November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: Opinion

Corvino: A personal tragedy

, columnist, 365gay.com

Chad and I met on my first visit to Detroit, back in the spring of 1998.  “Damn, he’s good-looking,” I thought to myself–a familiar reaction for those who met Chad.

He was thin then–he didn’t become a gym bunny until a few years later–but it was his handsome face and his unassuming manner that captivated me.  He had piercing blue eyes and a gentle, welcoming voice.  I was in town to look for an apartment, but I remember hoping that we would meet again upon my return and that the “boyfriend” he introduced me to was merely a temporary fling (I was single at the time).

As it turned out, his relationship with the boyfriend grew stronger and I acquired one of my own in the months prior to relocating. But Chad and I became friends, and a year later we decided to buy an old duplex together and move in with our respective partners.

Within 18 months both relationships soured, a development we always jokingly blamed on the house.  Nonetheless, Chad and I kept things platonic.  He seemed to have difficulty being single, and no sooner did he break up with one boyfriend than he would cling to another.

Seldom did his friends approve of the choices.  The bolder ones would tell him what the rest of us were thinking:  “You’re good-looking, you’re an attorney, you’re charming–a total ‘catch.’  Why are you dating this mooch?”

Chad’s good nature sometimes got the better of him; besides, he seemed desperately afraid of being alone.

He was also deeply closeted.  Having grown up with a fundamentalist upbringing, attended school at Hillsdale College, and chosen a fairly conservative profession, he was terrified of people–and in particular, his family–finding out that he was gay.

Once, when we were walking through a suburban downtown with our boyfriends, he suddenly disappeared.  A few minutes later we discovered that he had ducked into a store after spotting some law-school classmates across the street and feared that our presence would somehow “out” him.

While the dual life he led took an emotional toll on him, it also created (or perhaps exacerbated) some unfortunate character traits.  To put it bluntly, Chad was someone too comfortable at lying.

This manifested itself not only in his closetedness, but also in his cheating on his boyfriends, and ultimately, in his gradual spiral into drug use, which he kept largely hidden from those friends (like me) he knew would object.

Of course, it’s hard to keep some things hidden for very long.  I had heard from mutual acquaintances that Chad was using crystal meth, though he denied it (and later, when that became too implausible, falsely claimed that he had since stopped).  Eventually he lost his job, not to mention many of his friends.

I tried to remain close with him, even after I moved out of the duplex, but it became increasingly difficult as his drug use increased.   One day a routine check of my credit report revealed missed payments on our mortgage.  Chad, I discovered, had not paid for months, even though he continued to collect my contribution.

I will never forget the look of shame and despair on my friend’s face when I confronted him:  he had hit rock-bottom, and he could no longer conceal it.

We met for lunch about a month after that.  I urged him (as many times before) to get counseling, and for the first time he seemed somewhat open to it.  He claimed that he was taking several steps to get his life back on track.

I was reminded that day of the reasons I had grown to love him:  his gentle, reassuring manner; his endless well of charm; his fundamental kindness.  Maybe, I thought, he could get treatment for his depression, stop self-medicating, and tap into his enormous potential.  I felt hopeful.

Two weeks later, I stopped by the duplex to pick up a check from my tenants.  Chad was outside, pleading with the electric company not to turn off his power.  I called him later, but he never answered my call or returned my message (it had become a familiar pattern).

That was the last time I saw him.

The following week, on Sept. 29, 2004, Chad committed suicide, hanging himself in the basement of the home we had once shared.  My tenants found him.  He was 32 years old.

At the reception following his memorial service, the boyfriend I had met on my first visit to Detroit turned to me and said, “We failed him.”

“Yes,” I replied, “but he failed us too.”  Five years later, both claims still pierce me.

*************************************

John Corvino, Ph.D. is an author, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. His column “The Gay Moralist” appears Fridays on 365gay.com.

For more about John Corvino, or to see clips from his “What’s Morally Wrong with Homosexuality?” DVD, visit www.johncorvino.com.


