Where There
is Movement
by
Evan Knapp
Leave a note. I had to, so they wouldn’t worry.
I’d found myself lost in my lifelong home, a modest
ranch-style house on 17th Street in a small Oregon college town. I
was sitting on a stool at the yellow Formica counter in the kitchen, beside the
brand-new matching wall mounted push-button phone, with a ballpoint pen
twitching restless in my hand. It wrote a jabbing, fully executed sentence, “I
won’t be home for dinner.”
I thought I had a mostly normal, minimally average
middle-class family. My Dad rode his bike to work, even when it was raining,
clamping a thin metal horseshoe shaped clip on his right pant leg to protect it
from the biting teeth on the chain. Dr. Knapp, a music professor at Oregon
State University, Elementary Ed. He was an absent, mindful, kind, quietly
charismatic man who wore glasses which left behind oval indentations on each
side of his nose. Mom taught kindergarten. They’d lived there long enough to
have had a few of the same students. People rarely left Corvallis. Mom and Dad,
even after guiding others’ young Fall to Spring didn’t know how or what to do
with me. I’d made the decision to leave four days earlier, but not until the
blue ink formed those six words did I know I would act.
Dad had a forest green T-shirt which he wore tucked into
brandless jeans. He wouldn’t wear it often, but when he did, he wore with it a
sly, barely detectable grin behind his thick glass glasses. “Musicians Use The
Rhythm Method.” Well, their rhythm was off fifteen years earlier. I was the
oops who accelerandoed out to play
with my own phrasing. They thought they could only make girls so I didn’t have
a name for a few weeks. Mom actually asked the doctor, “Are you sure?” when he
told her my sex. “Yes ma’am, I’ve been a doctor for (mumble mumble) years. I’m
sure.” Under my baby picture from the hospital, in legible handwriting, I’m
labeled, “Knapp Boy.”
Dad wanted to name me Lucian. Vetoed. Instead, I got Evan.
Evan Lucian. No, James is my middle name, my Dad’s first name, but his mom
didn’t like it, so he’d always gone by the first three letters of his middle
name, Gilbert. I was six years younger than my middle sister Paula, eight from
Karna, and eleven years younger than their first unnamed stillborn girl.
Paula was unsure and always a little bit scared. “Five-foot
eleven and three quarters,” she barely told anyone who asked her height. She
cared nothing about her runway beauty. Her condor fingers were perfectly suited
to the black and whites. I would lie on my stomach for hours, on the striped
earth-tone carpet next to the piano, and listen to her practice rich, flowing
Chopin, and my favorite, pounding, dissonant Bartók. She escaped to the
granola-rich, patchouli-polluted University of Oregon in Eugene when I was in
eighth grade. She took a year off after high school to go with Mom, Dad, and me
to live in Scotland. A year-long professor exchange program with some
Glaswegian family.
We lived in their stone rowhouse, close to the Botanical
Gardens, and across the street from the BBC studios. The year I started growing
hair on my undercarriage and also the year I first told someone I was gay.
Yeah, didn’t turn out well. Paula played the cello too, and was also a pretty
good distance runner.
Karna had run through the acceptable channels. She got good
grades. She lettered in gymnastics, diving, track: a high jumper and even at
5’4” she cleared the hurdles. She put herself through four years at the
University of Washington on a partial gymnastics scholarship, almost far enough
away. After earning her degree in dance she moved to Singapore and taught
aerobics to cosmopolitan office workers. I didn’t get a chance to really get to
know her until I was almost thirty, a few years after more than one
drug-induced psychotic episode scared me sober. I really like Karna. She’s
nice.
And Mom, with her full head of barely brushed, rarely
contained gray hair, blue eyes and her perfect-teeth smile. She loved to watch
football while crocheting, blaring the live Saturday NPR broadcast from the
Metropolitan Opera. She used to call me her sunshine boy, but once I started
high school she started leaving books like Tough
Love on the un-ornate Scandinavian teak furniture.
