3/31/2010

That's My Dog!

If life has taught me anything, it's When In Doubt, Pet the Dog, a periodic column or feature or journal or blog thingy now and forever at Randy Boyd's Blocks.

Here now, a few more lessons learned while petting the dog:

-Boomer's Got Skills

-Boomer Nose Best

-Staying Connected to Your Pet

-America's Next Top Dog Model

-Why Pet the Dog When In Doubt?
-Dog with an Ear for Cell Phone Signals

3/27/2010

Big Boys, Big Toys

My life is now divided into two parts: BT and AT. Before I discovered Trikke and after I discovered Trikke. That's because my life will never be the same after finding my Trikke, or is that, my Trikke finding me?

It is now 1 AT. One year since I was channel surfing and came upon the joyride of the 21st century. My body calls this last twelve months the best year of its life. My soul calls this last 365 a fantastic journey, highlighted by the best Halloween Trikke ride ever!

Thanks to my Trikke, I'm in the best shape of my life. And having the most fun doing it. Doing what? Being my healthiest, dream-come-true self.
"Is the Monster Trikke strong enough for my 'prototype athlete body?'"
Many scientists now believe: the first human to live to age 150 is currently living, and now in their 50s or 60s. At age 48, I've got a shot at living much longer than I ever imagined, if I'm a good boy and listen to science.

Well, I'm no fool, no-sirree! I'm gonna live to be a hundred and fifty-three! Or more! Even though I've got HIV! It can really happen, believe you me!

In 1985, when the virus first became part of me, I was a 23-year-old UCLA grad of one month. Life expectancy was 12-18 months.

As fate and science would have it, I've been fortunate enough to have now lived more than half a life with AIDS. That's 25 years and counting.

Nowadays, my part in staying alive is relatively simple: good diet, good exercise, good medical care, good meds. Oh, and try my best to maintain a healthy, balanced lifestyle, emotionally and physically. That's all. lol
"Yes, I named my Trikke! If boaters can do it ..."
Thanks to my Trikke, I'm having the time of my life staying alive, just one more reason I can say, Dear Magic Johnson, Thanks for Saving My Life.

And just when the giddy little black boy inside me thought his Trikke dreams couldn't get any better, in rolls my new Happy-Birthday-One-Year-Trikke-Anniversary Present, my brand new Trikke T-12 Roadster, the Cadillac Escalade equivalent of every big boys' carving dreams.

Introducing Ebony Star 2, the latest addition to the Trikke Randy garage. Yes, I named my Trikke! If boaters can do it ...

In this edition of Trikke Randy: Is the Monster Trikke strong enough for what a UCLA football coach once called, my 'prototype athlete body?'"

Also in this edition: Because trikking can be educational, I list 10 Things I Learned While Trikking.

Big Boys, Big Toys

It was love at first sight. One year ago, one Trikke infomercial was all it took for me to follow the light. As per the recommendation of the ad, I went with the T-8 model. With the help of the instructional CD, I was up and Trikking in a few days.

Right away, I knew I had a new best friend and a new way to get around. I experienced more joy riding a Trikke for a year than a whole lifetime of riding bikes.

It's a love affair that might have lasted, but along the way, there were a few, shall we say, breaches of trust between my beloved T-8 and me.
"When I first stepped onto my new T-12, I felt like Tom Hanks in Big."
Three times, she broke down on me. Seems she couldn't handle my aggressive riding and became prone to leaving me hanging with broken parts and a broken heart. Thankfully, my local dealer, SouthBay Trikke, was there for me each and every time, fixing her up, getting her going again.

Still, my faith in my T-8 wavered. Was this newfangled bike too fragile for someone six-foot-four, two-hundred-plus-pounds? How long can a passion lasts for something that keeps breaking down?

Thankfully, my visits to SouthBay Trikke exposed me to a Trikke better suited for big boys like me.

One test-ride of my new T-12 Roadster was all it took to keep my passion alive. Once again, I'm in Trikke heaven. My new Roadster from South Bay Trikke was just what the Trikke doctor ordered.
"The T-12 lets you manhandle the road."
When I first stepped onto my new T-12, I felt like Tom Hanks in Big. The foot platforms dwarfed my feet. The T-12 far surpasses the T-8 in sturdiness and power. At first, the T-12 was kicking my ass, not the other way around as it had been with the T-8.

