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Dear Mom and Dad, As My Gay Transvestite Roommate Was Saying the Other Day . . .
May 17, 2002
by John Bloom
NEW YORK, May 17 -- "Coed roommates" sounds like an
Internet sex site, but it's actually the official housing policy
at places like Antioch College, the University of Massachusetts,
Tufts University, Swarthmore, and other colleges in the
Northeast.
To which I say: What an absolute nightmare. Not just for the
masochistic university official who volunteered to supervise this
can of poisonous Mesopotamian sand-worms, but for the poor
deluded souls who actually sign up for cohabitation and then try
to have inter-gender discussions about pressing issues like the
volume of the stereo, the relative importance of misplaced
toothpaste caps, and the appropriateness of a black-light Jenna
Jameson poster on the walls. If your opponent is a girl, you
can't even have a fistfight or a beer-chugging contest to decide
the outcome.
Tamar Lewin, a reporter for The New York Times, wrote a
basically approving "trend" story about this phenomenon, in which
various enlightened students and school officials talk about
fighting against the "heterosexist" housing policies of the past.
That would be the ones that put boys with boys and girls with
girls.
The problem, it seems, is that the definition of "boy" and
"girl" is now hopelessly out of date. What about a gay boy with a
straight boy? The article implies that this creates too much
pressure on the gay guy, who is forced to listen to conversations
about hot babes on campus. There's virtually no sympathy
expressed, however, for the straight guy. Why wouldn't it be
equally horrific to be forced to listen to Judy Garland records,
overhear phone conversations about his paper on Edith Piaf, or
accidentally sample the new Jeff Stryker video?
Then there's all your other various combinations--gay women
who want to room with gay women, gay women who want to room with
gay men, "transgender students" who want . . . actually, I'm not
sure what they would want, and, yes, straight men and straight
women living in the same room but swearing to the university
housing official that they won't have sex--except at Antioch,
where they specifically want to have sex.
Obviously these new enlightened student housing policies
have forgotten the first rule of dorm life:
You'll always end up hating your roommate anyway.
My college roommates included:
1) a neurotic Jewish guy who always thought I secretly hated
him, long before I started really hating him for constantly
reminding me that I secretly hated him, resulting in a shouting
match in which I said "I never even thought about Jews before I
met you, it would take me years to hate the whole race."
2) a preppie from New Hampshire who woke up the whole dorm
one night, standing in the middle of the quad in his underwear,
playing his alto saxophone. No one was alarmed at first, and then
we discovered that he was not drunk.
3) a marijuana-loving comedian from Alabama who built a
stack of records and books in one corner of our room that looked
like the revolutionary barricades in "Les Miserables."
4) a millionaire's son who liked to wake up in the middle of
the night and say "Hey, are you awake?" so he could talk about
how we could bribe state officials to find out where the new
exits on the interstate were going to be and thereby become rich
through land speculation.
5) a guy who sold fake Norman Rockwell paintings out of our
room. Fortunately he flunked out after one semester.
6) a proud redneck from Arkansas who once drank two cases of
beer in one weekend (okay, I helped) and then smuggled three
hookers into the room and passed out, leaving me to pay them and
get rid of them.
7) a gay guy. The gay guy was a journalist full of
excruciating moral dilemmas that had nothing to do with being
gay. Actually, I would have appreciated a little homosexual angst- -that would have been interesting. He was more interested in
whether there should be a permanent World Court at The Hague. I
never even knew he was gay until two years after we roomed
together.
Anyway, my point is that I like all these guys--now. I even
occasionally liked them while we were living together. The
millionaire kid had a personal valet who came by and picked up
our laundry, so that was a plus. But nine times out of ten, any
college roommate situation is playing Russian Roulette with a
fully loaded pistol. You've got that 19-year-old energy building
up in the room like Freddy Krueger's furnace, and sooner or later
somebody is going to end up with shaving cream on their sheets.
Now you're going to add into that equation female energy with
the male energy? Are you saving up story ideas for Edward
Albee or something?
The colleges say they have this under control because they
do such careful pre-screening. They make sure that the roommates
are not interested in each other sexually, for one thing.
Obviously the bureaucrat who wrote this policy has never
witnessed an office romance. The girl may look like your idea of
warmed-over corned beef hash, but when you spend every day with
her, there's going to be that moment when the bare shoulder, the
funny laugh, or the overheard conversation with her girlfriend
when she talks about getting naked at the bachelorette party,
suddenly zaps you, and you start wondering what's under
there.
It works the same way in reverse, too. "I used to think he
was a loser, but then I saw the way he took care of his
chihuahua, and I don't know, he's just so sweet." Pretty soon
you've got full-bore heterosexuality flailing around on your
modular dorm couch, followed by the morning-after session of
"What did we just do?," followed by the decision to either do it
again or to break it off, followed by the strained silence
because one person wants to continue the sex and one person wants
to quit.
Plus there's the universal rule of human sexuality: As soon
as you make a formal agreement not to have sex with someone, you want to
have sex with them. I would think that at a college, of
all places, they would tend to understand these things.
What flusters me, though, is the sheer variety of sexual-
orientation combos in these new dorms. Some lesbians want to room
with other lesbians. Some lesbians don't want the sexual tension
of another lesbian but they don't like heterosexual guys either,
and homosexual men rarely mix well with homosexual women. (Okay,
don't shoot me, it's just something I've noticed. I could be
wrong.)
And then you have the category of . . . "the curious and
questioning." I'm not making this up. Instead of checking the
"straight" box, the gay box, or the "transgender" box, you can
put down "I don't know what I am." And they'll put you in the
special dorm with a roommate who could turn out to be nine kinds
of sexual surprises.
Think about it, though. If the guy doesn't know whether he's
gay, straight or bisexual, that could mean two things. Either
he's such a wimpy chameleon that he'll take on the sexual
identity of whoever's standing next to him (please pick that
roommate carefully), or he's so David Lynch-level kinky that
he'll be sneaking out in the middle of the night to torture his
pet rats. Either way, I don't think the answer is to say, "Here,
meet Hans, your cross-dressing German exchange student roommate.
He has a cool Swastika tattoo."
My advice would be to follow the policy of Oxford and
Cambridge. "Here's your apartment. We don't want to know who
comes in and goes out of it. Just show up for class." Then fifty
years later you read about the freaky stuff in a cabinet
minister's memoirs. By then the statute of limitations has run
out. Believe me, it's easier on everybody.
© Copyright 2002
United Press International and John Bloom