Vermont Ave, Los Angeles, California, 11:54 am.
- Horatio: I know how to be persuasive when I have to be.
- Me: Really now?
- Horatio: On the first date, I got you to come to Punter’s, come home with me, have a smoke, and then have sex. I say I’m pretty good at getting my way.
- Manager: So tell me about yourself.
- Me: Something boring or something interesting?
- Manager: Something I can blackmail you with.
- Me: Just look me up on the Internet.
- Manager: How’s next Tuesday for you?
A true soul mate is probably the most important person you’ll ever meet, because they tear down your walls and smack you awake. But to live with a soul mate forever? Nah. Too painful. Soul mates, they come into your life just to reveal another layer of yourself to you, and then leave.
A soul mate’s purpose is to shake you up, tear apart your ego a little bit, show you your obstacles and addictions, break your heart open so new light can get in, make you so desperate and out of control that you have to transform your life, then introduce you to your spiritual master…
– Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat, Pray, Love
For the past month, I’ve been suffering the emotional aftermath from the breakup. Publicly, I was very polite and pleasant, but privately, I was a complete mess. For the first time, I lost myself completely in love. For the first time, I had my heart completely crushed. If it weren’t for a few very close friends who knew exactly what to say and do, I would be, simply, devastated.
I feel a deep sadness, pain from those years of neglect and failed efforts at making the relationship work, but with that lurks a roaring anger, born from the same hurt. Whatever happened, whatever the motives behind our actions, I was not happy being with him. As much as I tried to make him understand what could or should be done for me, he simply could (or would) not do it. I’m angry because these were simple things—flirting, a gentle loving caress, interest in my interests—things that I readily gave him before I realized that he stopped giving them back to me.
I deserved more than what I got from the relationship. For a long time, I hesitated to say that, because I was treated to great cuisines, family excursions to beaches, and other expensive indulgences. What more could I want? Though I valued his generosity, I still missed the smaller gestures, the ones that risked not the pocketbook but the heart. Dinners and movies can be bonding experiences, but without romance, they were more friendly than amorous. I looked for gestures of love. I asked for them. I needed them. But they were never consistent, and eventually, they stopped.
I deserved to be happy. Whoever he was couldn’t make me happy, and he was not interested in becoming someone who could. Maybe it was an unreasonable expectation, but I was in love and I was foolish and I hoped.
But now I’m free. I’m free to call old flames for casual mind-blowing sex. I’m free to flirt and tease to my heart’s content. I’m free to spend my nights laughing with my friends. I’m free to spend time alone in peace. I’m free to move out of New England. I’m free to move out of the country. I’m free to experience new people, new places, new things.
I’m free to love someone who loves me back, someone who is willing to put down life and limb for me, someone who deserves my attention, dedication, and love.
But not yet. It’s too early. The wound is too fresh, and the pain is too raw. I’m free, but I’m also free to demand the relationship I want on my own terms. That will not come easily, but that is definitely something worth waiting for.
Three months ago, I made a dramatic exit. A few days later, I stepped back on stage. What happened on July 4th will remain on July 4th, but suffice to say that the events of that night propelled us back into the relationship. At first, it was good. We communicated better than ever before. We planned to move in together. And we did.
But it’s been a week since he ended the relationship. The parting was amicable. We are still good friends. But the breakup meant that I had to move out. Perfectly reasonable (and arguably necessary) but I could have done without the additional stress. Packing and redefining boundaries and sobbing? Unpleasant activities.
Now I’m back in New Hampshire with family. It’s been slow sorting through the boxes. I feel a little disoriented, a little off-kilter. My life was scattered among home, school, work, and Boston for so long, having it all in one place is disconcerting. I don’t trust any semblance of permanence right now. I’ve been uprooted enough in the past year.
Is my heart broken? A little. Are the feelings still there? A little. (Have I jumped right back into the dating scene? No comment.) But this is better for both of us. I don’t know how the breakup affected his life, but I know that I am better now. I don’t have to worry about making the relationship work. I don’t have to worry about being hurt again. I can relax and focus on other things, getting on with my life.
Still, I don’t regret those 31⁄2 years. As cliché as it sounds, I’m glad that they happened. I was very hurt during those years, but I was also very happy. I’m still happy today, not because I’m free and single but because the relationship taught me how to be happy on my own terms.
But what I wanted and what he could give didn’t match. And that’s the end of it.





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