i make no apologies

for saying what I feel… for being who I am… for how I chose to repair what you broke.

Tag: relationships

It’s okay, girl crying in the bathroom.

It’s okay, girl crying in the bathroom.

One day you’ll see them together and won’t want to vomit.

Instead, it will be almost comical.

Because he’ll marry a Libertarian who rides the lightning with Ron Paul and interprets Atlas Shrugged like a middle schooler.

And she’ll be a super shitty blogger and hyperbole-abuser who writes about how her husband’s a douche and how she doesn’t like her Mother-in-Law.

And she’ll have really weird boobs and orange skin.

And then you’ll *really* know that you won.

You won so hard.

Better or Worse to Know it Now? — We called it “fictioning.”

He came out of nowhere.

I posted a political comment on facebook that he loved. He commented with: “If neither of us were in relationships, and if I hadn’t been such an awful date that one time we went out, I might ask you to marry me.”

(And then I gave him Hell because he WAS the worst sorority formal date of ALL TIME. He ended up making out with my       sorority sister and didn’t even notice that they got on a different bus than me to come home!! So, 50 comments later with the help of friends, the entirety of that awesome story from B’s past was out for the world to read…)

 And then he privately messaged me:

He said, “I tried making out with you once. You shot me down.”

I said, “WHEN?”

Him: “I didn’t write it down in my PLANNER. I had a huge crush on you in college!”

Me: “I wanted to date you, but you didn’t get it.  I totally would have known if you had tried to make out with me. Thus, bullshit flag.”

Him: “B, I wanted to be your boyfriend.”

Me: “You could talk to me about anything. Except that, apparently.”

Him: “I thought you hated me. How was I to go about courting you? You were constantly disappointed in me.”

Me: “I was always trying to get you alone because I thought you’d ask me out, but we’d walk out of an activism meeting together… and nothing. I generally get what I want, but I honestly didn’t think I could match up to you intellectually… and still don’t. So there’s that.”

Him: “You’re way smarter than me. I was intimidated by you. Still am.”

Me: “SHUT IT DOWN.”

Him: “I refuse. The truth will always eke its way to the surface.”

Me: “I was super intimidated by you every day. It was sexy, but intimidating.”

Him: “I felt and feel the same way about you. You’re an amazing woman.”

Me: “E shared something with me today, and the last line was: ‘There are some people whom you could only love by not being with them.’
Also, I’ve always felt really vulnerable around you. Like you could see through me and know when I wasn’t being my genuine self. Also sexy, but it makes me naked in a way. And I thought that if you really got to know all of me, I would disappoint you because there would be no mystery left.”

Him: “I think that’s entirely applicable. I think you’re wrong about the second part but I felt exactly that way about you. Nobody called me out on my bullshit like you did.”
(minutes later) “Don’t get quiet on me. We’re in the same boat here.
(minutes later) “I cried when I heard about your accident. And cried again about your lymphoma. I cried. I was scared that we might lose you.
(minutes later) Also, for the record, I thought you were a hot baldie. And I still have my B bracelet.”
(referring to the lymphoma support bracelets my friends and family wore).

Me: “Thank you for telling me that.  I kept your voicemail for a long time. I was so happy you called. I couldn’t believe that [our University] could just keep going without me… because I was dying without it.  So to be missed meant…
(let’s just say that after a day of not having the strength to pick your face up off the cold tile bathroom floor in your pool of tears… and then finding the strength to crawl to your parents’ bed to smell your dad’s aftershave on his pillow because it could happily be the last thing you smell… before your dad comes home early from work because you aren’t picking up the phone and holds a popsicle to your mouth because you can’t drink… and after hours of praying to die…)       the world.  Voicemails were on repeat. I”ll never forget yours. I’ve always wanted to tell you that, but I never had the appropriate time.”

Him: “I love you.”

Me: “I love you.”

Him: “I’m glad we finally got that out after 8 years.”

Me: “It’s fine. Life’s better without putting feelings in your PLANNER.”

 And then he “fictioned” me.

Him: “You do realize I won’t sleep tonight because you’ve opened up a brand new world of what-ifs, right?”

Me: “Shit. I hate that. I love that. I hatelove that. And hatelove is the worst.”

Him: “I wish I’d had the balls to ask you out.”

Me: “Me too. We would’ve been such a power couple. And our ribs would have hurt allthedamntime from laughing.”

Him: “I can hear your voice in my head as I read that.  And I have things I want to say, but I don’t think I should say them.”