Moving up to a bigger Trikke is akin to working out with heavier weights. It demands more of my body, and my body is able to give back without fear of her breaking down on me.

Curves are to be flown off of. Hills are to be raced down. Inclines are to be conquered. That's the way big boys Trikke. The Roadster lets you do that and more. Rough terrain? The rugged wheels are up for the challenge. More speed? Got that, too. The T-12 lets you manhandle the road.

I'm often asked whether or not Trikkes are sturdy enough for bigger guys. The T-8 might work just fine, if you're a dainty cruiser (not that there's anything wrong with that!). But if you want to own the ground you carve under, go with the Tank, er T-12. The big boy inside will thank you.

10 Things I Learned While Trikking

10. A moderate Trikke ride in cold, crappy weather is better than any workout inside a cold, crappy gym.

9. Trikking uphill or against a good stiff wind does wonders for the arms.

8. Even though “looks like a lot of hard work” is a comment often heard while riding, trikking never, ever, ever! really seems like hard work.

7. Even though trikking never, ever seems like hard work, trikking is absolutely the best form of exercise dreamt up by humankind.

6. Most women look at the Trikke and think, “is it fun?” Most men look at the Trikke and think, “is it a good workout?”
Most kids look at the Trikke and think, “cool!”

5. The word cool is still the word kids use to best describe something they find really, really ... cool.

4. I can't deny the enjoyment of being in the spotlight for riding on this newfangled, extreme-athlete-looking, 21st-century, three-wheel-bike-thingy in what is still most definitely a bike world.

3. This decade or the next will be the decade of the Trikke. The young kids of today see the Trikke and their eyes light up with wonderment, oftentimes so overwhelming they're rendered speechless. In a few years, those kids will be able to speak up a little better. Many of them will want Trikkes! Then their friends will want Trikkes!

2. Someday, Trikkes will be commonplace the world over, like bicycles.

1. Someday, I'm going to miss the enjoyment of being in the spotlight for riding on this newfangled bike-thingy.

3/24/2010

Randy Boyd's Biography

Randy Boyd is the author of four novels, several short stories and many essays, all from the unique point of view of a black man who has been living with HIV/AIDS for more than half his life. His novels have been nominated for five Lambda Literary Awards, including his latest release, Walt Loves the Bearcat, a Lambda Literary Award finalist for Best Romance.

Born and raised in Indianapolis, Indiana, Randy graduated from UCLA in 1985 and has been writing professionally his entire adult life. His fiction has appeared in Blackfire magazine, as well as the following anthologies:
Certain Voices (Alyson Books); Flesh and the Word 2 (Plume); Sojourner: Black Gay Voices in the Age of AIDS (Other Countries); Flashpoint: Gay Male Sexual Writing (Masquerade Books), MA-KA: Diasporic Juks (Sister Vision); and Freedom in this Village: Black Gay Men's Writing 1969 to the Present (Carroll & Graf).

His nonfiction has been featured in the Indiana Word, Frontiers, Au Courant, The Washington
Blade, The James White Review, The Gay and Lesbian Review, The Lambda Book Report, BeyondChron.com and the anthology Friends and Lovers: Gay Men Write About the Families They Create (Dutton). Randy is also a contributor to Outsports.com and the publications of the Black AIDS Institute.

An avid sportsman and fan of his hometown Indiana Pacers, Randy lives in Southern California and has a dog named Boomer, named after the Pacers mascot. Boomer is the inspiration for When In Doubt, Pet the Dog.

3/23/2010

AIDS and Magical Thinking

Once upon a time, there was a little black boy, who was me, whose world was rocked by a little virus that would change his life forever. To survive, he had to dream of better dreams. One of them is my fourth novel, Walt Loves the Bearcat.

Walt Loves the Bearcat
by Randy Boyd

A Lambda Literary Finalist
for Best Romance

Available wherever books are sold

Get Walt Loves the Bearcat at amazon.com

More about Walt Loves the Bearcat


"A madcap whirl, Walt Loves the Bearcat is first and forever a love story, one written with a roller-coaster brio and a magical intensity that demand and deserve the reader’s perseverance."
SF Bay Times (Read full review).

