“Before leaving my graduate studies at Berkeley and while I was still married, I met a gorgeous long-haired Italian poet and had an affair with him. One day out of the blue, after we made love, he asked me if I ever felt sexually interested in women. I was shocked by the question and he didn’t wait for my answer. He began to talk about his interest a guy we both knew. He did not seem surprised when, breathing deeply, I finally said, ‘I’m attracted to women.’ We kidded about setting each other up with same-sex partners.”
“Was that the first time you said something to someone?” asked Ksiusha.
“No, actually my husband knew about my feelings before that. At about the same time as the Italian affair, I made friends with a gay man in the Russian Department who talked to me a lot about his lifestyle. I kept asking him questions about how he met men, trying to learn about my possibly fitting into this strange queer culture, but the image of being at a dance or a bar or an open meeting place scared me. I never said a word to my gay friend about my feelings toward women. Several years later, we happened to meet on the street in Berkeley and I revealed to him that I had come out; he told me he had never suspected a thing about me at the time.
“So when I met Gina in Russia, you can imagine how thrilled I was. She was the woman of my dreams.” Both Ksiusha and Lena smiled and hollered, “Ura!” (Hurray!)
“I must have recognized something in her. I felt a spark, but I never dreamed anything would come to fruition. We were on a two-week tour through the Soviet Union—Moscow, Leningrad, and Tallinn, Estonia. One day Gina and I were walking alone on the riverbank in Narva, near Tallinn. While the river rushed by, there were some boys skimming rocks on the water. As we walked on the pebbly shore, she said to me, ‘Have you ever thought about making love to a woman?’
“Was this really happening to me? I thought. I don’t remember answering. She talked on. My mind was racing and tears worked their way to my eyes. As we walked up the hill to town, the setting sun was facing us. She said, ‘I hope you didn’t think I was coming on to you when we talked about being interested in women.’ I was already feeling that irrepressible rush, and now my eyes were really filling with tears. ‘What’s the matter?’ she asked. I said the sun was very bright and we walked on, with her doing most of the talking. We stopped at a little cafe before we returned to the dorm-like place we were staying in. The coffee was too sweet for me—they sold it presweetened. I didn’t finish it.”
“But when did IT happen?” Ksiusha asked with excitement, as Lena glanced at the rearview mirror.
“That night we were alone in our room. Our roommate was spending the night with her boyfriend. It must have been our time. Gina and I each lay in our own beds in the dark. We chatted for a while, then fell silent. I didn’t know how I was going to sleep that night; I was so wound up with excitement. I tossed and turned. I thought, ‘If she says one more word, I’m going over to her bed.’
“And she did. ‘You seem restless.’
“I literally flung the covers off me and ran to her bed. I bent over her and experienced an unforgettable wash of relief as I hugged and kissed her and she reciprocated. It’s all that happened that night but two nights later we were in Moscow and decided not to go to the circus with the rest of the group. We made love in our hotel room overlooking the city. It was everything I had dreamed and more—warm and gentle and so full of knowing. There was no turning back. It opened my life.”
Silence. A kind of reverence. I said, “The day before, we kissed for the first time while we were taking a walk in Lenin Hills, of all places.”
“Vorobyovy Gory? [The old name in Russian]” repeated Ksiusha in surprise, and Lena chortled behind the wheel. The park was the highest point in Moscow, with a panoramic view of the river, the Kremlin, and the city. We talked of how momentous it must have been to kiss a woman in 1977, in the Soviet Union, right there in the open, where many lovers had come to profess their love. My friends knew how important Moscow and Russia was to me.
“Gina and I took a side trip by ourselves to Zagorsk, to the historic Trinity Lavra monastery-fortress a half hour from Moscow by train. Our Soviet tour guide was hesitant to let us go—after all, he was responsible for us. With my knowledge of Russian we would be okay, I said. We took off like two girlfriends getting permission from a parent or teacher to do something no one was allowed.
“Zagorsk was majestic and brilliant with its tiered gold cupolas and white stone walls. It was another world from the crowded streets of Moscow. It was a quiet, ancient, spiritual world, allowed to exist in a circumscribed way. I remember walking around inside the fortress seeing occasional dark-robed figures, older women in kerchiefs pensively on their way to pray. We saw two middle-aged women walking arm in arm and talking in an intimate way, so I took Gina’s arm with a sudden burst of boldness. We bragged to each other about how free we felt in the Soviet Union.
“A man was working on an oil painting of the Cathedral of the Assumption, where Boris Godunov was buried. I asked the artist to take our picture with my camera. I still have the photo—our eyes glistening, our smiles ear to ear, his easel next to us. Arm in arm, we show each other off. I’ll never forget how romantic it all felt—to be among those shiny cathedrals that had survived in the Soviet Union, to have my dreams come true, to be in love.”
“And what happened with your husband?” asked Lena.
“Well, I told him as soon as I returned home.” I grew sad remembering the difficulties. “He didn’t take me seriously at first. Or maybe he couldn’t. But I moved out and got my own apartment in San Francisco when we got back to California, and Gina and I continued our relationship for a couple of years. I explored the wonderful lesbian world in San Francisco, which I think was at its height then, in the late 1970s and I became a political activist. I was very fortunate.
“I remembered how a poet helped me when I was having trouble leaving all that my husband and I had built together to start a new life. It was W.H. Auden. Do you know his name?”
“Ah yes,” said Ksiusha. “Wasn’t he gay?”
“I took his collected works from my shelf in my husband’s and my house and it just fell open to this page—a sign! I listened. His words gave me courage. I still can recite some of the lines:
“How do you think coming out changed your life?” Ksiusha asked.
“A great question. You know, I tried to get an interview with a woman in Tomsk once, and she declined, saying the label lesbian was narrow—she said she was much more than a lesbian. I knew being open and true to myself felt like an opening, not at all a restricting. The woman had lost her job at the university because of her sexual orientation. I tried to explain that it was the university administration that was narrow-minded, not the label. Of course any kind of label is confining, but the best way to build a new life is to connect with others and widen your circle. What better way than to come out?