My freshman year. I was leery of the second school I was
attending. I was the first kid in the history of the district granted a fast,
discreet transfer. The most outgoing, popular, naive little limpet up until
seventh grade, my cute charm and quick tongue had stopped being enough. I
didn’t understand. I couldn’t ask my sisters, they weren’t there. I had this
feeling my parents were simply tired of raising children and thought talking to
them wouldn’t have helped. Instead I tried to hide from the ever-growing crowd
who regularly slashed through my thin, underdeveloped frame. The bullies would
kick my shins when I walked by them. If I chanced upon one of those mau-mau
Neanderthals when nobody else was in sight, a punch to the stomach. After some
of the football team used almost a whole roll of duct tape to suspend me from a
locker one regular morning between classes, I flew home on my bike and stayed
in bed for three days. I didn’t get why no one helped me. Student after
classmate, I think even a teacher walked by and did nothing. It wasn’t until
one of my friends came to the house to check on me did my parents know what’d
happened. I told them I would never go back to that school.
I was singled out because I hung out with the edged-out, the
thespians, the smokers, punks, mods, the Wave-os, the dancers from my third
period dance class—you could take it instead of P.E.—and I ran with my packs
outside of school, buzzed on clove cigarettes, sharing one or three wine
coolers among us, listening to Suicidal Tendencies, Oingo Boingo, Siouxsie
Sioux, David Bowie, Bauhaus, Bronski Beat, Black Flag and Christopher Cross on
a suitcase-sized boom box. OK, in my room, never around those guys, I’d play
“Ride Like the Wind,” or Chicago or Billy Joel: “…he’s been misunderstood, it’s
a comfort to know his intentions are good. He sits in a room with a lock on the
door, with his maps and his medals laid out on the floor. Give a moment or two
to the…” Maybe I never all-the-way fit in with any group.
In a dusty thrift store, I found a pair of well-worn combat
boots I thought would protect more than my feet. One afternoon, scuffing and
partially laced, they walked by the door of the only ballet studio in town.
They stopped me right there.
Then they took me in.
It didn’t matter to Mr. Irwin I showed up in my favorite
neon-green English Beat T-shirt; I first heard them on a compilation album, This Are Two Tone, which I thought was
awesome, because It Are Wrong. And Mr. Irwin saw around my spectrum-spanning
hair colors and plaid pajama bottoms rather than the required black tights. He
only cared I showed up every afternoon ready to work, ready to learn. I showed
up every afternoon, ready.
Ballet is hard. Civilians have no idea. The technique, the
discipline, the absurd dedication necessary. I pushed my body, ripped my
muscles, exploded my lungs, popped mushroom-size blisters on the bottoms of my
feet, then tore off the flap of skin: pause, pause… pause YANK. I hadn’t worked
hard enough unless there was blood.
Not only was it OK to express myself, my selves, in the
studio, it was encouraged. I’d discovered my home, not like my house, not
modest. I felt embraced and protected, a part. I’d found my outlet.
There, air for my emerging, sputtering sparks; kindling
proems to roaring fires. There, freedom to meld with oneness; dancing is time
transcendent. There was where I was meant to do.
For some reason, Dad got it. When I was about 10, Sundays
after church, he would take me bowling in the basement of the student union, a
few structures and a courtyard from his office in Benton Hall, the very first
building constructed on campus. When we’d played our twenty frames, he’d take
me upstairs to the cafeteria and let me order whatever I wanted, usually a
corndog with mustard, and he would let me get my own soda pop from the
self-serve fountain. I mixed a little bit of each kind in my wax-coated cup.
“Swamp juice,” he named it. I know now, there were other things he could have
named for me.
After he died, Mom told me he never really wanted to teach.
He wanted to be a professional singer. He toured Europe with an all-male chorus
called The Bohemians, but he didn’t have the chops to venture out on his own.
He had a good voice, just not a great voice. I turned out to be a good dancer,
just not a great one.