"Warm-spirited ... resonates with soulful queries into the nature of love and life." Bay Area Reporter (Read full review).

3/22/2010

The Secret to Obama's Success

He did it! What no other black man before him had accomplished. He achieved the unthinkable. He became president of the United States of America.

He did it again! What no other president before him had accomplished. He achieved the unthinkable. He made universal healthcare the law of the land of the free.

He was brave enough to stick with his convictions and face his oppressors. It's done. They'll try to undo it, but it's done. It's done.

"Obama has something few men possess."
In less than two years, Barack Obama has achieved the impossible twice. One can just imagine (or see on television) the spinning heads of the scared white racists, er, rebels, er, republicans, decrying: where has our 'whites only' America gone?

When the white man mandated auto insurance, home owner's insurance, driver's licenses, social security, Medicare, some protested, but they got over it. That's because it wasn't personal.

When a black man mandates anything, it's personal. It's personal. It's personal.

So how does this black man, whose middle name is Hussein, keep defying the odds and doing crazy things like winning the presidency and achieving healthcare reform in the blink of an historic eye?

"The president's secret weapon is so innate, it's invisible."

Barack Hussein Obama has a secret that's more like a secret weapon. He has something few men possess, a trait that allows him to outlast the blowhards and remain calm amidst the yelling, screaming and temper tantrums.

It's not his brain, albeit he's one smart man. It's not his charm, although he's quite charming. The president's secret weapon is so innate, it's invisible, so ingrained, it's in his nature, so elusive, it would take Jedi-like training from an early age for an ordinary man to grasp and master.

Barack Obama's secret weapon is patience. He has the patience to pause before reacting, the patience to listen before speaking, the patience to give his brain some perspective. Got an insult? A lie? A spin? An epithet? An accusation? Give it your best shot.

President Obama has the patience to let other reveal themselves for who they are, then reply with a well-thought-out response. By not letting his testosterone run the show, his highly talented brain is better prepared to spring into action. You might say, our president is a James Bond of the mind.

In this day and age, Obama's patience is not only a virtue, it's a must for the survival of America and the world.

3/20/2010

Black People: Your President Needs You!

President Obama and the democrats make a final, weekend push for healthcare reform. To bring America a step further into the modern world when it comes to universal healthcare. To eliminate the right of insurers to drop people from coverage "just because." To help the millions of disadvantaged Americans who turn to the ER for basic medical care.

Meanwhile, republicans are out demonizing, name-calling, fear-mongering, partying like it's 1947. Where's all that love black folk had for the first black president, oh, circa, fourteen months ago? Where's that support now? Where are those voices? Why are so many so silent on such a critical issue for the president? An issue so critical to black people?

I refuse to be a vote that disappeared. I believe President Obama is good for my health. I believe President Obama is good for America's health.

3/18/2010

A New Way of Looking at a-i-d-s

The deadly disease. That's how the media described HIV/AIDS in the 1980s. The tag-lines haven't gotten much better since, not to mention America's dreams of everyday people living with the virus.

To most Americans, AIDS is still the stuff of worst-case-scenario nightmares. To mainstream media, AIDS is still coupled with words like tragic, fatal, death.

And so I began to wonder: what it would be like, seeing those four little letters linked to better words and better dreams, dreams involving feeling strong and alive while living with the virus?

I think I'm going to like this new way of looking at a-i-d-s.

3/17/2010

Black Yell Leader Tells Big White Lie

"It's my parents' anniversary. I'm flying back home to Indiana for the weekend.”

That was my excuse for getting out of the upcoming road trip: USC @ Oregon State. Football season, 1981. The yell leaders were at practice, getting a secondhand reprimand from our yell captain because our yell coach was upset.

None of the yell leaders had stepped up to fill the vacant slot for the road rip. For some reason, no one was eager to travel to an easy win at a win-challenged school in a remote location (where just two yell leaders--the captain and the chosen one—would cheer in a hostile environment with no band, little fan support and perhaps most importantly, no song girls).

"So that explains all that hostility, that resentment."

Longtime USC Yell Coach Lindley Bothwell thought the lack of volunteers showed a lack of commitment and had let it be known: somebody had better man up or else.

