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    Sasha Distan
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Bad Stereotypes - 31. Saturday 1st June 2013 (Earlier)

I had grown sick of my life.

My ex-best-friend Zachary Sarver made good on his promise to tell everyone and anyone hoe would listen that I’d come on him and that I was ‘unstable.’ He took David, Miles and coach with him, and when training started again after the New Year I was cut from the team. I was pissed rather than upset, and I decided that running without Zach would probably be easier. He was no longer haunting my dreams or my loins, but I could do without his vicious snipes. The over-excited bouncy kids from gymnastics managed to snag me for my PE lessons, so I spent the rest of the term sitting on a bench at the side of the gym, refusing to dash about and pull interesting poses dressed in spandex and lycra.

I lost friends left, right and centre. Guys with who I shared music suddenly off and hanging in other places, too busy to hang and go to gig. People I had considered decent who dropped homophobic language into conversations all the time, just so that I would know my place, and I felt short in a way I never had before.

Between New Years and my birthday I spent a lot of time on the phone with Dale. My godfather talked me out of quitting school, talked me out of fights, backed me down from the stupid shit I said and thought. I knew that the reason Zach hated me now was my fault, but that didn’t make not having anyone any easier. I stuck to my friends online, and I started running on a much more normal schedule.

I spent my eighteenth birthday in the gay part of the city, stayed in a bar and chatted to guys I knew, flirted a little bit and took the last train home alone. I was proud of myself.

But the last day of term started like every other had for weeks, fighting with my parents. I still hadn’t applied for university, or for any kind of training, and I didn’t yet have a job lined up for the summer. My mother was worried that I was going to just laze around the house and go out clubbing all the time now that I was eighteen. But that morning on the last day of term when all I had to do was go in, sit in a weird congratulatory assembly and get my entire book list signed off to say that I’d returned everything to the school, everything went to shit. I came downstairs to find completed applications lying next to my plate for three different arts and fashion programs and a local dance and theatre academy. I dropped my glass.

“Bay!” My mother turned at the sink and glared at me, “Oh, look what you’ve done.”

“What I’ve done?” I stepped over the broken glass and water, grabbing the papers, “What the hell have you done?”

“You need direction sweetie,” Mum was already sweeping up the broken glass, bustling about like the dutiful housewife, “You just need to sign them and I’ll send them off. You’ll get in I’m sure.”

“What?” My voice was hard edged, and I dropped the pile of applications on the kitchen counter. There were a thousand things I could say to her; I couldn’t draw, I didn’t understand fashion, I didn’t want to stay home, I had no interest in theatre. All of these things I could of said. “Jesus mum! And if I hadn’t come out you’d be signing my up for an apprenticeship with a mechanic’s right?”

“I just thought you might want to meet more people like you darling.”

“People like me?” I echoed, “You think I’ll find people like me at places like that? Do you not know me at all?”

“Well you’re different now.” She started gathering up the forms, tutting.

“Different? Different how?”

“Well you know…” Mum trailed off into silence as she got another glass and poured orange juice from the fridge.

“I know what mum?” I growled, “I know what? I’m different now because I’m gay?” I knocked away the juice she was thrusting at me, “I’m not a different person!”

“Well that nice friend of yours Alex…”

“Aw fuck…”

“Bayer! Do not swear at your mother.” Dad came in behind me with a growl I recognised from every time I’d ever screwed up. I grabbed the applications.

“Do you know about this?” I wheeled on my father, anger sparking at the too-calm look in his eyes.

“Of course I did, I picked them up. You need direction boy, you’re not lazing around here doing your make up and spending all our money on fake tan for the next few years.”

I was staggered, physically. Apparently my parents had decided that all their information on gay culture could be gleaned from dodgy Channel Four reality television shows.

“I’m leaving.”

“Bay!”

“I’m not going to go and do any of that shit!” I thrust the forms at my Dad, “And I’m not staying here!”

“You can’t leave!” Mum was already crying, begging and sniffling.

“D has been saying for months that I can go and stay with him. I’m taking the train south. Today. Now.”

“You may not leave this house young man.” My father pulled himself up to his full height, and there was an authority in his voice that made the child inside me shake in fear of being slapped. I was sick of feeling like a child.

