when the evening’s thin

October 26, 2008 at 8:50 pm | Posted in reflections | Leave a comment
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okay, can we just not do this for one goddamn second? i am not wearing a face right now, or at least the one i’m wearing isn’t anything i’m proud of. i am going to write something and i don’t know what it will sound like — maybe foreign, maybe like everything else i’ve ever written, and i could analyze what those two outcomes might mean but i don’t care. just, ok, ok, ok.

i have worked through the weekend. technically there is one more day of weekend but it is booked solid for working. weeking workend. i don’t miss my social life because it’s tenuous on the best weeks. i do miss cheeseburgers with sam, and sunny days on hawthorne, the easygoing ambience of portland. but i don’t know what else i miss. the last months of portland i was clawing to get out. i kept wishing to be unnamed elsewheres. sometimes i named them after boys: LA, boston. what a fucking joke.

everything is closing in, flattening, so that nothing can look only good or only bad–all the facets merging to make a lightless gray.

i am compiling possible pieces for my writing sample and i have nine that have some hope, and only one of them is not about botched romance, and of the other eight, only two others are not about some very real piece of my history. broken boys in rows like dolls. i read travis’s livejournal as i sometimes do and as of two weeks ago there is some girl, some crazy-about-him girl, and he is overwhelmed with joy and gratitude and his ever-present fear. my old professor tells me that his latest ex-wife is sending him emails twice a week, saying stupid shit, and that all he wants is to have a real conversation about the end of their marriage, and all she can do is pull this adolescent passive-aggressive bullshit. sam is dating a girl and he is happy and excited and, i’m sure, good to her. a friend in portland goes through the same motions, meeting boys, losing them, walking away in disgust, wondering what’s wrong with him. i tell him, you’re fine. your standards are reasonable. other friends find no one, and keep waiting and dreaming. others talk about romance, about commitment, and their partnerships make me want to run thousands of miles away from their bicker, bicker, bicker. a famous okcupid couple has it out on their journal posts, airing their ugly secrets for their bloodthirsty friends. i read through all six hundred comments.

it doesn’t matter what the story is. i feel like i am drowning in them, they are all sounding the same. right now, i don’t feel like i believe in this kind of happiness. it either doesn’t exist, or it is far out of my grasp, and quite possibly i am kicking it away at the same time that i reach for it, exhausting myself at both ends, pushing and pulling.

this is what i get for spending the weekend alone.

i’m tired of myself now.

it is the hope that kills me. i have put it aside to make room for other things, and now i’m afraid to pick it up again. tell me: is it worth it?

The case for romance: desperation?

August 26, 2008 at 11:49 pm | Posted in relationships | Leave a comment
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Lana and I watched Before Sunset the other night – the sequel to Before Sunrise. If you haven’t seen these two movies, they really are worth watching. Anyway, once again one particular line struck me hard (and again it was Celine who said it):

“I guess when you’re young, you just believe there’ll be many people with whom you’ll connect… Later in life you realize it only happens a few times.”

Good lord, that is terrifying. And yet it sounds true, doesn’t it? I think functionally I’m a romantic in that I tend to believe any promising human connection is worth pursuing – and I will pursue it. Of course there are obstacles, such as my reluctance to make myself truly vulnerable to another person. But in general I am willing to give something a chance. And hearing this line in the movie only strengthened my belief that this is the right way to go. Looking back, I realize I don’t regret having entered into any of the relationships I’ve been in, even the ones that crashed and burned. Because what if I hadn’t tried it out? What if I had passed over something that could have been amazing? I guess I’m just reiterating the clichéd wisdom, “It’s better to regret the things you did than the things you didn’t.”

Then again, I wonder whether there is something pathological about thinking this way. It seems pretty widespread to cling to the notion that someone you’ve loved dearly might be The One even after so many failed attempts at being together. You might call this the “Ross and Rachel phenomenon.” These days, the star-cross’d lovers idea seems to grow more out of internal conflicts than issues of circumstance, and yet we seem just as inclined to root for the eventual union in this modern-day version. Is it just crazy? How many times does this sort of thing actually work in real life? The truth is that it’s rare for people to change a whole lot over the course of their lives. Generally speaking, they just become more themselves. So if two people can’t make it work at one point, what will let them make it work the next? Sheer force of will? Maybe. But force of will is not so common, either.

Still, it is a rare and beautiful thing to meet someone we feel a genuine connection with. (At least, this is true for me.) And because this is such an important part of my life and my happiness, it seems wise to treat such meetings with the care and gratitude they deserve.

Approbations, disagreements and qualifications are welcome.