“What about you, Boyd?” asked the other yell leaders after they themselves had excused their way out of the trip. I was the last option because two weeks earlier, I had been “chosen” to cheer at the USC @ Indiana game (same two-man deal).

I had been “chosen” for the Indiana road trip because I was from Indianapolis and cheering for USC at ole IU was like my very own personal homecoming. We stayed at the Indianapolis Hyatt and ate at my mom's house. At the game, IU's student section was full of kids who had been my classmates two years earlier at Indianapolis North Central High School.

A good chunk of my 1980 graduating class (circa 1,000 students) had gone to IU for college. In 1981, a good chunk of them saw me cheering at the USC vs. Indiana football game in Bloomington, Indiana.

Perhaps it was those festive mini-reunions with my former classmates that fostered such good spirits between the Hoosier cheering section and the two USC yell leaders. At one point, the females in the IU band's flag corps kidnapped us both and carried us to the student section.

"The same guys who constantly made 'black' jokes surprised me by standing up for me."

SC won the game 21-0 and the road trip was one of my all-time college cheerleading highlights, which was exactly why I now was the last candidate for the vacant spot on the Oregon State trip. I had already gotten mine.

Moreover, I had only “gotten mine” because some of the other yell leaders had lobbied for me to go on the Indiana road trip, seeing as how it was my homecoming. To my astonishment, the same guys who constantly made “black” jokes surprised me by standing up for me. If only I had remembered that before telling a big white lie.

“What about you, Boyd?” asked the other yell leaders, desperate for somebody to volunteer for the Oregon State trip.

“It's my parents' anniversary,” I said hastily. “I'm flying back home for the weekend. Sorry, already have the reservations, been planning it for weeks.”

In truth, there was no anniversary. My parents split up around junior high. I lied because I was tired and needed the rest, not another road trip.

Eventually, another yell leader caved in, went on the trip and saved all our asses, allowing us to finish out the football season as unfired SC yell leaders. The Trojans went 9-2 in the regular season, highlighted by Marcus Allen's Heisman Trophy and John Mazer's great comeback win in the Oklahoma @ SC game.

A late season loss at Washington dashed SC's Rose Bowl hopes, then the Trojans' George Achica block UCLA's last-second field goal attempt and knocked the Bruins out of the Rose Bowl. New Year's Day, the Trojans lost to defending national champs Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl, where I was USC yell leader with a love hangover.

Some time later, after my SC yell career was over, I learned that some of the squad had been angry with me for going on the Indiana road trip with the full knowledge that I was returning to Indianapolis a few weeks later for my parents' anniversary.

Upon further reveal, my lie had sealed my fate, unbeknownst to me.

So that explains all that hostility, that resentment, that distance, thought my newly-informed self, reflecting on a year's worth of ill-will.

My fellow yell leaders thought they had stood up for me for no reason, since I was apparently a rich kid who could jet back to Indiana at will. In reality, we were anything but rich. But I lied, not even realizing how much I had poisoned my world.

By the time I found out, it was too late. The school year was over. My next stop was UCLA. If only I had been honest, my USC yell leading experience might have turned out quite differently.

If only I had remembered that before telling a big white lie.

3/16/2010

Interview with Ryan Phillippe

In 1992, One Life to Live dared to tell the biggest "gay" storyline in the history of daytime television. At the center of that story was a young gay teenager, played by a 17-year-old newcomer named Ryan Phillippe.

Take a trip back to a special, more innocent time and see how history was changed forever, When Ryan Phillippe Had One Gay Life to Live.

3/13/2010

What Be on the Blocks?

What be on the blocks? Provocative creations from the mind of a black author. Like a child who puts blocks together to make words that say something. Here are some of the blocks that are, now and forever, at Randy Boyd's Blocks:

For most of my life, I would have bet the house in Vegas that one of my young black peers would not grow up to become president of the United States of America in our lifetime. How glad I am that I was wrong. And even more grateful I survived long enough to investigate the Obama Files.

The world of sports has been a part of my life since birth. As a adult, my greatest sports dream is seeing athletes finally admit to being like most men, meaning: they've fucked around with other men. Only then will the world lighten up about Homos in Sports.