“Stop me.” I snarled. I pushed past him, and walked upstairs to pack my things. Some clothes, mp3 player, laptop, my favourite running shoes. I took my wallet and my phone and the form I needed for school and I walked out of the house of my parents without a backwards glance.

I went to school and walked around the halls where I had first seen Alex, kissed in the shadows under the stairs which led up to history. The place I had first clapped Zach of the shoulder, the physics room where I had nearly told him everything. I handed over my workbooks and I got the teachers to sign the form. I sat in the assembly and clapped in the right places, saw the new running team go up to collect the award for the most external sporting competitions won in a single year, knowing that most of those wins had been mine, and felt generally numb. I called Dale on the way out of school to let him know that I was coming and he told me to ring my parents and at least apologise for all the shouting. I didn’t want to, but I knew he was right.

It was not a great call. Mum wanted me to come home, dad wanted me to go to art school and I told them that I was going to Dale’s for the summer and that I’d call them when I got there. I waited for the train and closed out my social network accounts, deleted all my contacts and my photos and shut down my gaming accounts. I didn’t much feel like talking to anyone at all.

And then there was just me and a handful of other people waiting as the train squealed into the platform to take me away to the city by the sea and a long hot summer where I could start over and hopefully not screw up my life so much.

Copyright © 2013 Sasha Distan; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments

I still don't get, why Zach should hate Bay. Yes, Bay behaved like a asshole after the kiss and could have handled the whole think better. But I don't think the few sentences were so bad, that Zach should hate him. What Bay Said was not nice and propably hurt Zach - but in part they were also facts - Bay is the better runner. But it is not nice to have such things brutally shoved into your face so feeling hurt and getting pissed of is a natural first reaction.

I'm not saying Zach hasn't the right to be really pissed of and in that context I can also understand his threat to out Bay - he was frustrated, hurt and pretty pissed. A lot of People say thinks they don't quite mean under those circumstances.

What I can't understand is that he really Told People that Bay is gay. Granted, if his Friends who stayed over like Bay were the first indes he told, he didn't have much time to cool down. BUT he knew what a shitty thing outing someone against their will is - and did it anyway. Even if I am really pissed of at my best friend, there are usually borders I don't cross - like doing things, that can potentially harm that person.

 

The next thing I don't understand is, why neither of them tried to talk to the other. Well I dort of do understand - if each one thoughtthe other hated them it would be hard to approachthem - BUT I would at least try to apologize.

I had a lot of fights with my best friend while I was in school. We would Start a fight - about such stupid things like the weather - and stop speckig to each other for six weeks as a result - but that was back when I was 13. From 18 Year olds I would expect different behaviour.

But back to the hate thing: I get why Zach could think Bay hates him (if that is what happened), after all he outed him.

Buxtehude would Bay think Zach hates him? Zehs initial reaction to Bay being gay wasn't that bad (it could have been better, but I think that was because of the shock of findig out his best friend is gay and has the hots Form him) and he tried to talk about it to Bay. And while the things Bay Said to Zach weren't nice they weren't unforgovable either. Maybe I missed something? Or had the wrong impression of something?

 

And by the way: Bay's parents are ridiculous to believe into stereotypes even after living with their son for 18 years and since he didn't change that much after being forced out of the closet. But it explaines part of why Bay has the predjudices against other gay people.

Wow. How can a set of parents be sooooo far off base? I know it happens all the time but honestly, where are their brains? Day one Bay is their son, granted a bit fixated on running, and not really looking towards his future, but lots of teens put off thinking about university till they absolutely have to do it. Day two Zach outs him, and his social world goes to hell in a handbasket, then on day 3 Mommy and Daddy, the people who should know him best in the world suddenly decide he should change every thing about himself cause they have this warped picture of what being gay means?

 

Think I am now beginning to understand why so many of my daughters friends, especially the gay ones, keep trying to adopt me!

Well, the title of this story definitely fits in with this chapter. How can Bay's parents be so stupid???? I was reading this with my mouth hanging open! Dance and theater - can you imagine Bay wearing tights and singing to Babs? Omg, lol Art school? Since when has Bay ever done art? Oh, I know, Bay could draw a track and pictures himself running on it. haha His parents really need to join PFLAG or something and get out there so they can realize that they are stereotyping Bay.