Me: “Um, here I am telling you about death prayers… reciprocate.”

Him: “I think it’s well that we live 1,500 miles apart. Knowing what we both know now. For the sake of our relationships. Because I would jump at the opportunity.”

Me: “1,500 miles apart and we talk. Less than a mile apart… nahsomuch. I like that we make life interesting. WE are interesting.”

Him: “You keep that up, and I’m gonna tell you that I want to fuck you.”

( Yeah, that just happened.)

Me: “It wouldn’t end well.”

Him: “Ahh, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?
It’s only got one way to end, but why not enjoy a  fiction and ponder in the what-ifs?”

Me: “I love our fiction and would love to delight in our what-ifs.”

Him: “You would have delighted in me for a month or two, and then you would have grown sick of my bullshit. I would have begged you to stay, and you would have because I’m charming and persuasive, and we would have had crazy sex for six months before I asked you to marry me and you said no.”

Me: “I would have delighted in you for many months. Then we would have been all ‘what kind of future are we going to have?’ and it would have been not sexy… and the West Point graduate would’ve been all “Be with me” and you would’ve gone to jail for assault and battery. But I would have chosen you anyway.  And then we would’ve started playing house. And then comfort would have set in, making me incredibly unsexy and average and less sparkly… and then we would have split up. Except for the nights we couldn’t live without each other. But the morning would always come.”

Him: “I’d make you breakfast and wash your clothes. And I wouldn’t put your bras in the dryer. I’d make you dinner and do the dishes.  I can cook for vegetarians. The rest of that shit we could hash out over a movie and a bottle of wine… And yes, I would have punched {name of West Point graduate} in the goddamn throat.  But the sex alone could have sustained.”

Me: “That is not love.”

Him: “You’re right. None of that alone, no. But the things I would write, the songs I would sing, the terrible paintings I would attempt—all of those? The meals I would cook and the things I would read you? That’s love.”

Me: “Yes.. That is love. We would have had it. We would have made it. We would have lived it.”

Him: “You’re the smart one, the one with opportunity—I would have followed you. I can make a living anywhere on this earth.”

Me: “I would have learned form you every single day. I’m sure I do now. You are brilliant.”

Me: “I am totally blogging this. I blog anonymously.”

Him: “Send me a link.”

Me: “Fuck no. Every respectable woman goes to the grave with a few secrets.”

Then we said goodnight…. And I went to shower…. and then he texted me:

Him: “Now I’m bitten. You’re delightfully awful and splendidly wrong.”

Me: “Fuck you for making me miss you after 6 years.”

Him: “We should ‘fiction’ more often. How did this never come up in college?”

Me: “You and I were never alone. I didn’t know how you felt because we flirted for fun and you flirted with everyone. And you and I were almost always in relationships. And we were both stupid or chicken shit… or probably both.”

Him: “That sounds about right. I don’t know if it’s better or worse to know it now.”

Me: “Hatelove.”

Him: “Just so you know, the night of your formal is my biggest regret.”
(minutes later) “And there’s a lot of future left. Who knows?
I could have been better for you.
You were always with somebody, and I thought I could treat you better.”

Me: “I always thought if someone was going to make you crazy, I was perfect for the job.”

Him: “I love you, B.  Fuck you too for making me miss you.  YOU VEX ME. AND I LOVE IT.”

Me: “That’s the sexiest compliment I’ve received in… ever.”

Then he told me about the times in his life when he was homeless when he was young. And we talked about rough life shit.  And about how we get it, and that’s why we’re so fascinating to one another. Rebels aren’t rebels for no reason. Rebels are rebels because of our pain. And he told me about how he’s miserable now. I told him I know what miserable feels like. Reallyreallymisearable. That I almost moved back to our college town to get away from my life (what I didn’t say is that B is weaker now, and that that town isn’t big enough for her, her red polished toenails, AND unrequited love). To get B back (I lost her somewhere).

He said,
“B’s too good to lose. Fight for her.”

I said, “I love you for that.”

He said, “I love you for you.”

And that’s enough, B.   That’s enough now.

Lying Next to Me Lying Next to You

Lying next to me, you said “I’m sorry I complicate your life.” The same words I was just about to say to you.  I’m sorry I complicate your life. But mostly I’m sorry for you, not sorry for me. I’m sorry I’m not more sorry.