I like white skin. And black skin. And red skin. And brown skin. And yellow skin. And olive-skinned skin, and so on. Still, most of the world, myself included, is not colorblind. And so we're still Race Relating.

For nearly two decades, I've been a published writer. Most of my credits can be found in my bio, but the actual stories are scatted about the universe. Now my previously published stories are available in the blocks labeled Randy Reprinted.

He's my pride and joy and my constant companion. His name is Boomer, named after my hometown Indiana Pacers' mascot. If nothing else, daddy's special little buddy has taught me, When In Doubt, Pet the Dog.

There's a newfangled bike called the Trikke. I call it pure pleasure on three wheels. Trikking is like skiing on land. It puts ye ole bicycle to shame in the fun department. Trikke fever is catching on. It's given me a new identity and a whole new column on the blocks: Trikke Randy.

My sister taught me cheerleading when I was age seven. By the time I got to college, I was a cheerleading aficionado. It's no wonder I tried out five times and made it five times, at two rival schools no less. Find out what it was like, cheering for USC, then UCLA in the blocks labeled Cheer Up.

I've been HIV-positive longer than I was ever HIV-negative. In fact, I barely remember what it was like, not being my generation's greatest nightmare. Walk a mile in my shoes in HIV-P.O.V..

These are just some of the blocks I like to play with, now and forever on Randy Boyd's Blocks (.com).

3/07/2010

Meet the Kids

As a child, I imagined books and movies about someone like me. Rarely did I see images of people who thought like me, acted like me and with whom I could identify. And that was just in real life! On television, in novels and in the movies, I simply didn't exist.

Makes a brutha feel like Hollywood and the book world can't imagine someone like me being worthy of a plot.

Fortunately, they don't have to. I'm imagining it for them. Here now, my four novels to date. They're like my kids. I'm happy with the way they turned out.

A young black man living with HIV/AIDS dreams of an alternate life where he is HIV-negative and lovers with pro football's greatest quarterback. Or is that, a young black man who is HIV-negative dreams of an alternate life where he's living with HIV/AIDS and never meets pro football's greatest QB? Your ticket is your imagination. Walt Loves the Bearcat, a Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Romance.

A famous but closeted black pop singer tests positive for HIV and plots to assassinate a homophobic US Senator, while a straight white FBI agent goes undercover, as a gay activist, to stop him. Which side will you be on? Uprising, a two-time Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Mystery and Best Small Press Title.

An HIV-positive, black gay businessman must save his business and a friend's life by uncovering a sinister plot to demonize all homosexuals. The mind is a terrible thing to fuck with. The Devil Inside. A Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Best Science Fiction, Horror, Fantasy, and a Gaylactic Spectrum Awards nominee for Best Science Fiction Novel.

A young black man tests positive for HIV, then escapes to Cancun, Mexico, where he meets two white teenage brothers who idolize him, not knowing he is living with HIV/AIDS. It's a friendship that will change all their lives forever. Bridge Across the Ocean, a Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Small Title.

Welcome to my world.

Homophobia in the NBA: Who’s To Blame?

Some are blaming the brutality of the game. Others are blaming the mentality of the athletes. Some are blaming testosterone. Still others are blaming man-made facilities, like locker rooms.

These days, a lot of athletes are good at blaming their behavior and attitudes on things outside their control. The behavior in this case: killing another man’s spirit in the name of preserving one’s own manhood.

That’s what homophobia does. It kills the spirit. It tells little boys with big sports dreams that their big sports dreams are worthless unless they suppress what comes natural to them (regardless of how natural or unnatural it comes to anyone else).
"Please stop killing the spirits of little boys."
You can call someone a fag a lot of ways. You can call them a fag aloud. Or you can deny them access to any particular slice of the American Dream, the one that’s supposed to be pre-ambled with “liberty and justice for all” and “all men are created equal.” Either way, and no matter who and what you blame, you’re still calling that someone a fag. You’re still telling them they are worth less than you. No matter all else, you’re still killing their spirit.

Dear Danny Fortson: when you tell the press that having a gay person on your team “wouldn’t be a good idea” and justify your comments by saying athletes still have a grade-school mentality, not only are you not speaking highly about the mental capacity of your teammates, you’re abusing some kid’s spirit by telling him he’s not a good enough for your world, no matter his athletic ability, because he is worth less than you.

