Sylvain et Lola
They
couldn’t be more different:
Sylvain
in his sixties and Lola, her twenties
But
each has known trauma.
The
older trauma was the younger’s.
Just
a child of ten,
Not
sure what was happening when
Lola
watched his mother go through a “violent depression”.
Could
he lose her? – What would happen then?
His
mum did come through that traumatic time for her, and for him.
Sylvain
– the violence came much more literally and suddenly
And
more recently (sadly homophobia is not dead).
Out
of nowhere, he was set upon by thugs who threw him to the ground,
Hurled
homophobic slurs at him while they kicked and hit his dancer legs with iron
bars.
Not
young, Sylvain feared for his life.
As
the two shared their hardest times,
you
could tell that the telling was to some degree a reliving
of
those awful moments – and tears were not far away.
Yet
the telling and the tears
both
for themselves and for each other
were
healing and strengthening.
As
the two shared their hardest times,
Lola
and Sylvain found a solidarity
And
they agreed that tough as those experiences were,
They
both emerged stronger.
Context
Watching Drag Race France – Season three – the sixth
episode was a make-over challenge where the contesting queens were assigned an
older LGBT person to makeover into a drag character to walk the runway with
them. Lola Strega (drag name) was assigned to make-over Sylvain. The poem is
about the conversation the two had while Lola did Sylvain’s make-up.