You’re complicating my life because I’m complicating yours. You’re complicating my life because I desire you to. I welcome the complication– not the waves of pain that come with it– but the complication. The complication makes me feel like we’re interesting. And real.

Lying next to you, I said, “I love you. I know we can’t be together (I only know this because you make me know it)… but I do.”  And you said, “I know. I love you too.”

And in that moment, you told me what, at a minimum, I need to know to survive.

It was simple.

It was beautiful. Heartbreakingly so.

via

xoxo,
B

Red Polished Toenails and Unrequited Love

The things you said to me fifteen days ago. The nearly condescending things:

“I just can’t picture it—us together… it’s been what… FIVE years?”
(But you can picture me naked, can’t you.  I am still wearing the same fire engine red toenail polish I was wearing the last time I was with you. Two months ago.)

“I can’t imagine you coming here to live. I mean, I would love having you in town, but I just can’t imagine it.”

“If you came here, we’d have to take it slow.”

“I have never met someone I was as impressed with as I am with you.”

“I obviously am still very attracted to you.”

“You know I’m pretty popular and well-liked in this town and know a lot of people, right? I mean, I could probably have my pick of dates, but I just don’t want to date anyone.”

“She was here last weekend and she said a lot of the things that you are saying now. And I think I could get her back if I wanted to.”
(Maybe the saddest thing in the world is loving someone who used to love you.) 

“B, it’s not a competition between you and her.”

“I am so confused.”
I responded, “Yes, it’s pretty tough when two people adore you at the same time.”
To which you said, “I guess you would know.”

“B, you KNOW I CARE about you. “
(So THIS is what it feels like. Unrequited love.)

-B

via

It’s been fifteen days.

I know that once you learn something like what you learned from me fifteen days ago, you can’t unlearn it.

Are you sorry you learned it? Or sorry you’re not sorry? Or not sorry that you’re not sorry?

It’s been fifteen days.

Maybe I don’t like what I’m learning about you.

89 minutes and 9 seconds

I confessed.

10 days ago, I confessed to you that I have feelings for you that I don’t know what to do with and that I can’t ignore.

I confessed  that I can’t be casual like you can even though I’ve tried. I can’t just casually joke with you when I feel this way.

I confessed that I am comfortable (with me) with you. I crave you.  How I think about you like the clock tells time.

I confessed that I know you want no drama in your life, but that I just want to cry all the time because I want to be with you and I’m not.

I confessed that I can no longer analyze and microanalyze the things you say or how you act to just wonder how you feel.

I needed you to know. Or I needed to know that you already knew, which apparently you didn’t (at all).  And I needed to say what I said. Out loud. To you.

I took the biggest risk. I gave up my power.

I spilled all of this — my vulnerability — out into the space between us. I laid my heart in your hands to keep, throw, break. I shared my deepest secrets that nobody knew… with you.  I said words out loud, making them real, known, non-secret and non-refundable.

I said that your friendship wasn’t enough. The friendship I treasure, honor and delight in.

And I told you that now you have the power. Over me. You have the power of knowing what you know, and you can use that power to hurt me. And you said you would never abuse your power. And I trust you. I do.

And then I realized that giving up power is much worse than sharing it. You had given me no power over you. There was no balance of power between us now. You held the power, and I held my lack of it.

Knowledge is power. And in the end, power settles everything.

I endured.

And then I endured the i m p o s s i b l e silences after speaking my truths.

I endured the embarrassment of not having those feelings reciprocated  after I asked the question (to end the silence). The question that I had wanted to ask for months but didn’t because I knew that my heart might not be able to handle the answer. The question that I didn’t have to ask (because your silence was really answer enough)… but I had to ask (to make you step into the vulnerability hot box for a moment. I had perspired enough.).

And I endured the vexing, humiliating, nearly condescending responses you doled me.

I was brave.

And after I bared all of that to you for 89 minutes and 9 seconds, ten days ago, I told E.

B: “I feel that I was brave to tell him how I feel. I was brave.”
E: “SO BRAVE.”

I was brave. I am brave. Braver than you.

-B

Part III: What we didn’t say

Part III

Or maybe you just think

I’m selfish.

“When life offers you a dream so far beyond any of your expectations, it’s not reasonable to grieve when it comes to an end.”
—(yes, this shit came from Twilight. Supposedly. The interwebs said so, so it must be true. And no, I’ll never quote it again. And no, I’ve never read the books because I stand with Stephen King and don’t dig chick lit that’s about the importance of having a boyfriend.)

