When I lived in ABQ (that's Albuquerque, NM), finishing grad school…
coming out, divorce… it was a tough time.
It was more than 30 years ago. I was really a lost rowboat on a stormy sea… poor choice of metaphore whe nyou are living at the northern reach ofthe Chiuahan Destert, but I digress... I even attempted a
suicide once or twice on my bike in traffic… dumb, I know.
A professor of mine, Rafael, was one of the
first openly gay role models I had. He was a former Jesuit, turned Zen
practioner, and let me stay with him and his partner until I could steady
myself. I owe a lot to them. Strike
that, I owe everything to them… Until then, my only contact with gay people,
was, with, well unsavory and not very well put together types. They introduced me to strong, together, professionals and good decent people. Saturdays we went to a Gay men’s meditation group, and then we went to brunch. Learnign to brunch is an essential gay skill, I had to learn. It was there that I first met some gay men who were working on their spiritual side. At that time, I was still going to feasts and wearing a Bahá’í ring.
One morning a very, very odd man came to the group, his energy field was really off, and at brunch he sat next to me. Early on he noticed my ring, and began ranting about the Guardian… come to find out he was a big cheese in the Covenant Breakers near ABQ. Sigh… he began a very wacky rant… I remember, turning to him and saying,“My friend, this is hardly the place for such a discussion, I do not agree with you, and we will not continue this discussion. Period”.
He started in again, and as he did, his plate lifted off the table, and dumped into his lap…
The group just stared at him, our Zen
teacher and leader turned to Rafael, and said…
“The force is strong in this one” and we all laughed…
Soon after, I took a faculty position in
Sacramento, and Rafa, got a job at Stanford… he is since retired, and still a
great mentor. I owe him a lot, he taught
me that I could be gay and follow a spiritual path, and could ignore all this
nutty Bahá’í administrative homophobic dysfunction. He introduced me to the
idea of service and tools that helped me deal with the anger I had with Bahá’í.
I volunteered with the Sacramento AIDS project when things began to explode in
SMF. Again I met a lot of good, decent, service oriented people. His mentorship
planted the seed in me that allowed me to eventually meet the other great
people here. “The force is strong in this one” and we all laughed…
It is also why I get frustrated with all this Bahá’íness… it doesn’t want to look at what works, or adapt. And why I no longer feel the magic with it or have any sense of Sangha in it.
So maybe, just maybe Baha’u’llah was looking out for me after all, and showed me a place where I was loved, where I was welcome, where I could serve with out fear.
Namaskar Rafa!