Memories, experiences and musings of a writer who wrestles with life, with its sublime passions and its strange and ferocious obsessions.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Where to begin? Long before November 2001, I came across a site called Rec Pro Wrestling (or something close to that). The site offered lots of pictures and several videos, and I spent a lot of time exploring it. I think I discovered Bill Hughes there. And the site was where I first learned about other wrestlers that I've been in contact with since—some I've wrestled and some I haven't.
My favorite on Rec Pro was a big fellow named Larry. He was everywhere there, wrestling a lot of guys and, I imagined, having a blast doing it. But he was so omnipresent and advanced, I thought I was in no way ever going to get my hands on that man. I thought many times about trying to find an email address for him so that I could send him some fan mail.
Then one day in 2001 the unthinkable happened. I don't remember now what wrestling directory I was part of at that point—maybe something connected with Rec Pro, but that doesn't seem right. Anyway, I got into my email that day and found a message . . . from Larry! I wish I still had that email, but I'm sure I've lost it somewhere along the line. The bottom line was that he'd seen my profile and was interested in getting together for some wrestling. I remember writing back—Larry still laughs about this—and opening my email with something like, "This is the Larry?"
Larry was living in Atlanta at the time, and as it turned out, I had to go there on business that November of 2001. We made a date and got together in my hotel room for some wrestling. I was giddy to be wrestling with him. He was patient with me, teaching me all sorts of fun stuff about pro wrestling and exchanging holds with me. We had a great time then and have wrestled three other times since—once in Nashville and twice in the Midwestern city where he lives now. He's always been a great teacher and a generous wrestler, allowing and encouraging my penchant for the head scissors. When we talk on the telephone, which we do every few months, he's always kind enough to tell me he'd like to be in that head scissors at that moment. Needless to say, the feeling is always mutual.
Larry has had some health issues over the years that I've known him, but he's nearly recovered from it all now. I recently saw some pictures of him in action again, and I was thrilled to see him—and only a little jealous that another man was on the mat with him and not I.
Friday, September 4, 2009
He arrived at my hotel room door at the appointed time. I remember that he was a handsome man about the same age as I was then—right around 40. If I remember correctly, his hair was kind of a light brown, but he was dark of skin and eye. Again, I'm stretching my memory here, but I think that he was around 5'10" and in the neighborhood of 210-220. When he took off his shirt to wrestle, he was broad in the chest, maybe medium hairy and had great pecs. He didn't talk much, and we had a good quiet wrestling match there on the bedspread in the space between the bed and the wall, just beneath a window looking out on the city.
The one thing I remember is that I used a lot of head scissors variations on Tom, and he indulged me and remained patient. I seem to recall working him over with a figure-4 head scissors, sitting there leaning back on my hands and just being able to look over the windowsill at the city. After such a long break from wrestling, I enjoyed having my hands on Tom and my legs wrapped around his head in various ways. I don't remember any particular holds that he used. Maybe he was a jobber. But I kept him in a head scissors for so long that when we were finished wrestling I thanked him for being so patient with my special interest.
I've had very few matches that I didn't enjoy. And I haven't often gotten the impression that when a wrestler and I parted ways he was disappointed for having wasted time on me. But I think that Tom must've been disappointed in our match. He didn't talk much, as I said, but I don't remember any great enthusiasm from him for the experience we'd just shared. I might be remembering this all wrong, but I generally can recall those impressions that have been part of my matches and their aftermath.
I lost touch with Tom pretty quickly after we wrestled—another reason that I think he probably didn't enjoy the experience much. But I've always wished we could get together again and maybe make it more about him this time.
Monday, August 31, 2009
Saturday, August 8, 2009
At some point, R emailed me--or we talked on the telephone, as we used to do often--and said he was coming up near my area to see one of those big Bill Gaither singing extravaganzas. He would be close enough to come my way and get a motel room for the night where we could wrestle.
The October day finally arrived. So did he. And so did I.
We did some pretty good wrestling on the top of the king-sized bed in his room. I got to play around with my head scissors variations, and he got to do the holds he liked, which I don't remember right now. The only negative thing in the match was that he was a talker and constantly talking through the wrestling. He didn't trash-talk, for which I was glad, but he talked all the same. When he had me down in a headlock, for example, he was constantly saying stuff like, "Wanna rassle?"
Like the big guy from New Jersey that I'd wrestled in the spring and the choir director in the summer, R wanted to wrestle naked after we'd wrestled in our briefs for awhile. I'd become fairly comfortable with this (although as I write, I don't think I've wrestled naked since), so I had no problem with it.