He met Mom when they were in college in the Midwest, and
followed her to Oregon after they graduated. She got the first job she applied
for, a teaching position in Portland. She’d turned down Dad’s proposals when
they were co-eds. She wasn’t a cheerleader at all, but as a beautiful young
woman (Dad, by the way, was a handsome young man) the star quarterback had
already pinned Mom.
When I came across a photo of said hunky guy, I asked her
“Who’s he?” She told me. I wonder what it would’ve been like if he’d been my
dad.
So, after Dad followed her West, he got a job in a clothing
store, folding sweaters, and “patting socks,” as he put it whenever he told the
story. Mom finally said yes. I love the picture of them off to their honeymoon,
the en vogue shot, twisting toward
each other, looking at the lens with beautiful, genuine smiles through the
back, rounded window of their car.
Dad and singing. It brought him joy, not money. He pursued,
instead, his family. He gave them the opportunities. Us, he gave us the
opportunities. There were mortgages, college funds, the years it took him to
get his teaching job, and later his Ph.D. I was born in 1967, the year he was
finishing up his coursework to become Dr. Knapp, before he started his
dissertation. Nineteen sixty-seven, the year of the sheep, goat or ram
depending. My birthday, March 30th, makes me an Aries, fire sign,
the ram. I am a burning double ram goat sheep.
He helped me. He knew I was suffocating in high school. He
pulled some strings with them so they would let me go half days, then pulled a
few more at OSU so I could go to the university in the afternoons to take
modern dance classes with the college kids. Intimidating, but getting to dance
with adults—and they had live drummers, and the studio was huge—shushed the
inadequate and the shy in my head. When I was done there, I’d go to Mr. Irwin’s
and chameleon into a danseur; pliés, tendus, jumps, turns. My
unhindered, unparalleled amour.
At night, I was out with my fringe friends, dancing in vacant
lots, parking lots, playgrounds, at the drive-in on the hoods of cars, doing
the pogo, the pony, skank to ska, popping and locking. I’d come home late and
stretch, go over choreography, eat air-popped popcorn, carrots dipped in
mustard, and wash it all down with Fresca. Once, I razored down the
over-the-counter caffeine pill Vivarin to an uneven powder and snorted it. So
cool, I thought, starving myself like I imagined real dancers did, doing lines
of fake coke and chain-smoking Benson & Hedges Ultra Lights 100s in the
mirror. I turned myself into a ninety-eight-pound weakling, my face a target
for kicked sand. I became as thin as the little town saw me, but I was
thickening my façade and I was teenager know-it-all strong. The truth and
clarity I knew in dance, the chimerical sustenance beating through my soft
cells, untainting love, remaining my secret, my never-draining battery, my
stringent binder-blinding focus. Kick as much of whatever you want at my face.
I was becoming.
I was urged to audition for a summer intensive workshop at
Reed College in Portland. I had never been to a dance audition before. They
gave me a full scholarship. What I lacked in technique, I made up for with a
transparent, gnawing-raw, slavish desperation.
Before we got in the car I convinced Mom to let me go. It
didn’t take much.
I think it was during my electric blue hair, bleached-white
eyebrow phase. She took me aside and told me since I was a teenager now, she
would give me the same options she gave my sisters. If I didn’t want to go with
them to a movie or out shopping, I didn’t have to. If we were in public and I
didn’t want to be seen with my dorky parents, I could walk on the other side of
the street. I didn’t have to go to church anymore unless I chose to, and if she
was dropping me off somewhere, she would let me out a few blocks away so I
wouldn’t be embarrassed. I thought she was the most awesome Mom ever until I
realized those allowances were not for my benefit. She’d never needed to have
that talk with my sisters.
She drove me up to Portland the moment I scraped through
ninth grade.
She told me, “Remember who you are,” something she often said
to me when I was leaving. I did remember who I was. Part of the oneness, the
truth I was determined to funnel through my long-limbed body. I didn’t share it
with her. I didn’t think she could ever understand. “OK, I will,” I
auto-answered. Then I locked and shut the car door. I called home that night,
then once a week, like they’d asked me to. They had the number, but I don’t
remember them calling to check on me.
