Showing posts with label Loneliness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loneliness. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Ordinary Days

To set the scene: I am in my apartment in New York City and it is almost 9 pm.  Music I do not recognize is playing on the radio – a violin. Schubert maybe? My apartment smells like cigarette smoke, my dining table is clear of paper and pens and could actually function as a dining table rather than a desk.

I’m brooding.

This afternoon, I went to Brooklyn to meet a friend to see Ingmar Bergman’s Scenes from a Marriage. I wish I’d seen it alone—there was hardly anyone in the theater and it was the kind of movie where other’s people’s opinions are best unheard.  Devastating is not too harsh of a word.  And I mean that in every sense of good and bad.

Supposedly the original miniseries that was shown in Sweden includes an abortion.  If that had been included in the cut I saw today, I don’t know if I would have been able to stand it.

“I love you in my own imperfect and selfish way…and I know you love me in your own pestering way.” –Johan to Marianne

Tomorrow I am going to see Figaro – I’ve realized that I do like company at the opera. And so I’m going with a friend. A comedy will be good after today’s entertainment.

A few minutes ago, I came across this blog: http://limagequotidienne.blogspot.com/
One portrait of one person every day for one year. Pretty awesome.

I need to some lightheartedness in my life.  But the thing is, I don’t enjoy light as much as I enjoy the kind of shit that keeps me awake at night. Call it masochism. I’ve always been drawn to a kind of sadness.  Not the poverty-stricken, hopeless, drug-addicted, hungry kind of sadness (I think that is unbearable); it is the emotional struggle of people that sucks me in.  The trouble we get ourselves into knowingly, as if we do not have a choice.  And really, do we?

I remember a conversation I had with CC about A.  I was aware of the flaws of character, his as well my own, but I said to CC, “what am I not going to do it?”  And I think I said the same thing to her about some other event in her life. 

Do you turn down newness out of fear?  Does that make you a smarter person when a year or two later, you are unscathed? Or does that make you a coward who has shut herself/himself into your world, which needed a little shake up anyway?

Four years ago, I was well on my way to being a permanent supporting actor in my own life.  It seemed to me that everything was happening to everyone except me.  I was the listener and the supporter, the one to provide the snarky one-liners—the Rosie O’Donnell/Carrie Fisher to the Meg Ryans of the world.

I hope I am not on my way there again – it might seem like a strange thing to say because when I think of my life, I realize it’s someone’s idea of interesting. I have a friend who would even go so far as to say it’s a sophisticated life, vaguely intellectual, something to be desired. I could go out every night of the week if I wanted and I would have the appropriate clothes to wear for each occasion. I even have a stalker.  (Well, HAD.  I sent the email asking him to go away.  More on that later.) And I feel myself getting smarter and better.  Is that a crazy thing to say about oneself?

But I’m locked inside myself, I have chosen to be quite visible but no one is really allowed to see me. I don’t talk on the phone, I don’t talk to A. I’m on retreat even as I move forward.  My life feels a bit like a game of pretend – I enjoy it, but I realize its limitations, its artificiality and I know that it can’t go on forever.

Am I going to have to make a conscious decision to end this way that I’m living at the moment or will I find my way out without my even knowing?

I’m reading Lark and Termite. But tonight I don’t know if I’ll get anywhere with it.

This has been quite an ordinary day and while I’m not in crisis mode or anything quite so dramatic, I am restless.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Lucy Writes

We must be willing to let go of the life we have planned so as to have the life that is waiting for us.           E.M. Forster

Maybe I’ll start calling myself Lucy in honor of Miss Honeychurch, E.M. Forster’s heroine in A Room With a View.  This could be the Reticent Diarist’s pseudonym.  Reticent is not so catchy, is it?

I’m writing almost every day.  This is unusual for me but maybe not that surprising given the workless days. It occurred to me that I might write about things that happen that have nothing to do with heartache --is that even possible?  I toy with the idea of dividing each entry into sections: FUCKING SAD and NOT SO BAD and GREAT.

FUCKING SAD would have to be a major category because there is a lot of that in my life right now. But I don’t want to be a drip or seem like I sit around collecting sad stories.  I do believe that it is in the misery where our characters are formed. But in the midst of all that there is fun and hope and dirty jokes and weird/stupid stories that make a lot of things worthwhile.

Personally, I’m willing to put myself through an unusual degree of weirdness in the hopes of finding the good. I think this is a good character trait. It also shows that there is a part of me that is a gambler. And all gamblers are stupid. That is not a criticism, exactly.

But when I write to you, dear reader (well, when I write to myself), I find I turn away from what is almost happy.  Guilt perhaps?  There’s no perhaps – it is guilt, pure and simple. And fear. 