But something different was present in this match. R had brought in a little TV with a VHS player. To my amazement, he had a video tape that was I-don't-know-how-many minutes of nothing but head scissors holds. Couple that with the heightened eroticism of wrestling naked, and I found myself in a new situation. Before when wrestling naked, I was either just trying to survive or afraid of getting caught. The nakedness never really seemed that much different in those cases from wrestling in briefs, and to my knowledge I never got a significant erection.
But again, this was different. At a crucial point, I had R in a figure-4 head scissors, and I sat there leaning back on my hands, his head caught between my thighs and calf and the TV full of head scissors right there in front of me. And suddenly--talk about your significant erections--my penis was hard between the back of R's head and my lower belly. The wrestlers wrestled on TV, head scissors after head scissors. The wrestlers wrestled on the motel bed, R shifting all around and struggling to get out of my head scissors. Too much stimulation!
For the first--and only--time, I ejaculated during a match. I couldn't stop it. And when it happened, I was stunned and embarrassed. I released the hold immediately and lay back, my face burning. R was unruffled. He came up and lay beside me and, mostly through body language, indicated that he now wanted me to jerk him off. I couldn't do it. I was finished. I apologized and got up to go clean myself off.
When I came back, I got dressed. Not wanting to run out on him, I took him out to Arby's for supper before I headed home.
It would be over a year before I could bring myself to wrestle again.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Monday, July 27, 2009
I'm wrestling with some different things this morning. Over the weekend, a younger man (39) that I know drowned in a local river. At first, this is all that I knew. But the next morning in the newspaper, a brief front-page story provided more details. Apparently "Gerald" was on the side of the river opposite a campground. No mention was made of anybody's being with him on his side of the river. Several campers saw him wade into the water and start swimming their way. A couple of them reported that he seemed inebriated, which detail, because this was little more than conjecture based, I assume, on his behavior, I thought it rather tacky of the newspaper to print. But print it the paper did. Anyway, in the middle of the river, Gerald seemed to be struggling and began trying to make his way to a rock raised out of the water. He didn't make it. He called out for help and went down. No going once, going twice and gone the third time, as on TV. He went down, and that was it. A couple of the campers apparently jumped into the water, but when they got to the area where he disappeared, they couldn't find him.
The authorities drug the river for a time, but they were unsuccessful. Finally divers went in and found the body some 20-30 feet away from where Gerald was last seen. The current in that section of the river is gentle, and while it probably had little to do with his drowning, it was strong enough to float the dead body beneath an underwater rock ledge.
I know this drowned man's mother. She is completely devastated, which is understandable. She screams and cries and wants to die, apparently completely thoughtless of the husband and son and grandchildren she would leave behind. But this is the way of many people around whom I've grown up and lived. I don't call it ignorance or selfishness, although these must be in the mix somewhere. Maybe it's some long learned tradition in the vein of sack cloth and ashes and the wailing wall. Whatever its component parts and influences, at its most genuine it seems a witless abandonment of life and reason inspired by a simple and overwhelming grief. Sometimes it seems like a performance for the benefit—whatever that might be—of the pitcher of the fit, but not this time, I think. Hers is raw emotion devoid of reason and driven by grief in its most beast-like form. I shudder at it. Until the beast releases her and reason begins to make its way back into her soul, she is a thing that I can't deal with except to watch in horror.
I have children of my own, and if I should lose one of them I suspect that my grief would attack me in similar ways, although the outward signs of its grip might not be so freely and wildly expressed. What I might dread most of all is facing for years the realization that my child apparently died for nothing—a prey to drunkenness, perhaps, or some moment of "watch-this" machismo. If he should die in such a place and in such a way, I would, of course, prefer him to be in the act of trying to rescue somebody else or to be suddenly and unexpectedly overwhelmed by careless nature.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Monday, July 6, 2009
I felt something different this past weekend when I learned of the death of another wrestler. My friend Ed. As with Bill, I don't remember when I first found myself in touch with Ed. I think he was living in Memphis but was at the point of moving somewhere else. Oklahoma maybe. I never met him in either place, and we didn't really keep in touch very well. But then he moved again, this time to Indianapolis, a city where another of my good wrestling friends lives. With two of them there, I had a goal to work towards, and eventually I made it there to wrestle them. But I'm getting ahead of myself.
Readers of this blog will know that my favorite hold is the head scissors. They probably get tired of being reminded of that. But that was what brought Ed and me together. That was his favorite hold as well. Once my Indianapolis trip began to come together, we emailed each other often to suggest variations of the hold that we might try when I arrived. We were quite excited.