Tom. Everyone at the workshop wanted Tom, also a dancer, but
not on scholarship, and he was 18. Tall, dark, hands finishing the lines of his
arms perfectly. He was ridiculously gorgeous, with a wry-dry wit inside his
fantastical dancer body. Somehow, I’m not sure why, I was the one, or maybe one
of the ones he picked. He took me back to his house. He lived in a nice
neighborhood, with his family, a short bus ride away. We went down to his
basement bedroom. Exciting. It’s happening.
My first time. We were sitting on his bed, shoulder to shoulder, thighs
barely touching, tentatively taking off clothes, looking at each other’s
growing definition through white cotton Y-fronts, when his sister slammed open
the door, banging it against the wall so hard it bounced back and she had to
freeze it with her forearm and palm.
“My cream rinse! You used my…” and she stopped.
She didn’t know Tom was gay, or maybe she did. She did see
me, the gay kid trying to disappear behind her brother. She never spoke to me.
Tears and words and backing up. Tom, hopping, jumping, pulling out of the room,
trying to get back in both pant legs, both legs at a time. Me sitting there.
Disappointed. Embarrassed. Shamed.
I needed more class. On the weekends, I took the bus downtown
and went to all of the studios I could find. I managed a scholarship with a
strictly ballet school. I applied for and received a work-study arrangement
with a semi-professional contemporary ballet company where I scrubbed toilets
and vacuumed the carpets in the lobby, office, and dressing rooms. I found a
Dunham-based African/jazz teacher, Benny Bell, who gave me free classes and
eventually let me perform in two of his shows: “Real Men Eat Quiche” and “The
Ritual.” The youngest in the ensemble, but I still got paid.
A group of us from the workshop would go downtown to the
Saturday Market under the Burnside Bridge. We met a brood of break-dancers. We
started taking turns dancing on the stony, uneven pavement. They carted in
their flattened cardboard. We spun on our heads and tails for change. “Don’t
just watch and walk away, these dancers need to eat today,” we chanted, and
also had written on the paper bags we moved through the onlookers after each
routine.
Downtown too, I met some of the urchins who lived on the
streets. They wore anarchy patches on their shredded jeans—shredded because
they were old and worn, not because they were bought pre-distressed. They wore
bottle-cap-sized buttons with nuclear symbols, black and white checkerboards,
or bands or slogans: Duran Duran, F_ _ K Iran, the C and U taken out, because
wearing actual profanity in public was going too far. I wanted the one, RUDE
BOY. Those kids, those I wanted to copy, had safety pins through their shirts
and ears, stacks of thin silver-chiming bracelets on their arms and hard spiky
finned hair soaring down the middle of their heads. They liked me. No one
freaked out because I wanted to make out with guys. None of them wanted to beat
me up. I was just that dancer kid. They weren’t posers, they were real. The
kind of friends I trusted with my life, but not my possessions.
I didn’t want to go back to the distant small town, home, or
whatever it was called. I asked my parents if I could stay the rest of the
summer and dance with the companies I’d elbowed my way into. They agreed.
Hesitation none. I found a room in a house with some college students and
pretty much did the same thing I’d been doing, except it was still summer so
not the school part. Dance all day, dance all night, dream about dance, smoke.
The pinhole in the membrane between the material world and
the infinite was stretching. Each time I learned something new about technique
or performing, I took it as a confirming present, ever increasing my
understanding it was possible to channel the never-ending cache of pure
creativity. The euphoria I found in the studio was rarely a little scary. It
pulled me like a treasure hunter who’d finally found Pandora’s box, reluctant
but possessed to open the lid and let everything out. I didn’t know the story
then, but intrinsically, wishful and unworldly, I knew there was hope in there.
I memorized my now life: hanging out on sidewalks, cutting
each other’s hair with anything sharp, preferably at bus stops where the hated
yuppies could watch. Class, all of the classes, all of the nourishment. My
now-only food groups: caffeine, nicotine, flirting, aspiring, Charleston Chews,
and flirting. Then, my summer was over.
