical attraction. I was never turned on by his body or wanted to have sex with him, though given different circumstances would certainly have done so out of the desire for intimacy. Maybe you should give the make-out scene (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186434&postcount=21) another read. At the same time I can't deny that "Skylar" embodied my archetype of the blue-eyed Northern European, and I have trouble imagining things would have gone the same way had he been, say, Chinese. Attraction is such a complex and multi-faceted thing.

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 12:27 AM
I agree with David that these people seem very narcissistic.

He's recently accused me of the same. I think there's some truth to it.
http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186271&postcount=3

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 12:40 AM
I'm sometimes uncertain as to when a platonic attachment is there rather than a sexual attraction. (not always but sometimes) (ie. Distinguishing between a love friendship attachment to a person from a sexual attraction attachment with emotional connections.) I think that is what happened between you and Skylar.

Yes, I rather agree, but what do you think about what I said above about how my platonic love would probably not have developed into passion had "Skylar" been Chinese?


Elke mentioned the one night stand that she had misread as probably not having an emotional connection and was bothered by the point that the man established a connection beyond the physical sexual connection. They seem to be only partially open to exploring their connection with other humans regardless of the gender. They hold their own bond as a couple as sacred. They tell those singles that they come into contact that this is the rule. When they feel their connection with another human that is not their partner growing, they retreat.

Exactly. And I think the clause in the contract about the third not being allowed to get emotionally attached is a secret minefield, something no amount of discussion beforehand would have brought out.


Overall, though, I think that you have had an enriching experience with these people. Your connection to Skylar was deeper though than the connection with Elke. I hope that you are able to see it as such.

Oh, yes.



post 14
"I look back on the days when I actually sought out men for partnership. How I would have loved to have had a boyfriend like Skylar back then. None of the men I dated were hippies, and most of them had that attachment to the gay identity that never really jibed with me. I get the sense Skylar was never like that. He would have been too authentic, too much in tune with his true self. "

"David" was appalled by this section, by the way. He thought I was very deluded to imagine this of "Skylar" and I think he took it as an example of my homophobia. He hated the whole piece, had little to say about it, and maybe never even finished reading it.

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 12:44 AM
Atiq,

Thank you for sharing your story. It confirms to me, even the better of us are not always saints nor sinners. Not sure how I would have responded in the same boat as you. Possibly would have been crushed just as you. Again, thank you.

Mmmm, thank you. No, I don't think anyone comes out looking innocent in this story.

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 1:04 AM
Such a bittersweet experience.

Thank you for sharing it, Atiq, I did find it enlightening.

I am sorry that this relationship did not turn out the way you hoped, but perhaps it is for the best?

Ha, everything is for the best if you look at it that way.

Glad you liked the story.

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 1:05 AM
Thank you for sharing your story. I enjoyed reading it and do like your style of writing.

Belle

Thanks, Belle!

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 2, 2010, 1:24 AM
It occurs to me that many readers here may be puzzled by the lack of conflict between my sexuality and spirituality, and may think my impressions of being opened to Divine Love by this same-sex crush are some kind of weird personal heresy. It actually is square in Sufi tradition. The theme of romantic love -- even forbidden love -- blurring into the Love of God even as all forms of piety fall away is a recurrent theme in Sufi literature, from Ibn Arabi's love of the mysterious (and probably underage) girl at the Kaaba to Farid ud-Din Attar's celebration of the sheikh who abandons Islam out of unrequited love for a Christian girl to Jelalludin's countless odes to the Love introduced to him by his male love(r?) Shams i-Tabrizi.

I would be interested in anyone's thoughts on the experiences I describe in post 22 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186435&postcount=22) first paragraph, post 29 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186444&postcount=29) paragraph 4 and on, and post 31 (http://main.bisexual.com/forum/showpost.php?p=186446&postcount=31) last paragraph. Are these tastes of "the Love that requires no reciprocation" delusory? If they are real, why do they not last, and I am left me in despair when "Skylar" leaves?

SilverFox52
Nov 2, 2010, 5:50 AM
I want to acknowledge the time and effort you gave to this. It was so very nice to see a man expose, embrace and celebrate his romantic heart.

NotLostJustWandering
Nov 21, 2010, 7:00 PM
I read the entire "article".

Your writing needs lots of editing. You're going on and on about not much of anything at all. This makes it very boring for the reader.

Reading this was a complete waste of time.

Especially when you remembered that you had already read it before, in your "Lst4t" incarnation.

Time for your next identity change...




There's there's no sex or nudity at all.

Pearls before trolls, LOL.

But yes, I'm sure the story needs editing, I just don't know what to cut. Opinions from non-trolls are welcome.