Friday, September 9, 2011

Reflections on the Hollow Men

"We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men."

When I fashion a Leather mask, I begin by casting the face. I carefully mold a negative form and from that, I create a positive. Then I stretch the Leather, hammer it, and rub it methodically for hours until a near perfect replica of the visage takes shape. A mask that begs to be worn. Without a person to wear it, the mask is dead, an object without life. Every actor knows this. An essential part of the professional actor's training is learning to interact within its hollow. Acting en masque.

Decades ago, many of our Leather organizations were formed. They were fashioned by men who understood the need to raise funds and awareness for HIV, for service to members of the Community, to defeat right-wing political agendas that threatened to drown us in intolerance. Although the shape of these organizations has remained the same over the years, the skill of those who knew how to animate them seems to be gone. What remains are the shells of organizations, masks of clubs and contests that once served a vibrant purpose.

While a few of these organizations have found revitalization through the efforts of a few selfless individuals, most remain evident but ineffective. They seem to have little direct association with their original purpose. And their affiliation with Leathersex, with play, or with the individuals who make up our current Community seems strained. Many of these organizations have become but facades of broken stones from another time, objects that are the focus of "Old Guard" incantations and fantastical rituals.

Groups that used to facilitate brotherhood now foment politics and drama. And their leaders, once essentially hidden behind the masks of their organizations, now expose themselves. The desire to be seen, greater than the call to serve. For it was service that animated these organizations, not the egos of men whose appetite for accolades and awards compels them to move the mask from the borders of its surface rather than from the inside.

I recently attended a symposium in San Francisco called, "Is Leather Dead?" As a Sir to boys of varying ages I can attest that kink and perversion is alive and well in the lives of the rising generation of Gay men. What seems to be dead are many of our organizations that have no context in the lives of these men. They belong more within the context of a reliquary than a vibrant Community.

So all hail to the "Hollow Men" who claim to lead these organizations. To them, I say -

"A penny for the Old Guy."

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for this post even though I think the post was just a little too polite of missing the manners. I think it would help to be a little more direct on the subject. But it is a very difficult subject of the self-sabotage of our Seattle community. Who wants to be the target who says that there is a large elephant in the middle of small room? This subject has been talked and talked and talked for about 10 to 15 years and people do not listen. GLPW is an example who can not listen and it is just so much easier to just to step back from the "community". It is just sad but again, from the ash of the community, an organic phoenix will rise. Until then, it is just sad.

    - Aubrey Sparks

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  2. I live across the country and know nothing about any situation in Seattle, but I have noticed over the last twenty years the decline of service organizations.

    The number of members may have stayed nearly the same, but fewer people are actively involved and the number of worker bees at fund raisers and service events is very low. Members turn out when there will be publicity or to play, but the hard and often tedious behind the scenes work is done by the same few people again and again until they are worn down.

    I truly don't think this situation is limited to Leathermen, but is a symptom of a lack of understanding and appreciation of the joys of quiet altruistic service, true service.

    Donna

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