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  • Raymond H. Clark Said: October 8th, 2009 at 8:35 pm
    • Memory eternal!

      May he rest in peace and rise in glory!

      Bud Burgoon-Clark
      San Diego CA USA

  • Facebook User Said: October 5th, 2009 at 9:23 pm
    • Sir:
      I was a closet case for 48yrs. Partly because of a career(Army for 26 yrs) and the other was a responsibility I assumed caring for my disabled brother and mother(both deceased). I suffered for 48 yrs with terrible migraine headaches and never knew why. I came out of the closet last Jan ‘08. The migraines ceased almost over night. I have only had two attacks since then. During those 48 yrs I knew of people who commited suicide and even some that forced law enforcers to do it for them. I have watched friends and relatives slowly die of HIV/AIDS. I often wondered why I was spared. The one thing that has kept me going was the spiritual befief in GOD! I rationalized that God must have some purpose for me to do, some destiny to fulfill. I never thought that I would ever find a partner, but God in his merciful guidance, allowed me to find the right man without any trouble. We have been together for a while, and looks like for a very long time to go. Life has not been easy, but everything I have exerienced, good, bad, or indifferent, all had very excellent lessons to be learned. I have to admit, that I am still learning new ones every day. Such is the life we live, learn, and follow. I have one quote that I have followed and tried to live by:

      In all Things of the World,
      Know Thyself first,
      Then all Others shall come to Light!

      Socrates

      Thank you, Dr Corvino, for that very poignant and moving story. It really served to totally reinforce everything I believe in! NJMJr!

  • Dr. Peter Said: October 3rd, 2009 at 5:43 pm
    • ….and, now, Dr. Corvino makes me weep yet again! My bio—my story.

      Respectfully

  • teachermahn Said: October 3rd, 2009 at 2:21 pm
    • I am a 43 yr old man. at 39 I decided to go back to school and get my degree. There was one major problem, I was into the “party” scene. I had only been “partying” for about 5 years. How I kicked my addiction was to alienate ALL of my friends while I was in school and made new ones. It was very difficult and I really wanted to hang with my old friends, but I knew NO good would come of that. People who do drugs are not necessarily bad people, they just make bad choices. I went through a small depression and finally got myself on track. I earned a 4 yr degree in 2 yrs and I haven’t looked back. I couldn’t imagine having to live in the closet too. You did not fail Chad. He failed himself. People will only change when they want to, you can’t make them.

  • Robert Katz Said: October 2nd, 2009 at 6:39 pm
    • This is a chilling reminder that drug-use is still widespread in our community. There are certainly many people who can party occasionally without any apparent adverse effects; I don’t begrudge them the choice of doing so. In your friend Chad’s case however, what occurred was the descent into full-scale addiction.

      Your story illustrates quite clearly the costs of being stuck in the closet. Living in fear of being “outed” and thus rejected can result all too often in a level of stress for which many have found no other remedy than self-medication as a means to escape the emotional discomfort and self-loathing.

      After a certain point addiction takes on a life of its own and it can be very difficult to turn one’s life around. Your friend Chad unfortunately sounds like one of those so used to keeping his own counsel that he was either unwilling or too scared to admit he needed help until he reached a point where suicide seemed like the only way out. Sadly, I have known a fair number of people over the years who’ve taken exactly that route and for exactly that reason.

      While recovery is possible, it is not easy; too many give up before they’ve truly given it a chance and the result is as you’ve described. I am sorry for your loss.

  • nurmihusa Said: October 2nd, 2009 at 5:32 pm
    • People who have never experienced depression do not know – can not know – what a burden it is to live with. Living NEXT to it is difficult enough, living IN it is orders of magnitude different. Do not think you failed him. You didn’t. That he survived as long as he did, despite the obvious pain, is a testament to your efforts and to his.

      AND YET… If he were dying from, say, colon cancer, his insides rotting away millimeter by agonizing millimeter – would you consider it a victory to insist he live with that torture yet one more day? Or could you discover a measure of peace knowing that his suffering had finally come to an end?

      There are things much worse than death. Much, much worse.

 
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