FUCKING SAD
  •  My abortion
  •  My dear friend has cancer
  •  Ex/impregnator fell in love with my less cute doppelganger in a matter of weeks post break-up, causing me to question how much/how little he valued our relationship
  •  My mother is nuts and regretful about her entire life
  •  I am hung up on my ex even though I know it ain’t happening anymore
  •  I had sex with a beautiful man who had the smallest penis I have ever met (and I’ve met a few)
  •  Dating too much with little success
  • Loneliness
  • Having sex with my ex (the one now in love with the ugly version of me—I realize this is mean, but give me a break.)
  • Not having money due to unemployment
  •  DID I MENTION MY DEAD FETUS and my broken heart?  This occupies five bullet points each, just so I’m clear. FUCKING SUCKS.  I miss my A like a missing limb; I’ll miss my baby forever.
 NOT SO BAD
  • I had sex with a beautiful man who had the smallest penis I have ever met (sic)
  • Dating
  •  Trying to be friends with my ex
  • My attempts at dating have been met with little success -- but really, am I capable of having an honest relationship at this point?
  • Unemployment
  •  Having sex with my ex – it’s good for my ego
  • Drinking
  • Loneliness
GREAT
  • Writing 
  • A man in Boston who I might never meet who tries to help me with every dilemma I throw at him, including finding a person at Memorial Sloan Kettering who would be able to help my friend CC get better treatment
  •  Interesting men that I’ve met who I'll never see again
  •  The man with the small penis also came too fast. He could do it multiple times, each sex session lasting all of three minutes or so -- sorry for not being more accurate as I did not think to set a stopwatch before each encounter. After Round 2, I observed that he was quite sweaty and he replied, “It comes very fast.”  I died laughing, but I was the only one who got the joke.
  • Meeting Michael, who I thought might turn out to be the greatest rebound boyfriend of all time. But it turned out all I wanted was to be his best friend and he wasn’t so pleased about that (this last bit makes this bullet point an eligible entry for FUCKING SAD but I have bigger fish to fry).
  •  Making new friends in desperate attempt to distract myself from misery
  •  Reconnecting with Jon in real life and remembering how much I love him – I have my doubts as to whether or not this would have happened if events in the FUCKING SAD category did not occur  
  •  My ex and I stalking each other on OKCupid and sending each other stupid notes
  •  Stealing the apartment/sex analogy from my friend DY and taking it to a whole new level of absurd with his sister LY. I will write about this later.
  •  Making a kick ass apple pie for my sad sick friend – it is a stupid thing to do, but it was what she wanted and what I could give
  •  Re-finding another Michael, my reluctant male friend.  He gives me rides on his motorcycle and drives us over the Brooklyn Bridge
  •  Going to the beach with CC
  • New York in the summer
  • Loneliness
So does the categorization work?  Probably not.  Too pretentious.  A too-self conscious attempt to be funny.

But I'm keeping Lucy.

I'm going to gamble.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Any Day Now

My therapist told me about an episode in Sex and the City where Carrie confesses that she'd had an abortion and when asked how long it took her to get over it she replied, "any day now."

I was never a big fan of that show, but there were times when certain episodes, certain lines, resonated. 

Right now, I could honestly say my "any day now" has come.  But that would be silly.  

What is true is that I've gotten better. More than I thought possible.  I am better about my ex, I am better about the aborted fetus.  I think of that fetus not as a baby but as something more than a lump of cells that had to be gotten rid of.  Where does that leave me? 

Another thing I'm noticing -- as I make this uneasy peace with the abortion, my sorrow over my ex diminishes.  I don't understand why -- there was a relationship before there was a pregnancy. But now I see the weak spots in the relationship -- what held me back from introducing him to my family even though I loved him to pieces, what kept me from embracing the reality that "I LOVE THIS MAN."

It was never meant to last because we disagreed about children.  It was never going to last because I have always wanted someone who would be able to provide for children, even when I was blissfully lying to myself about the desire for children.

My ex and I got into a kind of fight the other day. He kept on wanting to see me to return a book.  I kept on saying no, use the post office.  I was surprised at the absence of desire to see him. I was sad, sure. But I was not for one minute tempted.  Suddenly he seems flimsy -- how can I say that about someone I miss so much? I am done.

I wish I could say more about the abortion/baby/fetus.  But it was hardly there at all.  There is nothing to say.

Tonight I'm going to Lincoln Center. I will sit somewhere with my girlfriend and we will talk about the men we meet.  I will tell her about the one night stand I had the other day.  I will tell her how it made me feel better and she will tell me that she would like to do what I have done.

Maybe I'll tell her about a man I've been corresponding with via email.  I call it my e-epistolary romance. Will we ever meet?  Does it matter?  I'm stealing comfort from strangers who don't even know what they are giving me.

If it's a nice night, I will go home in a fog of love for New York City and a kind of loneliness that I like.  I will probably tear up. It will be fun.  No sarcasm there.