An ideal husband."So let me get this straight. Are you proposing to de?" My boyfriend, a sexy clown with perpetual bed-head, shrugged and smiled expectantly. "Yes. I think so." Six months ago, we had tabled the registering-as-domestic-partners discussion because he found the whole concept too intimidating. "It'd be too much like marriage." He said this while folding my underwear. I suppose he found living together for three years, having his parents over every other weekend, and dishtowel shopping at Ross so free and easy that it left him with a host of other options. I decided not to take his resistance personally and let it go. One of the perks of queerdom was that my relationship didn't have to mock the bourgeois conventions of heterosexuality. I didn't need a legal document to affirm my relationship, and I've never viewed marriage as a guarantee of forever. Look at what happened to Bob and Rod Jackson-Paris. Besides, it wouldn't be a real marriage anyway, just the closest proximity we can get in California at the moment: If I got hit by a car, he'd get to see me in the hospital, and if I died, he'd get hit with a mortgage. Just when I convinced myself that marriage wasn't necessary, my boyfriend, Jamie, asked me to become his domestic partner in the middle of the Eat Well diner in West Hollywood. All of a sudden he's the mature one. I was furious. I said yes immediately, then cried into my root beer float. I've been out since I was 14. That means I've been dating for 26 years. My early relationships were manifestations of my own virulent self-loathing. It wasn't enough for me to have feelings of worthlessness; I needed proof. The incredibly hot Baptist flight attendant who always insisted we prayed postcoitus post·co·i·tus (p st-k![]() ![]() -t so we wouldn't go to hell. The closeted actor who'd fly me out to visit him on location, then cover his bases by telling security I was a stalker. No matter what kind of abuse the world heaped upon gay Asian me, it was nothing compared to the disasters I willingly signed up for. Luckily, I wasn't too much of a cementhead, and there was a definite learning curve. I had some fabulous near misses--great guys I wasn't meant to go the distance with. The Adonis who made a better friend than a spouse. The handsome mensch who lived 3,000 miles away. By the time I met Jamie I thought maybe I wasn't supposed to be with just one person for the rest of my life. Maybe I was supposed to have a bunch of different relationships that were meant to teach important life lessons. The kind I couldn't learn any other way than loving, fighting, and having hot, crazy sex with someone for several years at a time. Maybe that wasn't such a bad thing. We went downtown, filled out all our paperwork at the state building, and had it notarized in an office supply store down the street. The notary was a friendly Pakistani man who didn't bat an eyelash when he saw that he was notarizing a domestic partnership registration form for two men. When we returned to the state clerk, the entire African-American office staff recognized me from the UPN sitcom I appear on and crowded around us to say congratulations, reaching across the counter to hug us both. Minutes later Jamie and I were standing outside the office doors with our certificate, giddy and exhilarated. We didn't have a camera, so I took a picture of us on nay phone. In the photo he looks delighted, and I look slightly freaked out. I have the manic, disbelieving smile of a winning game-show contestant. I thought of all the times I've ever felt lost, abandoned, or just plain unlovable after a breakup. Am I willing to set myself up again for that kind of heartache? Do I actually believe that this is a worthwhile pursuit? I looked into Jamie's eyes. He makes me laugh till I pee. He's my best friend, my lover, and I miss him whenever he leaves the room. I do. |
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