Although Vicki Chalmers had grown irritated and touchy about the increasingly wild excesses of the Left, she remained in lockstep with their causes. The Gestapo SS troops unleashed by Donald Trump to round up law-abiding asylees, slam them in cattle cars, and ship them back to the oppressive, inhuman regimes from which they admiringly fled were signs of a growing fascist dictatorship in the White House.
The President's wholescale dismantling of the federal bureaucracy, sending hardworking, concerned civil servants packing, and his demonic, arrogant machismo forcing LBGTQ Americans to scurry for cover were unconscionable. His loosening the fetters that reined in a predatory, greedy capitalism was tantamount to a perilous consignment of the poor into a dismal, hopeless purgatory.
Vicki had spent her whole life doing good, engaged in charitable causes, on the faculty of a historically black college, the only white woman to be granted such an honor and a tenured position, and a frequent contributor to The Nation, the Atlantic, and her own Vassar College Alumnae magazine.
Yet at her advancing age the placards, banners, and camaraderie seemed not only silly but comedic. A thousand hysterical, overweight women stomping like bull elephants up and down the National Mall, was a side show. She loved her sisters in arms, sympathized with their cause, but could never bring herself to actually rub shoulders with such an element.
Despite her fervid liberal politics, she was sexually as straight as an arrow, and found the whole idea of scissoring, eating out, dildoes, fingering, and 'tit squash' frankly repulsive. She never let on of course, always greeted her lesbian friends with warm affection and solicitude, but felt the need to wash up afterwards.
She hated herself for such apostasy, but there it was. Nothing she could do about it. Nature had had her way, so time to buck up and get with the larger program. This wasn't about her.
This infection - this growing cynicism, these persistent images of a herd of cows mooing and bellowing on the Mall - was becoming systemic; and as hard as she tried, she could not rid herself of the image of these Flossies on top of each other in some Dupont Circle basement sucking to the music of Radiohead.
Epiphanies are by nature unexpected, and so when Vicki took her grandson to the circus, an independent production touted as the retro event of the century complete with lion tamers, clowns, trapeze artists, and a sideshow not to be missed, she jumped at the chance.
She had loved the old Barnum & Bailey circuses of her youth, had walked around the fairgrounds after school to watch the tents being put up, the roaring animals assigned to their cages, the flags and festoons placed on the big top, and to listen to the bang of hammers and the rasp of saws. She couldn't wait for the spectacle, the cotton candy, the festivities, the jamboree of men, women, and animals from another planet.
She was as excited as a schoolgirl when she stood in line to buy her tickets for her and her grandson, one for each of the big top events, the fun house, and of course the side show which, she knew, given the vastly changed cultural standards of the day would unhappily not have the freaks she remembered. There would be no two-headed babies, ape-men, and bearded ladies. It might in fact be better this way, for her grandson was a quiet, timid boy whose parents had told him that no one was stupid, 'so please, let me not hear you use that word' and that 'everyone has a place in the world'.
The circus was as hoped, a real retro show. How the producers were able to run the gantlet of animal rights, faux humanist, and inclusivist alderman and come out with a show as authentic as this one, was a minor miracle. The circus grounds even had that smell of hay, urine, and animals that she remembered. It was all there as she remembered - tightrope walkers, trapeze artists, lion tamers, clowns, and trained seals. The Master of Ceremonies wore a top hat and tails and was as convincing and exciting as those of the old days.
The fun house, usually a feature of amusement parks, had been added to the circus, and she clung tightly to her grandson as the carts rattled around dark corners, as spooky goblins and witches popped out of nowhere, and as ghouls stood on the tracks before them.
With great anticipation and excitement, Vicki and the boy entered the freak show. She held tightly to his hand in case he got a case of jitters and they had to leave. This was what she had come for.
For a moment, she thought that her interest was prurient and shameful. After so many years of inclusivity and diversity according to which there were no such thing as freaks, only otherly- dimensioned, -statured, or -configured people, she was delighted at the prospect of seeing the deformed, the weird, the barely human.
Why, she wondered? Was it some kind of final resolution - once and for all looking at human deformity in all its shapes and sizes, realizing that even this menagerie of unusual people belonged to her society and would be welcomed everywhere, invited to the Cosmos Club, and invited to join as honorary members of The Society of the Cincinnati, the DAR, and Patriots of America?
What she saw was at first shocking, then stunning, then brilliant. There were dwarves, midgets, bearded ladies, and elephant men, but they - in a masterful ironic transformation - had become caricatures of the most exaggerated, fag ends of the gender spectrum and icons of protest she had joined on the Mall. These tattooed, fat, tarted up cretins were the very images of women she knew. Noses were misaligned, ears were pendulous, and elephantine lips were as large and distended as baboons'.
'Ah,' said Vicki to no one in particular, 'I get it'; and by that she meant the Holy Grail of human creation. The horrible distortions she was used to seeing on the Mall had simply been displayed in the nth degree at the circus. There were cross-dressing midgets, transgender dwarves whose proportions were all wrong - huge, oversized tits, and bulging cocks barely contained by circus cod pieces. They were all painted like harlequins, their hair spraypainted blue, rings and studs from tongue to toe.
She was unsure how she felt. At first it was hilarity - such a marvelous freak show could never be duplicated, a work of production genius, a one in a million worth the price of admission and then some. Then it was shame - the old diversity training returned, and she should have nothing but respect and humility before these othered people; but finally it was the aha! Eureka! moment. God's supreme irony, his devilish sense of humor on the Sixth Day before he rested.
Konstantin Levin, a principal character in Tolstoy's Anna Karenina wonders at God's irony, having created an intelligent, sentient, creative, willful being; granted him but a few decades on earth, and then consigned him to an eternity beneath the cold hard ground of the steppes.
That was nothing, thought Vicki. A better irony was that He created a side show and said it was in His image, a freak show of generous proportions, a menagerie of poseurs, queens, dykes, sexual half-breeds, buggering midgets, and swishy 8-foot giants; let alone the marvelously outrageous pimps and ho's, the barking women of Capitol Hill, the bald-faced liars, cheats, conmen, touts, and snake oil salesmen of middle America, and the hallelujah Baptist preachers, the holy rollers....Jesus Christ, the list was endless.
Now that she had seen God's humor, how could she not laugh at everything else? She smiled, hugged her grandson, bought him a chocolate ice cream cone with jimmies on top, and drove home to the exhilarating music of J.S. Bach.
The next day was a new day, the first day of her life. She scrapped her rainbow Hate Has No Home Here signs, cleared the decks of all iconic tchotchkes - a small, clay bust of feminist Gloria, a Che Guevara poster, images of San Francisco's Folsom Street S&M fair, photos of wild gay boys atop Mardi Gras floats. It was a clean sweep. The whole marvelously fantastical progressive thing was dismissed with a brush of the hand, gone, over and done with.
It was time for sense and sensibility, the literary canon, exegesis, simple prayer, and finally trimming the hollyhocks which were overrunning the back yard. 'Free at last', she shouted out the French doors to the garden. 'Free at last'.