Here’s a beautiful scene from Before Sunset, for those of you who have already seen it. (If you haven’t and you want to, don’t watch this, it might spoil the film for you.)

The epidemic of unrequited love

August 21, 2008 at 1:07 am | Posted in relationships | Leave a comment
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Unrequited love

It amazes me how many of my friends are currently involved in an unrequited love relationship, in which they are the ones pining after emotionally unavailable jerkfaces. Is this just me – do I attract this kind into my circle? It makes sense that I would feel a sense of camaraderie with them; I’ve been susceptible to the same disease all of my adult life. For the most part I’ve weaned myself off the long-term version (my longest bout was 10 years), but the story of my love life has repeatedly featured me me throwing myself at guys who couldn’t match my commitment. Examples?

Current: I’m possibly becoming interested in a guy who is already seeing someone else and is hesitating in making legitimate space for me in his life, even though he says he wants to.

Spring 2008: Jon, a guy I’d been chasing off an on for almost a year (who originally told me that even though he had no prospects he would rather “play the field” than date me – but we should keep having sex!) finally decided he would like to try out a relationship. Within literally 3 days, he told me it was too much work for him and that he didn’t think he wanted to do it anymore. Please note that this guy lived about a thousand miles away from me at the time I started courting him, though we had just moved to the same city when we started our “relationship.”

Winter 2008: I met a guy who was crazy about me (this would be Travis). He lived 3000 miles away. He also had no prospects and hadn’t in quite a while (almost a year?). We got along fantastically and were crazy about each other. But he wanted to “play the field.” Even though I offered to move to the East Coast to be closer to him. He was just not ready to be in a relationship with any one person.

Summer 2007: Gus, the boy of the 10-year infatuation, came back in a flurry of toxic romanticism to try one last time to make things work. We had already broken up (fled from each other, really) at least four times by then. He arrived for a two-week visit (again, he lived 3000 miles away); afterward he stopsped returning my calls. Finally I called to break up with him since he didn’t have the balls to do it, and he confessed that he simply wasn’t ready to uproot his life to be with me. Never mind that his life at that moment consisted of trimming hedges professionally and occupying his childhood bedroom in his parents’ house. (Note that almost exactly one year later he called me to say that he was afraid he had made a terrible mistake and he hoped he hadn’t lost me forever. We can all see where this is going.)

Spring 2007: I started an intense romantic relationship with a guy who initially was all about sharing a life and being completely open. Within two months he announced he wanted to move three states over, and knew there was no way I could join him because I have commitments where I lived. He begged me, though, to “pretend” he wasn’t leaving until he actually moved. (I refused, thank god.)

I know I sound bitter, but honestly none of these guys were bad people. For the most part I still think fondly of them and I don’t blame any of them for how things went down. In all examples, you could say the external circumstances were just not compatible with the pursuit of a long-term relationship. But underlying that in every case was some kind of psychological resistance on the guy’s part to laying himself open. Maybe that was related only to some temporary emotional state that made it impossible at that moment to get involved. Or maybe these guys were just more willing than I was to admit that the pairing didn’t feel right on some level. That’s another problem I have: I compromise my needs and desires too much. I am always willing to work and work at a relationship even when it’s best just to let it go.

I’m inclined to believe that a lot of women have this complex of compromising, settling, taking responsibility. After all, we’re socialized to bear the burden of smoothing out the rough patches in our partnerships and marriages; we are the tenders of our relationships.

But the repeated pursuit of clearly doomed, poisonous relationships with emotionally distant partners is another beast. It requires a special brand of masochism. What is it about people like us who hurt themselves this way? A few theories have floated through my head over the past several years.

We’re reenacting a childhood trauma. Having a father who neglected or abandoned us seems to be a common theme. Maybe we’re unconsciously seeking out people like our dads (who were themselves emotionally unavailable) in an attempt to create a different ending to the story. But this is a generous interpretation. Are we really trying to do things differently? Maybe we’re just compulsively replaying the event in our minds and our lives because we want to try to make sense of it. And maybe, anyway, we’re giving ourselves too much credit by thinking we might be able to do things differently – after all, the only model we have represents failure.

We are, ourselves, emotionally unavailable. Finding a partner who mirrors our own defect allows us to then blame him for holding back, when in fact if we were with someone who didn’t have this problem, we would be the ones shutting down or running away.

We don’t really want a relationship right now. Slightly different from the above possibility, maybe we are not entirely committed to the idea of getting serious with anyone, so we naturally draw in a partner who is equally ambivalent. Since this isn’t pathological, if we were to discover that we wholeheartedly wanted to be in a serious relationship, we would find ourselves with a compatible partner. (I actually shared this thought with a friend who was going through a period of meeting a lot of guys who wanted sex but nothing serious. She had convinced herself she was all right with this, but when I questioned it, she relented. I suggested she write out exactly and honestly what it was that she wanted in a relationship. Within a couple of weeks, she met a man who was completely smitten with her from the beginning; they got married last summer. Aww.)

