All posts by Steven Satyricon

I'm an artist who's been living in San Francisco since July 2002. I'm a believer in activism, community, love, magic, and real life engagement. I'm the man behind the curtain in this little slice of the internet.

Travel Reminders

Note: I missed a day in my daily writing practice, yesterday. The circumstances of my Sunday in LA began with me waking up somewhere in Pasadena and not getting back to Silverlake until around 5pm–with a flight leaving shortly after 8–so trying to squeeze in an entry in that relatively narrow time window was unrealistic (my laptop, of course, had not come with me on my adventures the night before, so I was without my writing tool most of the day), and though I had envisioned writing while on the plane, the truth is that once they pressurized the cabin, I lost consciousness almost immediately. Perhaps it’s all best in the end, as the thoughts I’d wished to write about may not have coalesced so gracefully in my drunken/exhausted state.

Sunday, as I sat on the patio of Basix in the heart of West Hollywood, sipping bottomless mimosas and cackling with laughter in conversation with my four fellow homos–two of whom I’d known for less than twenty-four hours–I was marveling inwardly at how easily connection can sometimes be felt; at how many commonalities there seem to be within the various cultures I am enmeshed with and what a familiar language and anthropological similarity we have. Continue reading Travel Reminders

In the Wake of a Memorable Evening

I love my life.

I realize that this statement is no great surprise to anyone, but sometimes I still feel like it bears repeating. I occasionally have to remind myself that many people lead (to quote Penny Arcade) “lives of quiet desperation”…I know that wide swaths of people aren’t doing what they would most love to be doing in their lives. While it’s true that I myself am not doing as much of what I love as I wish I could, the fact that I have at least come so far as to KNOW what I love and to do it at all seems sometimes to be a fair distance ahead of the curve. I am very blessed in that following my heart has never been difficult for me, nor has it felt anything other than natural. Continue reading In the Wake of a Memorable Evening

Musings on the Small World

We are the music-makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers
And sitting by desolate streams;
World losers and world forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.

The above stanza is one which I’ve long had committed to memory, from a poem by Arthur O’Shaughnessy which is named “Ode.” In my adult life, I have often found my mind drifting to the subtle truths of these words. Continue reading Musings on the Small World

Sunset In SoCal

So, here I am…

After a relatively expedient and uneventful afternoon of travel, I’m settled in at Gus and Patrick’s, blogging tonight via ethernet cable (because for some unknown reason, my laptop can’t locate their network wirelessly). As they tend to do, plans have shifted slightly; my friend Hamish and John will be meeting with me tonight due to an unexpected parental visit–from Melbourne, no less!–which is just as well, since it turns out that my host Gus is one of the hosts at a new party at Faultline tomorrow night, so now I’m free to attend that. Continue reading Sunset In SoCal

Fake It ‘Til You Make It

Today, I had several experiences which put me in mind of the phrase above, in that I was subtly reminded that experiencing negative or limiting self-consciousness is a learned response which all humans are capable of training themselves away from.

It was a slow day at work in the early part of my shift this morning, so I spent a few minutes entertaining myself by adorning my eyeglasses with Post-Its. It’s a silly sort of thing akin to a teenage writing or drawing on one’s jeans or body…something harmlessly expressive which temporarily alleviates boredom. Of course, once I’d done it, I kept it; one of the freedoms I greatly enjoy in my position is that of being whimsical without fear of reproach or discipline. Although some customers certainly seemed confused by this flourish, for the most part it was well-received, and I was given numerous bits of positive feedback.

When it came time for me to leave work, however, I was hit with a wave of uncertainty: was it time to strip off this silly appendage before mingling with the rest of the world? Did I want to subject myself to the slings and arrows of public opinion and judgement in such a way?

Ultimately, it took only moments for me to decide with resolve that of COURSE I’d leave my glasses as they were, and continue along with my day as if nothing were not as it should be. When all was said and done, I can’t say that the big bad outside world seemed much to care–or even notice–my whimsy; not at the sushi place where I had lunch, not at Safeway when I was picking up groceries, and not on the streets. In short, no big fucking deal.

In the late afternoon, I put in my contact lenses to go to yoga (hopefully no one reading this would wonder why glasses and yoga don’t really mix well). Midway through class, as I twisted myself into a shape with which I was as yet unfamiliar, I suddenly became very aware of myself…the fact that I was positioned at the head of the class, as it were (simply because I get quite hot rather easily, and the front of the room has a decent breeze of outside air coming in), meaning that everyone could see me struggling to find the position (or, perhaps even worse, in my mind: someone might see me doing it wrong but think I’m doing it properly just because I’m in front of everyone else, and then start doing it wrong themselves. Yes, these are the sort of fears I often obsess on)…reflexively, I had to laugh at myself, to remember that in situations like these, the worst judgement could only come from within.

Yet as I lay in shavasana at the end of class, I found my thoughts drifting back to these two times in my day when I was stricken by potent moments of self-consciousness. I vividly remembered, then, being a teenager and going to High School dressed in certain outlandish ways, simultaneously trying to provoke a response and daring anyone to say anything, while also feeling some inward part of myself cringe and beg, “why are you doing this? You’re going to be laughed at. People will say mean things. You shouldn’t express yourself like this.” Still, i persisted in leaning into that discomfort, pushing myself into a visibility and vulnerability which felt terrifying: I was training. I was faking it in the hopes that some day, I would make it.

These days, I look fairly outlandish by the standards of polite society. I have 13 piercings, and a lot of large, very brightly colored, and highly visible tattoos; I dress in ways which challenge gender roles and sexual taboos; I often paint my fingernails and/or wear makeup. I do all these things (and have been doing them) so regularly, for so long a time, that they’ve become second nature–I don’t ever stop to question myself. All that early self-training, all that faking it (when my insides were a hurricane of self-doubt and ingrained shame), led me to a life in which I can feel comfortable in my own skin.

I made it.

Today, I was given gentle reminders that this aspect of life is a continuing journey and not a bed of achievements in which one can rest. The process never really stops….but it does get much easier, the more that you do it.

Counterintuitively, it seems that sometimes you’ve got to be a fake if you want to be authentic.

Unshakeable Trust

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, I have recently (and some might say FINALLY) discovered yoga. There is a long story in the road which has brought me to this point–one which I’m sure will eventually be told on these pages–but today I’ll just keep it fairly short and say that Maxfield’s is little over a block away from Laughing Lotus, a wonderful yoga studio which also has a NYC location. Many of the teachers, students, managers and employees of this studio are regular customers at my shop, and after many encouragements (and several free passes) were given to me over a lengthy period of time, a few months ago I ultimately caved to the gentle pressure and attended a class. Continue reading Unshakeable Trust

The Faggots Who Brunch

(In case it isn’t obvious, this is a parody of “The Ladies Who Lunch,” by Stephen Sondheim. Thanks and credit to him.)

I’d like to propose a toast:
Here’s to the faggots who brunch, everybody laugh.
Backstabbing their friends and all acting like cunts
To the restaurant staff.
Mimosas raised, they cheers their besties, playing the role,
Their muscles praised: “You’re looking chesty, getting real swole!”
Does ANYbody…REALLY…
Say “swole”??
I’ll drink to that. Continue reading The Faggots Who Brunch