When I arrived in Indianapolis, my schedule demanded a doubleheader. I wrestled my friend Larry first--our fourth meeting, I think. We had a great time as usual, although he was somewhat handicapped by an injury and was also in recovery from a serious health issue. We'd been wrestling for an hour or more when Ed called. He told me that his dog was terminally ill, so he didn't have a long time to wrestle. That was disappointing for both of us, but I understood. Larry and I were still wrestling when Ed knocked on the door. The two of them knew each other, so we had a nice little visit. Before Larry departed to leave Ed and me to it, he took this picture of me working Ed over with a head scissors.
I remember that Ed and I created a little video of our wrestling. When the clip was finished, he hovered over my shoulder to watch it. He was sweating a great deal--both of us were--and he kept wiping the drops from where they fell on my shoulder or thigh. We had a great time that evening and both looked forward to wrestling again--a longer meeting this time.
But then I got Larry's call this weekend. He had tried to call Ed for the first time in a year or so. The man who answered told him that Ed died back in the winter. We don't know how. He was a strong sixty-something, as you can see in these pictures. I'd been afraid that something had happened to him. We hadn't emailed in some time--almost exactly a year--but I'd emailed him just recently to check in. When I didn't receive anything back from him, I was uneasy, but I hoped he was just busy.
Here's the brief text of my last two emails from him:
"Sure wish I had ur head in a good fig 4 scissors..... damn" (7/8/2008)
"Louisville might be doable, M.... I look at the pic of you in my head scissors from time to time and have good memories.. I love that action and I know you are about as hooked as I am.... Nothing like two big men going at it and having a good bonding session based on this masculine, primal and visceral action.....!!!!" (7/9/2008)
Sunday, June 28, 2009
K is a big fellow like I am—weighing in somewhere in the upper ranges of the 200s. We wrestled again during this trip and had a fine time doing so. Like before, I was unable to get a single submission from him. Nothing stops him, it seems. Nothing I can do, at least. We wrestled, we talked, we wrestled some more. It was on this trip that he told me one of the most interesting things that I've heard from another wrestler, something that has haunted me in the years since. He was talking about when he learned that he was gay. It's a simple story with complicated consequences (at least in my view). He was dating this girl, and he was spending time at her house, like daters do. Maybe they were getting along all right—going out to dinner on the weekends, going to movies, maybe over to Cincinnati to the amusement park, sprawling and cuddling on the couch to watch TV. The things that dating people do, you know. My guess is that at some level he felt comfortable with this "normal" experience.
But she had brothers. Maybe he knew them from high school or work or the local bar. Maybe he just met them when he first came to pick her up. I picture it like this: as he grew more comfortable being in their home, he began to horse around with these guys, these brothers of his girlfriend, and this horsing around included some wrestling in the back yard. But what K discovered was that he had a strong physical reaction to this wrestling, different from and stronger than the reaction he had cuddling on the couch with their sister. As might be expected from a smart man like K, this situation—reactions, feelings—wasn't swept to some dark corner of his mind, nor did he try to ignore it altogether. Eventually, as he analyzed it, he came to the understanding that he was gay. How his life progressed from his time in that house to our wrestling on the motel floor, I don't know. But I enjoyed the time we spent together, and I learned a lot about wrestling life from him.
Something different happened with J. He and I had been online friends for some time. We shared a lot of interests and similar professional situations. We had chatted online for a few years and done some fun cyber-wrestling. But when we met in person I couldn't enjoy wrestling him. I had tried to convince myself that I was a wrestle-anytime-anywhere-with-anybody kind of guy. Such a guy, I believed, without a physical agenda or preferences for certain looks and such, couldn't be in it for anything but the wrestling. To that point, however, I hadn't wrestled anybody under 200 lbs. J weighed in in the 170s. He was all sharp points, all bones and muscles without any of the big belly and big thighs I associated with wrestlers from my days of watching it on American Saturday mornings. J was a good wrestler, but try as I might, I couldn't enjoy wrestling him. It wasn't being stabbed by his points—knees, elbows, etc. I recognized that I had a wrestling fantasy and along with this recognition came the realization that I had a body type I liked to wrestle, which in turn suggested that I had a body type that I was attracted to.
This hasn't led me to conclusions and understandings K came to partly through wrestling his girlfriend's brothers. Maybe I'm not gay. Or maybe I'm not brave enough or honest enough to follow through with considering the full implications of this. Maybe it's just as simple as having a wrestling fantasy and that big men fulfill that fantasy, which is all in fun (with a little homoeroticism thrown in). Maybe not. Maybe it's far more complicated than I'll ever understand.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
An Email
Great to hear from you, Xxxxxxx. I hope life is going well for you in every way, and I'm glad that you're still checking out the blog and keeping in touch from time to time.