Incarcerated in high school again, the bullying began anew.
“FAG.” “Nice hair faggot.” No! Dancer!
I’m a dancer. I’m that dancer kid. My adequate grades swiftly melted into
painful failing stains.
I wanted to be around all my edged-out friends but slipped
into a group obstinately hurdling toward evaporation. Up until then, I liked
the idea of taking drugs more than actually taking them, but one afternoon I
caved. Someone had a joint. We were beside the football field by a creek and
all of these thin drooping limb trees. Instead of saying “No thanks” like I
normally did when it passed to my turn, I took some deep pressured hits. I
think it was laced with something. I didn’t like the feeling. It amplified my
self-consciousness beyond what I could mask with eyeliner and a lotta
what-have-yous. It didn’t wear off in time. I was more than stoned when I made
it home, but tried to play it off as angst. The marvel was watching my parents
pretend nothing was wrong as they saw me altered for the first time.
And then began the bribes.
The biggies: In addition to the dance classes I was taking in
Corvallis, they told me I could go up to Portland on the weekends, to keep
taking classes there. I could go on the Greyhound, by myself, and they would
pay for my roundtrip bus tickets, if, I pulled my grades up to at least B’s.
Also, Karna was still in Singapore. Mom was going to go visit her (most
probably uninvited) and proposed I could go too if I got a job to pay for half
of my plane ticket.
To Mom and Dad, excellent offers. In reality, nullifying
world-annihilating booby-traps. I would still be drowning in scarlet C’s and
D’s even if I aced every assignment, quiz, test and exam from right then
through to finals. Getting a job to pay for half my flight halfway around the
world would make it impossible to go to my dance classes. I was never going to
let that happen. I sensed their agenda. I was welcome to dance as long as it
didn’t interfere with me working a job, graduating high school and fulfilling
their never directly expressed expectation of going to college, then probably
grad school, and then what—marriage and makin' babies? The message (in
their-era song lyrics) was clear: “Straighten up and fly right.”
I love my Mom, now. We didn’t speak for more than five years
but when we finally did, we found a way to get passed the past. We went camping
at the beach for a weekend and piece by piece dug up those bad years and talked
about them, sort of. I told her I forgave her. She said, “I haven’t done
anything that needs forgiving.” It took a night’s sleep for me to figure out
what I meant, and to figure out why she said what she did. The next morning, as
I was lighting the fire, without ever looking up, I said, “Mom, for not knowing
what to do with me.”
When she was 76, I was the one she trusted to see her
decline. I was the one who was there full days and nights while she was dying.
She let me fly my partner out when I needed a similar but different kind of
support from him. He and I slept in the same bed, a wall away, and took turns
getting up to sit with her when the pain from her bone cancer lengthened her
nights. She wouldn’t take any medication. She was a Christian Scientist,
determined to live to the last the way she had long before chosen, or maybe her
parents had chosen for her. I placed my beliefs on hold to respect hers. It was
her time, not mine. I made her favorite foods, even though she wasn’t really
eating; recipes from the Depression, her childhood, and subsequently mine.
On a rainy afternoon, I drove her out to the first school
she’d taught at in Corvallis. She couldn’t remember its name, so we went there
to recapture it. She thanked me, then again. I didn’t know remembering a name
from her past could mean so much. To be beside her again in her present, to
hold again a fond memory.
The night before she went to some Christian Science care
facility, a few minutes before she was almost asleep, I went in her room and
curled up on the floor next to her bed.
My deadline to pick up my grades and a job was close. This
one night, I brought a guy over when I thought my house was asleep. Exciting. Maybe it’ll happen this time.
It was late. I took him into the TV room and we started fooling around. Heavy
petting, a little dry humping, heavy panting. Soon pants had pulled pants down.