Dear Robert Parish: when you reason that testosterone causes the macho (read: intolerant) and chauvinist environment in the locker room, you’re reasoning that it’s okay for men to behave the way they behave because of an agent in their bodies and chauvinism (which is acceptable?). You’re also saying: screw you, little boy with big sports dreams, grown men can’t help themselves from being heartless souls who treat you like crap and that’s just the way it is. You and your dreams aren’t important enough for me to imagine a better-case scenario or effect change.

Dear Doc Rivers: when you reason away the homophobic reactions of NBA players by saying “guys are brutal,” you’re condoning brutality. Against other human beings. Because guys are brutal, little boy with big sports dreams, and that’s just the way it is. You and your dreams aren’t important enough for me to imagine a better-case scenario or effect change.

Dear NBA, NFL, MLB, et al.: when you cite all the negative reasons why an athlete can’t be himself at all times, you’re telling the little boys and girls of this country that their sports dreams don’t matter, that preserving an environment encouraging behaviors and attitudes unacceptable in the majority of American settings is more important than the spirit of any boy or girl who dare to dream of finding their soul through sport while also daring to dream of loving another of the same gender. You are making a choice to prejudge the situation and the person without a single thought to that person’s ability, that person’s dreams, that person’s feelings. The very definition of killing the spirit.

Dear professional athletes: please stop killing the spirits of little boys and girls in this country by telling them their dreams are worthless. Please give us all a chance to make our sports dreams come true. It will only become a nightmare if we all think the worst and act the worst. If we do the reverse, it just might be a dream come true for all.

  • This article originally appeared on Outsports.com in November, 2005

3/05/2010

The Worst Night in a Black College Boy's Life

“I confessed to one of [my roommates] that I was--I don’t even know the word I used--but we both understood it as gay. Or he probably understood it as queer, since he was from the South.

“Anyway, I told him I was queer and in love with him--again, in whatever inarticulate words my 23-year-old mind used. He moved out the next day, breaking my very adolescent heart and leaving me without a good friend and a roommate.

"The beloved roomie had ratted me out as a fag."

“It all happened toward the end of February. The basketball team was in a heated battle for a berth in the NCAA. After I got home from cheering at the greatest USC-UCLA basketball game ever, the apartment was eerily quiet. Next thing I know, I’m sitting at the kitchen table and reading this very long and angry letter on yellow legal paper.

“The note was from the other roommate, the one I hadn’t been in love with. He wasn’t even a student, just a Hawaiian guy on some Christian missionary-type voyage. Our apartment had been his temporary harbor.

“Turns out, the beloved roomie--who had already moved out--had ratted me out as a fag, so the evangelical roommate moved out while I was at the basketball game, leaving me a vitriolic note telling me all the reasons I was going to hell.

“Life became a blur. I had literally days to come up with all the rent, and before that, coming up with my third was already a monthly challenge. From the moment I read that letter until I graduated a few months later, I went into survival mode.

“My landlords were an understanding elderly couple. They gave me a few extra days to pay the rent and I recruited two strangers who each needed a mattress on the floor--same arrangement, different cast. This time, I kept my mouth shut and concentrated on surviving until graduation.

“The UCLA basketball team’s NIT title run was a godsend, a place to live the last of my boyhood dreams. After the climax of the hoop season, the faculty advisor wanted us to cheer at some volleyball games. I didn’t even bother responding.

“My work was done. I’d given two major universities my life and times and my heart and soul for five years, all while searching for one other male student who thought like me, felt like me, and was compatible enough to be my buddy-for-life.

“The closest I ever got was a guy at USC who once told me he was gay when he was drunk, then later told me he had no recollection of that disclosure when he was sober; and a guy at UCLA who was from the South and thought so much of me that he moved out the day after I told him I was in love with him and very confused about it all.

“I don’t blame him, mind you. He did what he had to do to move on, and eventually, so did I. I spent my last months of college making sure I passed my classes so I could get out of there and never, ever have to look back."


—from Walt Loves the Bearcat
by Randy Boyd
A Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Best Romance

"Warm-spirited ... resonates with soulful queries into the nature of love and life." Bay Area Reporter