The play has bogged down for the moment but only because I've been getting back into a mystery novel I've had under construction for some time. Although I don't always write about wrestling, the novel features a good bit of it as well. I'm currently at around 207 pages.
I agree about the intimacy issue. Wrestling is an intimate activity, no question about that. The assumption often is, then, that to enjoy that intimacy outside sanctioned events--organized wrestling bouts, amateur or pro--suggests homosexual activity or, at least, homosexual desire. But to me this isn't the case. To enjoy wrestling, to enjoy the intimacy of physical contact with another man, isn't, for me, homosexual in nature. I recognize the obvious homoerotic in wrestling, but I understand that as being different from the homosexual. In fact, much pro wrestling foregrounds the homoerotic, and fans are, oddly, either oblivious to it or, what's even more intriguing, comfortable with it.
Interesting stuff to think about!
All best--Xxxxxxx
Thursday, June 4, 2009
For Bill
Check out the body scissors beginning at around 4:00. You get a lot of the variations in a single sequence.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Another Match Remembered
He was coming through the town I was living in part time, and he contacted me via email. I checked out his profile. Wow! Here's a guy who was big and strong, a guy who had apparently won some kind of award for wrestling. At first I was quite excited about this potential match with a big guy--6'3" and 265. But as I thought about his experience and his size, I wondered if this was the right thing to do for a guy who was still basically a newbie.
At some point, Ray asked for my telephone number, and I gave it to him. He called and came on with a really strong sales pitch. Now, I'm not much on salesmen, so his rapid-fire delivery seemed like another negative. I was all ready to decline to meet him when he turned up both the friendliness and the pressure.
I buckled.
On the night that he was in town, I met him at his motel. I was nervous, but he was a nice guy and now that match was sold he was less pushy. We had a good chat and cleared our space for wrestling. He changed into his singlet--the first guy I wrestled with real gear--and I into my no-fly briefs.
From the moment the bell rang, he was all over me--strong wrenching holds, twisting me this way and that, working me into whatever hold he pleased. I seemed absolutely powerless. I've got some weight and a little bit of strength, but I was no match for Ray.
Thankfully he was a good man along with being a good wrestler. He released me as soon as I submitted to this hold or that--and I submitted often, once to a head scissors so powerful I thought the top of my scalp was going to pop off. He wasn't really a teach like some others have been, but he had a level of enthusiasm for wrestling that nobody I'd met so far could match.
It was this enthusiasm of his, I think, that also allowed me to experience something I don't believe I'd yet experienced--wrestling naked. Once we'd gone several falls--all of which he won handily--he simply asked if I wanted to wrestle naked. Without giving it much thought, I said, "Sure." So, we stripped off our singlet and briefs and wrestled some more. Everything went mostly as it did before, although I got him in one halfway decent head scissors. I was able to hold it for a few seconds, but then he was out of it making me submit to who-knows-what hold of his own. Wrestling naked seemed like no big deal, and so I've never been afraid to do that since, although it hasn't come up that often.
When it was over, we had a friendly parting, and I walked away glad for the experience but in no way anxious to take Ray on again . . . ever.
Friday, May 22, 2009
An Observation
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Wrestling Drama
Today, however, with a lull in my "have to" work and some other future work not yet pressing, I decided to close my office door and try some writing. Oddly enough, I started looking at this one-act play I started some months back—maybe more than months. I've never written a play. I've seen several and I've read several, but I've never tried to write one. But over the years, the "scene" of to two strangers, known only to each other through the Internet, meeting in a motel room to wrestle has seemed to me one of the oddest things I've come across—and not only come across but participated in.
And in thinking back across the many such meetings I've had, I began remembering the conversations I've had with these men as much or more as the wrestling we've done. My friendly opponents and I have revealed some surprising things to each other over these years. At times I've believed that we experienced a greater intimacy with each other than I've been able to achieve with friends in the "real world." But my friend Mike (a friend and a friendly opponent) points out—and rightly so—that while I have experienced a certain level of intimacy with these men, the thoughts and secrets revealed create a broader sense of intimacy that is ultimately false. Sure, these men know things about me that nobody else knows, but the bottom line is that such intimate knowledge is, in reality, a very small part of what is to be known about me.
So, I thought I'd write a one-act play to recreate such a meeting and to play with some of the ideas generated by this tightly focused intimacy and what it might reveal about—and how it might affect—life outside that rented room. Being much more a writer of fiction, I could probably pull this off better in that genre. But I want to try writing this play simply because it's a play I'd love to see!
Friday, January 16, 2009
9 June 1932
Ed "Strangler" Lewis (trunks) vs. Dick Shikat (tights)
Part 2 of a 2-part match on YouTube