I looked up and there she was, standing in the doorway, watching but not
looking. She calmly told the guy to leave, sat me down, got a deck of cards and
dealt herself a game of solitaire. Without ever looking up she told me, “A
mother knows,” and in the same breath said she was taught homosexuals were in
the same category as drug addicts and prostitutes. She said she would talk to
my father. My father? What happened to my
Dad? My memory is smudged, but I do remember her cheating, so as she said
her last word she covered the last queen with the red king on the stack of
hearts.
They told me I’d blown my trip to see Karna, not because I
was caught about to play with some guy’s boner, but because of the job and the
grades thing. The next weekend came, and I was ready to be dropped off at the
bus station, to go take my classes in Portland. They didn’t budge. Mom did the
talking while Dad stood there with a look in his eye I’d never seen before. Empathy,
understanding, but mostly a twinge of his own personal disappointment time
traveling to be with mine. No, the answer was no, N.O. they wouldn’t let me go.
I knew they were expecting me to take off right then, so I
didn’t.
Unrestful, I waited through the rest of the weekend and
forced myself to school on Monday. During the period before lunch, a surge
gurgled, a bubbling sulfur mud pit, tarry with things I couldn’t define. I ran,
feeling my way down the industrial carpeted hall to a bathroom. My eyes were
spitting tears. None of them ran down my cheeks. My vocal cords were sounding a
noise like the terrifying, barking-call of an elk being yanked through liquid
iron by a back leg.
I didn’t care about the trip. I would do anything; stay in
school, get beat up every day, find my brown hair and pair it with Izods, go to
church to stand and sing, smile and nod, and yes, even make pleasant
conversation in the foyer with blue-haired old ladies, but I could not, would
not, would never ever make it, unless I could be in the studio.
Sitting back down in the classroom the teacher walked toward
me. She got out one and a half syllables of the obligatory, “Are you OK?” and
it erupted again, in front of everyone. I couldn’t stop the damn tsunami
rushing the enormity of the past few days into large-scale microscopic view.
The teacher backed up. Everyone else froze and stared. Exiting the typing class
the second time, I took a stumble. I actually had to crawl a little to evacuate
due to loss of emotional cabin pressure. No calm. There was nothing orderly
about it.
I don’t know when or how it stopped. I don’t know how I got
home. I don’t know how I managed to zip myself up to make it through the sticky
small talk garnishing dinner, while a mange-gnarled Snuffleupagus sat in the
corner. I do remember looking at the knife on my napkin, the serrated edge
turned toward the fork to protect the spoon, which is how it was explained to
me when I was taught to set a table properly. And I needed to protect my spoon,
which fed my boundless body, so I could blend my intellect with my emotions.
My plan was simple. I called my friend Karena after dinner.
She had a car, a red 1967 Mustang named Maurice. I asked her if she’d pick me
up during lunch and take me to the bus station. I told her I was running away
from home, and there was a green silence. I walked out the door the next
morning like I was going to school, but instead, climbed over a fence and
waited in a neighbor’s backyard until I was sure Mom and Dad had gone to work.
Time got long. My heart strangled diluted beats. With my key, I broke back in
to my own house. I packed, but only the important stuff: Dippity-Doo, the
October GQ, cigarettes, dance
clothes. I laced tight my combat boots, double knotted them and sat down at the
kitchen counter. I knew I wasn’t coming back. They knew exactly where I was
going. I didn’t have to explain anything, and really, then, I didn’t know how.
The only place I would be able to make sense of anything was as a conduit in my
wordless, moving world.
Karena came and got me. She gave me some money. I said,
“Thanks,” as I grabbed my bag and got out of her car. I turned for her to see
me through the window as I waved and said, “See ya.” I was Pat Benatar, riding
the bus to the chorus of “Love is a Battlefield,” to meet up with my dancers in
a dancehall-hooker club, to punch out the choreography to the chorus, “We are
young! Heartache to heartache, we…” I had a five, eight crumpled ones and a
two-dollar bill. More than enough. When I got to Portland, I never knew exactly
where I was going to sleep, or the next time I’d have dinner, but
I always,
always, always made it to class.
Grab Your Copy Where There is Movement
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