What I’m getting at is that I never took time to grieve us splitting up.  But that’s mostly because I didn’t let myself believe that we were ever really together.  In that way, it seemed easier? Easier for me.

You never introduced me as your girlfriend. We never talked much about having a relationship. Rather than talking about it, I guess we were just having one, for awhile.

(You still say, “You’re my B______.” And it sounds perfect and uncomplicated-complicated. But it makes it easy for you now, to use my name as a definition of my relationship to you.)

I remember lying on the floor of my sorority bedroom on the phone with you when I said, “Do you really, honestly love me?” and you said, “I do, B_______.” (When you personalize things, it’s incredibly sexy and irresistible.)

And I tried to talk you out of it. Because I was trying to move on from the waiting (for more of you).

I thought I was being proactive in avoiding inevitable rejection. That you were being so casual and slow with me because you weren’t convinced of me?
I knew I needed you for life and felt like I was losing you in the waiting. I needed your friendship even more than I desired a lover.

I refused to grieve the loss of my friend, my confidant & a love incomparable to others.
I thought that if I made it platonic, I could make it last forever. That I could mold us into the perfect “Let’s be friends.” Only, we would like
really. actually. be friends.
And it worked for awhile, didn’t it (Until we let it die.)?

It felt like I was your perpetual one night stand.
And then someone offered to make me their one life stand.

Yes, maybe I am

Selfish (but I am also a lot of other good and pure things that I hope you haven’t forgotten about).

“Grand declarations never meant half as much as what we didn’t say.”– (the interwebs fail me here.)

So, here I am, saying it now.
I wish that you were here, saying something.

XOXO,
B

image via

 

 

Part II: Maybe you think wrong

PART II

Maybe you think

that with my aforementioned jealousy, I’m pulling an “I don’t want you but I don’t want anyone else to have you”

(Not that I didn’t want you. I did. But I didn’t admit that I loved you in the way you wanted me to. Because you were so   casual… about EvErYtHiNg. Which was sexy at first but then heartbreaking. And I was the girl waiting. Waiting for our next class together, waiting for you to call me, waiting for you to answer your phone, waiting to see you alone again, waiting to run into you downtown.  W a i t i n g… for more of you. But that was when I was probably f*cked up from a previous relationship & attention hungry, and just gutsy enough to go after a man different than any other I’d ever been with to find more than what I’d ever found. And maybe I’m still f*cked up, but now I’m an older, more mature, post-sorority, post-put-you-bar-jeans-in-the-windowsill-overnight-to-air-out-for-the-next-night attention hungry, gutsy girl.).

And I know how that feels– to have someone not want you
(or want you only on their terms).

And for them to be completely unfair when someone else wants you
(without terms).

I know what it’s like to give them all the parts of yourself only for them to devastate all of it.

And I know how it feels to be with someone new only for an old love to interrupt it with a plea of “Want me. Be with me. Call me,” much like the Meredith Grey “Pick me. Choose me. Love me” (Season 2, Episode 5).
(But I don’t put my bar jeans in the windowsill anymore. Yes, smoking is banned in the bars now, but I don’t have even bar jeans anymore… I just have feelings for you.)

But if you do think this
(that I’m pulling an “I don’t want you but I don’t want anyone else to have you”),

you think wrong.

XOXO,
B

image via

Part I: I am confident

PART I

I am confident

that you have no idea the effect you have on me.
Or how jealous I am when I think about you hanging out with someone else, and it doesn’t matter who they are, male or female. I just wish I was in their place, being with you.

Or how it hurts when I come to your town and don’t see you.
Or if/when I see you on the sidewalk, that’s all, because you don’t invite me anywhere. And you always let me go.
And the next time we talk about it (a year later), you say, “You didn’t even tell me you were coming.”
And I want to say (but I don’t because it scares the shit out of me), “Because I’m scared that one of these times you… just won’t care.”

that you have no idea that I dig out your letters a few times a year to read them and just feel close to you. Like when I told you the things I didn’t tell anyone else and trusted you with all of it. And when you trusted me too.

Or how I wonder whom you’re with at any given time and whom you take home to your bed for the night, and I’m jealous, without any right to be. But jealousy doesn’t come with rights: it’s just jealousy. And it doesn’t consume me, it just sits there and lets me feel it.

And I think that at one time, you maybe had those kinds of thoughts about me, but

I am confident

that you don’t anymore.

XOXO,
B

 

image via

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