All of these theories revolve around the central idea that in some way we are lying to ourselves about what we’re doing, what we want and/or what we’re capable of. There is nothing for it, really, except to perform the arduous task of reflection upon our deepest desires and fears, and try to exorcise our own demons. This is a great example of why I think having a therapist can be such a gift. It’s often much too difficult to see our own behaviors objectively, and it’s rare for our friends to have the insight and detachment to be able to guide us consistently. Moreover, it can be very difficult for us to believe even our best friends when they try to tell us how we’re hurting ourselves and how we might stop. We have so much invested in these compulsive patterns of behavior. I think for many of us it has become a part of our identity, this special kind of burning agony that is the mark of unrequited love. Dismantling that identification often requires the help of a professional.

If that is not a practical option, then at the very least, women with this affliction need to read Clarissa Pinkola Estes’s Women who Run with the Wolves. Seriously. It will change your life. Do it.

Then come back here to discuss.

Photo by Scented_mirror.

On loving strangers

August 20, 2008 at 12:48 am | Posted in reflections | Leave a comment
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I say to myself sometimes that I am in love with faces. In the right mood, I can study one for hours, the curves and shadows, and feel nothing but warm fascination, a desire to reach out with my entire being to caress this emblem of human fragility and courage. But this is not to say that I am a kind or friendly person. And it’s not that I fall in love with every face I see. Tonight in class I sat next to a man who enjoyed making gratuitous inane remarks when we got into our small discussion groups. And I was forced by politeness to listen and respond, which meant making eye contact. His face drooped asymmetrically around the eyes; folds of thick flesh sagged from his cheeks. But worst of all was his mouth: it was as though some tiny fanged rodent had gnawed away a hole between his two front teeth, from which a grey rot spread outward. I was ashamed of my revulsion but I’m sure I couldn’t hide it. He smelled bad, too.

From an artist’s perspective I might have drawn him, felt some compassion for the character that lay upon the hills and valleys of aging skin that decorated his skull. But I was not an artist at that moment, as I am often not, especially in public. I was merely a petty, selfish brute, drawn in upon myself and carefully masking a blind snarl.

I believe I could fall in love with anyone, but it’s a self-deception. In a figure-drawing class in college I came within minutes to love each model, and I believed this was a pure aesthetic love for the human form. In retrospect it could have been their confidence I loved, their self-love radiating toward me unencumbered by clothing; or perhaps they had been hired because of the beauty of their bodies, however unconventional. I draw friends, lovers, family, and I love them more for having carefully recorded the slopes of their noses, the way their eyelids sweep and fold. But this does not make me a better person. It doesn’t even make me a better friend, lover, or relative. The love I’m talking about is completely unconnected to a relational emotion or skill.

Increasingly I am startled by my own coldness. I spend days or weeks isolated from all but the most minute human contact. When I ventured to the grocery store today to refill a prescription, I automatically held the elevator door for a young sweatsuited woman trotting toward me. She said thank you in a small, kind voice, and it shocked me. My response was a mute nod, maybe ten percent of a smile, which I imagine must have looked more like a twitching lip. When I said “thank you very much” to the pharmacist – the unconscious calculations of her helpfulness and efficiency had warranted this particular canned response – she surprised me by smiling and saying “you’re welcome” in a friendly voice. Somehow those two tiny interactions left me feeling more human than I had ten minutes earlier. Did I have actual interactions with these strangers? Why should a rote politeness make me feel anything at all? If their words were false or hollow, is my being moved by them a symptom of my own naivete? What is it to be human with someone, after all? Did I owe something more to these women who expressed a simple momentary warmth? Where do you draw a line in connecting with strangers? Do you miss your stop on the bus ride to hear the rest of the story of their awful week, year, life? About their sister’s wedding, about a child’s broken arm? How do you end something you just started? How do you say, “it was nice to meet you, and I have no interest in ever seeing you again”? Does that hurt for everyone else to hear as much as it does for me? What is the point of becoming attached when the one assured outcome is heartbreak?

I have the capacity to fall in love with a face, the same way I fall in love with bodies when I practice massage therapy. I love them for all the humanity they contain. To access that humanity in this way – detached but attentive, even fond – is to make myself feel more human for a few moments, without the risk that comes with revealing myself in turn.

It’s nice to know one’s capacity for making beautiful things out of ugliness – one’s own especially.

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