 

I also agree somewhat to ninecila's review. Even though Bay overreacted to Zach's calm response to his coming out, Zach should have given him a break. And Bay really did overreact. Maybe if he really thought about it long and hard (haha, get your mind out of the gutter, girl!), he would have realized Zach wasn't trying to emasculate him by being nice to him or treating him the way he did right after Bay came out to him. Out of all the reactions Bay could have gotten, Zach's was a welcome one.

 

Anyway, that's over and done with now and now we know he's on his way to his future. :)

Oh the irony of that last sentence 'where I could start over and hopefully not screw up my life so much' was just too hilarious. Hindsight is a wonderful thing - and I'll say again that your story just gets so much better and is more fun with the switches in time.

Bay's parents are idiots, but I hate his Coach more. What a shitty, unfair thing to do - especially not to include Bay at the graduation ceremony, when he was their most important runner. Getting on that train might have been running away, but he was totally justified and better off.

On 06/22/2013 01:10 AM, Lisa said:
Well, the title of this story definitely fits in with this chapter. How can Bay's parents be so stupid???? I was reading this with my mouth hanging open! Dance and theater - can you imagine Bay wearing tights and singing to Babs? Omg, lol Art school? Since when has Bay ever done art? Oh, I know, Bay could draw a track and pictures himself running on it. haha His parents really need to join PFLAG or something and get out there so they can realize that they are stereotyping Bay.

 

I also agree somewhat to ninecila's review. Even though Bay overreacted to Zach's calm response to his coming out, Zach should have given him a break. And Bay really did overreact. Maybe if he really thought about it long and hard (haha, get your mind out of the gutter, girl!), he would have realized Zach wasn't trying to emasculate him by being nice to him or treating him the way he did right after Bay came out to him. Out of all the reactions Bay could have gotten, Zach's was a welcome one.

 

Anyway, that's over and done with now and now we know he's on his way to his future. :)

Bay is tights....teheheheheh
On 06/22/2013 12:32 AM, ninecila said:
I still don't get, why Zach should hate Bay. Yes, Bay behaved like a asshole after the kiss and could have handled the whole think better. But I don't think the few sentences were so bad, that Zach should hate him. What Bay Said was not nice and propably hurt Zach - but in part they were also facts - Bay is the better runner. But it is not nice to have such things brutally shoved into your face so feeling hurt and getting pissed of is a natural first reaction.

I'm not saying Zach hasn't the right to be really pissed of and in that context I can also understand his threat to out Bay - he was frustrated, hurt and pretty pissed. A lot of People say thinks they don't quite mean under those circumstances.

What I can't understand is that he really Told People that Bay is gay. Granted, if his Friends who stayed over like Bay were the first indes he told, he didn't have much time to cool down. BUT he knew what a shitty thing outing someone against their will is - and did it anyway. Even if I am really pissed of at my best friend, there are usually borders I don't cross - like doing things, that can potentially harm that person.

 

The next thing I don't understand is, why neither of them tried to talk to the other. Well I dort of do understand - if each one thoughtthe other hated them it would be hard to approachthem - BUT I would at least try to apologize.

I had a lot of fights with my best friend while I was in school. We would Start a fight - about such stupid things like the weather - and stop speckig to each other for six weeks as a result - but that was back when I was 13. From 18 Year olds I would expect different behaviour.

But back to the hate thing: I get why Zach could think Bay hates him (if that is what happened), after all he outed him.

Buxtehude would Bay think Zach hates him? Zehs initial reaction to Bay being gay wasn't that bad (it could have been better, but I think that was because of the shock of findig out his best friend is gay and has the hots Form him) and he tried to talk about it to Bay. And while the things Bay Said to Zach weren't nice they weren't unforgovable either. Maybe I missed something? Or had the wrong impression of something?

 

And by the way: Bay's parents are ridiculous to believe into stereotypes even after living with their son for 18 years and since he didn't change that much after being forced out of the closet. But it explaines part of why Bay has the predjudices against other gay people.

i had a really hard time with that chapter where Bay and Zach fight. it needs reworking, but they are two stubborn young men, and Zach feels like he's been lied to for years - then shouted at for being nice.

thanks for the world's longest review, i value the feedback.

On 06/22/2013 01:30 AM, Timothy M. said:
Oh the irony of that last sentence 'where I could start over and hopefully not screw up my life so much' was just too hilarious. Hindsight is a wonderful thing - and I'll say again that your story just gets so much better and is more fun with the switches in time.

