I moved back in with my parents for the summer. I had planned
to do little else other than work for three months to save up for graduate
school expenses in the fall. But someone got in the way.
Someone, a Mormon, and fireworks.
My coworker threw a birthday party for me last month. It was
a rager till 10pm when she, her husband, and their newborn had to go to bed.
Everyone left except for two guys. A really cute someone
(let’s call him E.F.) and his odd Mormon friend. They were committed to waiting
up with me until midnight, so that I could have a “real” birthday celebration.
Any good celebration calls for fireworks, right? So off to
Wal Mart we went.
While it’s legal to buy fireworks, it is illegal to set them
off unless it is Independence Day. After illicitly lighting just one in the
parking lot, our Mormon companion was too morally conflicted to let us
continue. He insisted we call it a night. He held the car keys, so call it a
night we did.
Utterly absorbed in his moral monologue, he failed to notice
he had driven half a block past my house.
E.F. got out of the car to walk me down the street to my door. And on the porch he asked me out. I said yes.
E.F. got out of the car to walk me down the street to my door. And on the porch he asked me out. I said yes.
We went to dinner a couple of nights later. I can tell
within a few minutes whether the guy is going to get a second date. Rarely does
that happen. I don’t like to waste my time.
E.F. was a true gentleman. A Left-Circler for sure. He
picked me up, opened doors for me, paid for dinner, took me to a Jazz concert.
We talked in his idling car for over an hour when he dropped
me off.
I was absolutely terrified when I wanted a second date, and
a third, and so many more. E.F. was NOT in my summer plans. I was NOT supposed
to get attached during my hiatus from real life.
Yet I let myself fall for him anyway. I knew I was opening
myself up for a world of hurt, whether we decided to do long distance or write
us off as a summer fling.
I was happy simply living in the moment until we went to a
pool party with his friends, his sister among them.
While E.F. and the Mormon
were parking the car, the sister interrupted my conversation with one of the
guys about his long-distance girlfriend to ask me how she should introduce me
to a person in our group who hadn’t arrived yet.
“Are you my brother’s girlfriend, or what? I have to tell
her something.”
LDGF guy came to my rescue. “You could just say her name, like a normal person.”
The sister wasn’t having any of that. “She’s my best friend. I can’t just be like, ‘this is so-and-so.’
She’ll want to know WHO she is.”
My turn. “Look, we haven’t put a label on anything, but I don’t think
your brother will correct you either way, whatever you tell your friend.”
Cue E.F. and Mormon. They approach. We all quickly change
the subject. The sister’s best friend arrives. The sister introduces me by
name, sans epithet of any sort.
My heart sinks. I wanted to be E.F.’s girlfriend. Dammit.
It bothered me for the rest of the day. When he would grab
my hand and kiss it unexpectedly, or wrap his arms around my waist, or look
into my eyes for a little too long…I felt my heart’s defenses crumbling.
For the next couple of weeks, I kept a note on my phone of
all of the things I wanted to say to him, but couldn’t. We were doomed from the
start, so what was the point of saying things which would only make it harder
in the end?
And then I drew for him. I hadn’t picked up a pencil since the
semester before I started this blog as a stupid class assignment. I was still
pretending to be an artist then.
So not only had I not drawn for myself in nearly two years,
but I also hadn’t drawn for another person in four. Yet I did for him.
And when I gave him the drawing, he played guitar. He played
guitar like someone else never did.
Every chord exposed a new chink in my pathetic armor.
And so when E.F. asked what my response would have
been had his dad asked me what my intentions were with his son, I knew. I would
have said that my intention was to treat E.F. the way he deserved, and not the shitty
way every romantic interest in his life before me had. This man lying in the
dark beside me had suffered more than I could ever comprehend. My pain was a
raindrop compared to his ocean.
It was my mission to show him how beautiful love could be,
and how much more beautiful it could grow if you work on it every day.
His mission was to understand me.
We enjoyed 11 dinners, 3 concerts, 3 movies, 2 rounds of
fireworks, 1 art festival, and 1 ice cream run. I don’t regret a second of it.
I learned a lot about an amazing human being, and a lot about myself, too.
I learned that regardless of how many times I’m beaten down, regardless of how hard I try to keep my heart closed so
that no more can get in and nothing can get out—it doesn’t matter. Sometimes a single word can make a heart open.
“Are you my brother’s girlfriend?”
And all those things I didn't say
Wrecking balls inside my brain
I will scream them loud tonight
Can you hear my voice this time?
Wrecking balls inside my brain
I will scream them loud tonight
Can you hear my voice this time?
No, E.F., you can’t. Because this is an anonymous blog post.
My occult following in Germany is more likely to hear me than you are. Because,
according to my page view tracker, I’ve a lot of fans across the pond.
But I don’t need you to hear me. I need to hear me. I need
to hear me admit that after every heartbreak, I become a better version of
myself. And that for whatever reason, you and I weren’t meant to be. Not right
now at this moment.
I’ve been single, I’ve done hook ups, I’ve done
long-distance and long-term relationships…and I’m not sure where this Ephemeral
Fox-shaped puzzle piece fits in, but I’m happy I got to walk through a month of
life with you.
You said that you hoped the next guy I introduced to my dad
was worthy. He was. I just wish you had met him more than once, so that he
could see what I saw.
I went to our park earlier today. At sunset. With red wine
(concealed in a thermos cuz I’m classy), Nutella, and pretzel sticks. The thin
kind.
As I saw something very close to your favorite color, I
thought about how you’ve got an unsigned drawing, and how I’ve got an empty 18x24
frame (with an unpaid balance of 20 kisses).
You’ve also got a full set of fireworks, minus one. I’ve
also got half of a pizza leftover in my fridge, and an unopened copy of your
brother’s book.
We’ve both got a collection of ticket stubs and restaurant
receipts. And a "To Do" date list with 2 out of 23 items checked off.
Those 11 dinners, 3 concerts, 3 movies, 2 fireworks shows, 1
art festival, and 1 ice cream outing were worth the tears I shed with each
keystroke.
We should have kissed goodbye.
We should have kissed goodbye.
Mission aborted.