Category Archives: Life Story

Andrew McCarthy/Maybe you didn’t want it

Brat: an 80’s story/Andrew McCarthy/2021

If I’d been a member of the Brat Pack, I would have wanted to have been Rob Lowe. But I was more like Andrew McCarthy.

He wasn’t handsome, nor was he a good actor. I wasn’t handsome either, or ever been an actor.

Underneath that cute shyness he was an outsider, not liked by his contemporaries, and he was resentful, and probably not a nice person.

“Early on in The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald describes the character Tom Buchanan as a ‘national figure in a way, one of those men who reach such an acute limited excellence at twenty-one that everything afterward savours of anti-climax.’”

Now we know the truth.

McCarthy thought he could deal with fame, but wasn’t able to, and lived by the bottle. And this meant that once he’d peaked at a young age it was downhill. And then, by his own choice, it ended.

“Maybe you didn’t want it,” Alec Baldwin said to him on the Here’s the Thing podcast without realising he’d come closer to the core than McCarthy ever had.

I’m not sure I liked him after reading this, but he writes clearly and honestly, and afterwards I realised that we were alike after all.

He might not have been a nice person, but I suspect he might be now.

I looked at the man in the mirror

Look in the mirror/S.O.S. Pedro/Brazil

He was called Fabrício and said he came from Rocinha in Rio de Janeiro. It was the tattoo I noticed first, a bird on his neck, and I was suspicious of guys who had tattoos. We sat drinking beer at the counter. The barman cleaned up. The night was ending.

“What is your name?” “Where are you from?” “What do you do?” “What are you doing here?”

Fabrício wanted to talk, but I was tired, and came across as being rude.

Tito’s Vodka. Corn Whiskey. Pama Pomegranate Liqueur. RumChata. Rye Whiskey. Southern Comfort. Tennessee Whiskey. Jack Daniel’s. Bourbon.

I read the labels on the bottles behind the bar.

In the mirror I saw two guys. And I found a thousand things wrong with me, but only the bird on Fabrício’s neck.

“I’m gonna make a change, for once in my life. It’s gonna feel real good. Gonna make a difference. Gonna make it right.”

Fabrício gently sang the opening verse from Man in the Mirror. It was a sweet voice. I could not sing.

I looked in the reflection and noticed him looking at me. It reminded me of a scene in Rebel Without a Cause where Plato looks at Jim with a look of adoration. A coded declaration of love. Gay desire.

“I’m starting with the man in the mirror. I’m asking him to change his ways. And no message could have been any clearer. If they wanna make the world a better place, take a look at yourself, and then make a change.”

That was it. The first time for me. We had met in a hotel bar in Fort Lauderdale and ended up making love behind a stack of deck chairs on the beach, protected by the roar of the sea, and waiting for the cop with a torch and gun.

Fort Lauderdale Beach/ZielinskiCreative/Flickr

Leo and Timothée

(Image/Ernest Klimko)

It is a cold September afternoon and not the weather to be wearing shorts and little else. But Leo is different. We don’t know his real name, but we shall call him that, because he looks like he should be called Leo. 

Leo is in a small supermarket, and he looks about fifteen or sixteen. He has a shaved head, mischievous eyes, and boyish stubble. He will never be considered good-looking until he abandons that pursuit of chaviness.

‘I am Leo, and I will shock you.’  

The only signs of manhood are his scrubby hairy legs. His slender torso is pale, smooth, and scrawny. Despite the cold, there are beads of sweat across his chest, and if you stand close enough, you’ll recognise that faint smell of a teenage boy. 

Leo is quick, and if you were to fight him, he would be incredibly slippy.

He has no money, and as he brushes past old women, he thinks about stealing a packet of crisps, or a chocolate bar,  but there is nowhere to hide them.

When Leo reaches the newsstand, something catches his eye. He stands and stares, and somebody looks straight back at him. 

Leo studies the fox-like face on the front cover of Vogue magazine. He looks at the gentle lips, that noble nose, and green sex eyes, then notices that the eyebrows have been carefully plucked. Most of all, he likes the thick black curly hair. Leo thinks that he has never seen a man look so handsome.

Leo stares too long and realises that he’s put his hand down the front of his shorts like gangsta boys do.

“You battyboy, bro?” says a gangsta boy voice behind him. Carter, dressed in school uniform, grins over Leo’s shoulder.

Leo clenches his fists and swings around.

“I ain’t no battyboy, bro,” challenges Leo. And in his deepest gangsta  boy voice, tells Carter. “I swear I will bang you if you ever say that again!”

(Image/Vogue/October2022)

Harry’s time will soon run out, and he will be lost forever


One day Harry will grow up. But it might be too late then. He mixes with the wrong people, and when there is trouble, you know he will be involved. He carries a blade for protection because there are many who will hurt him. There is a rumour that he once shot somebody, and that could be true. And you live with the realisation that one day he will come unstuck and will end up in prison or worse.

Harry can lose his temper, and when he is angry, he will strike first, and for that reason we should be afraid.

But those of us who are well acquainted are not scared. If Harry likes you, he will invite himself into your bed and you will not resist.

In the darkest hours, when he is safe in someone’s arms, he becomes the sweetest little boy again, and will love you until morning claims him back.

It happened to me once, and I saw the scars across his chest and stomach from when drug deals had gone wrong. And Harry whispered in my ear that I was one of his boys, and he would protect me.

Harry has been good as his word. He gives me dodgy money, stolen gifts, and friendship, and once beat up my ex-boyfriend because he found out he’d been sleeping with somebody else.

But Harry has never returned, and I live in the hope that he will be back, but I worry that his time will soon run out, and he will be lost forever.

Bad Boy Jamie and emotional drama

(Image/Jason Waud/Pinterest)

It’s two days since bad boy Jamie disappeared. His messages stopped, and he didn’t come around as promised. I was angry, unfriended him on social media, and deleted every trace.

I cannot trust a person who hurt me because I know he will do it again.

Last night, Jamie turned up in a busy bar, and I ignored him. But he kept appearing in the crowd and glancing across.

He messaged me. ‘Sorry I was in a police cell.’

I ignored it, and this meant he had to come over and speak. He asked me if I was turning my back on him. I said yes.

And he got drunker, more desperate, and more apologetic, and this is when he is dangerous, and might end up in a police cell again.

And now, the emotional drama.

‘I understand that you’re angry with me. All I can do is apologise.’

What if I told you I like you

Here we are, face to face. You can’t look me in the eye. “There’s something I want to say,” I tell you. “What is it?” you mumble. “What if I told you I like you,” I say. You don’t answer, but shuffle on both feet. The floor seems more interesting. That silence says everything, but also nothing at all. Are you shocked? Are you pleased? Just say something, and finally you do. “I like you, but…” But nothing. And I walk away.

Bad Boy Jamie and nothing doing

(Image/Jason Waud/Pinterest)


People disappoint me. I have been rejected by bad boy Jamie, and that makes me sad and hurt. He was supposed to come around and gave every indication that he was going to. But his messages dried up yesterday, and today there is silence. I had high expectations, and this always seems to be the killer.

I am wired to form trusting relationships and have people to love. Am I mistaking love for lust? Do I need empathy, companionship, commitment, or consideration? Is Jamie someone I want in my life?

Tonight, I am the victim, and choose to be, and will agonise about things for hours to come. And then, I will be kind to myself, and realise that my energy is better spent elsewhere, and I will get my needs.