Bay's parents are idiots, but I hate his Coach more. What a shitty, unfair thing to do - especially not to include Bay at the graduation ceremony, when he was their most important runner. Getting on that train might have been running away, but he was totally justified and better off.

i love irony...

You know I'm not really sure what to say about his parents...is there sometime of new application for college or universities that has questions that say if gay check here no knowledge of courses required? No doubt about it he definitely got the raw end of the deal. Yes he did have some handing itbut he was really screwed over and shit on. But to be totally honest in my opinion between being a bit spoiled, childish, over thinks stuff, he has been screwed scared and so many others things that no one person should have to deal with in a lifetime. But in the long run over one summer, a few good friends a boyfriend and an understanding godfather, but most of all time I have to say he has turned out and grown up to be a man that I would be proud to call a friend. A work in progress but I would definitely want him as my best friend.....granted knowing what kinds of friends I have that may not be a recommendation lmao.....

On 06/22/2013 06:00 AM, Daithi said:
You know I'm not really sure what to say about his parents...is there sometime of new application for college or universities that has questions that say if gay check here no knowledge of courses required? No doubt about it he definitely got the raw end of the deal. Yes he did have some handing itbut he was really screwed over and shit on. But to be totally honest in my opinion between being a bit spoiled, childish, over thinks stuff, he has been screwed scared and so many others things that no one person should have to deal with in a lifetime. But in the long run over one summer, a few good friends a boyfriend and an understanding godfather, but most of all time I have to say he has turned out and grown up to be a man that I would be proud to call a friend. A work in progress but I would definitely want him as my best friend.....granted knowing what kinds of friends I have that may not be a recommendation lmao.....
Daithi and Bay have an adventure! haha...

What a way to go. His family does not know the right ways to do things for him. His friends has disowned him and he was rejected for awards that should have been his. I think I would have taken the first train out of town period, as long as I could just get the hell out of Dodge.

Ryan did a lot of wrong things also. I guess at their age, it is hard to just talk things out. When you are angry, you can't seem to see past the red. Only time heals things like that. I know that from experience. Sometimes it never gets fixed. You just have to leave it behind and move on.

Hopefully, he will straighten things out with his parents now that he has Isaak to guide him a little, along with his Dale. So much going on here girl. Your imagination is working overtime these days.

On 06/22/2013 06:37 AM, joann414 said:
What a way to go. His family does not know the right ways to do things for him. His friends has disowned him and he was rejected for awards that should have been his. I think I would have taken the first train out of town period, as long as I could just get the hell out of Dodge.

Ryan did a lot of wrong things also. I guess at their age, it is hard to just talk things out. When you are angry, you can't seem to see past the red. Only time heals things like that. I know that from experience. Sometimes it never gets fixed. You just have to leave it behind and move on.

Hopefully, he will straighten things out with his parents now that he has Isaak to guide him a little, along with his Dale. So much going on here girl. Your imagination is working overtime these days.

glad you like joann.

 

Who is Ryan?

I just finished reading the whole story, up to this point, for the first time and it's strong. There is enough blame to go around, as in real life. Bay overreacted, true, but he is young and struggling to cope with some big changes. The glimpses of his background do explain where his attitude came from and it was nice to see him learning to cope with it.

His family and friends were really wrong to think he would become someone completely different because he was gay. I do question that anyone would believe those stereotypes today, but maybe some people do. I'm glad his relationship with Issac is back on track and I am curious about Bay's plans for his future.

On 06/22/2013 07:50 AM, avidreadr said:
I just finished reading the whole story, up to this point, for the first time and it's strong. There is enough blame to go around, as in real life. Bay overreacted, true, but he is young and struggling to cope with some big changes. The glimpses of his background do explain where his attitude came from and it was nice to see him learning to cope with it.

His family and friends were really wrong to think he would become someone completely different because he was gay. I do question that anyone would believe those stereotypes today, but maybe some people do. I'm glad his relationship with Issac is back on track and I am curious about Bay's plans for his future.

thank you very much. you won't have long to wait until the end.

more than enough blame to go around, i like that. also working in schools, you would be surprised at the attitude of some modern parents. they've accepted gay people, just not gay people who don't conform.

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