One thing about being old is that every once in a while
you’ll think of some trivial thing that you haven’t thought of in forever,
something that existed or a way people used to do a thing, something that is
S-O-O-O different from how things are now that you laugh to yourself and think,
“If I told a young person that that’s how this thing was back then, they
wouldn’t believe me.”
And usually, that thought’s the end of that, because it
really isn’t important and there’s really no reason to mention it to anyone.
But I always want to anyway, so here’s one: Tonight I went out for a walk when
sunset was just an orange glow along the horizon and just above it in the
cloudless sky was the
moon and a star (Venus actually, I’m sure), but I thought
“moon and star” because it reminded me of one of those things I hadn’t thought
of in years . . .
In the early 70’s when I was in my early 20’s, I was walking
along the drag among the artists and craftspeople, stopping here and there to
admire their work, and some earrings caught my eye. They were very tiny gold
studs, a pair of crescent moons and next to them, a pair of stars.
And I asked the jewelry maker, “Could I buy one moon and one
star?” At first she said no. What would she do with the mismatched leftovers?
No one would want them.
Because – this is the part no one under the age of about 60 would believe –
back then, people only wore two
earrings that were the same, one in each ear. And those people were always
women (unless you were a pirate, I guess).
Anyway, I finally talked her into it. I couldn’t afford to
buy them both. They were gold! She decided that she could make one more star
and one more moon and have her two matching pairs to sell again.
So I put them in my ears and pretty much kept them there
except for an occasional alcohol rinse for the next ten years or so.
Now what makes it really
something that most people younger than I am would find hard to believe is the
way other people reacted to them. I’d be talking to someone I’d just met and at
some point, nine time out of ten, they’d just stop talking and stare . . . And
I’d stare back, puzzled (because I always forgot) . . . until they said, in a
shocked tone, “Your earrings. They’re not the same. . .”
Well, yes, that was exactly the point, besides the fact that
a gold star and a gold moon is pretty. One major point of being a hippy was to
break rules that made no sense whenever possible.
For some of those rules, it was very, very important to
break them, like a rule that says you must support a war against people on the
other side of the world who pose no threat to you or a rule that says you must
hate and fear gay people.
But some of the rules were just silly, like only women (and
male pirates?) can wear earrings and if you are female you have to wear two and
only two earrings, one in each ear and they must be the same.
Of course, men who had hair half way down their back or in
braids or a ponytail weren’t going to abide by a dumb rule that said only
pirate men could wear earrings, so led by gay guys (who were themselves
increasingly breaking the rule that made no sense about hiding who they were in
the closet), men started wearing one
earring. Having only one made it masculine, you see. And I heard, though I had
no idea if this was true or if true, if it was rigidly enforced, that which ear
your one earring was in announced whether or not you were gay or straight.
And eventually, there were women and men who wore earrings
that didn’t match and more than one in an ear, and nose rings and eyebrow rings
and various other similar things and then there came the tattoos, and it’s been
like that for so long that that’s why I say, you might have to be over 60 to
remember a time when a person would find a woman wearing earrings that didn’t
match so shocking that it would leave them speechless, at least for a few
moments.
As I said, I wore the moon in one ear and the star in the
other for many years and it felt like part of my identity in the way I’m sure
many people feel about their tattoos today.
Terry, who later became the father of my child, came across
a single earring that had a star inside a moon and he wore that for a long
time. So we matched, in a way.
Seeing the moon and “star” tonight looking so beautiful
inspired me to go looking for the earrings and I found them!
I’m not sure the other one is Terry’s. I remember his as
being simpler, more like mine. I think I bought this one because it reminded me
of him and I was feeling sentimental. But that’s the other thing about being
old. Your memory is probably not as great as it once was, but more to the point
you’ve had longer to be convinced that we all, at every age, don’t remember
things as well as we think we do, especially about things that happened a long
time ago.
So that’s my story about something that’s really of no
importance except to remind us how much things change and no one really notices
or thinks of it once the change is done. Except those of us who were there, and
once in a while are reminded, “Can you believe that it used to be that . . .?”
Well, that was a lot of words about something of no
importance, really, which is why I don’t usually bother to write these, “I just
remembered how it used to be and it seems so weird now . . .” thoughts down. In
the meantime, my moon and star are back in my ears as I write and maybe I’ll go
back to wearing them all the time.