
Lifestyles Unrequited
Goddess
Gary Glauber
It
was my first major rejection |
|
You cant
force someone to love you. She told me her story and I wanted to believe
her, if only to save myself. We each played our parts. It was my first
major rejection.
Id persisted with poems (and even a song), believing that if my
creativity didnt win her over, it would at least pique her curiosity.
I was wrong. She had her own problems and I was too caught up to notice.
When she spoke, I listened for words and phrases I wanted to hear. It
was all dreams and fantasies. She was more symbol than person, a marionette
out of control, and I was an emotional mess amid tangled strings. Reality
never had much part in it.
Id heard rumors. Her mother was dying of multiple sclerosis; her
father had been in jail. I wasnt sure her family problems concerned
me. My selfish dream didnt allow for outside issues. Instead,
I asked others to say good things about me to her.
The futility lengthened, as the days grew shorter and the guessing game
and innuendo had become too much. I was very aware how she was pursued
by lots of guys, and how she saw them as nuisances. But I felt I was
different. I deserved to hear directly from her what the story might
be. After weeks of deliberating with quickened heartbeat, I decided
to call.
Her roommate answered, eager to screen this attempt. I told her I knew
she was there, that it was an emergency, that I HAD to talk to her.
My verbal pleading worked. She got on.
"We need to talk."
"We do?"
"Youd be doing me a favor. Can we meet in an hour at the
flagpole in the middle of campus?"
"I have so much work. Its really not a convenient time."
"Cant you inconvenience yourself once on my behalf?"
The silence seemed to stretch for ages.
"Okay," she said. "See you in an hour."
The day was cold and dry, the air unnaturally clear, the snow reflecting
the late afternoons sun. In my mind it was Humphrey Bogart meeting
Ingrid Bergman. Sharp winds stung the part of my face the scarf ignored.
I fully expected to be stood up. Then I saw her climbing the hill from
her dormitory.
We exchanged a silent greeting through the bulk of our clothing, and
walked together toward the empty football field. Though my heart was
beating in my throat, I managed to tell her my feelings. She seemed
flattered (yet not surprised), but wanted to speak her mind too.
Her story seemed a stock one, simple enough: bad timing. Coming off
a really sour dependent relationship that had lasted four years, shed
been hurt badly. The last thing she wanted now was another relationship.
I took it all in, then argued on, rallying in defense that we could
be different. I presented my case, even reducing it to listing all the
interests we shared. In essence, I described the very foundation of
my dreams in what I thought was a most moving way.
She said no.
Sensing imminent loss, I proposed the dreaded alternative.
"Cant we at least be friends?"
She said "With you it could never be just friendship."
I took that as a compliment, my bruised ego grasping for anything. She
went on to say all the right lines, as if I had written them for her.
"Youre a special person. Im flattered. And were it
another time, another place, things might be different."
It was a movie of my life, a romantic scene of heartbreak, something
that would play again and again in memorys theater.
"Maybe then I could be who you want me to be. And Id be able
to respond the way you want."
When we parted ways, I think I loved her more than ever. She wasnt
rejecting me. It was timing. I heard her story and fell for it. I admired
her honesty, her forthright attitude, her easy way of discussing emotional
matters. She must care, I told myself, to throw her work aside and brave
the cold simply because Id asked.
Back in the warmth of my room, nagging doubts crept in: was she telling
the truth or only responding the way a normal person would when confronted
with a pathetic emotional train wreck? I wanted to think the best.
A few months later I learned she was "going out" with someone.
I tried hard not to panic. He was another freshman, not even some upper
classman. I told myself it wasnt true. After all, I knew what
shed said.
Yet it was. She was with him, despite what seemed obvious: that the
two of us would be a far better match. All the hurt Id held in
check came back full force. Naivety transformed into ugly jealousy.
I lay awake at night trying to figure out why it wasnt me. Everything
shed said was probably no more than her being polite and I hadnt
known it.
From a distance, she caused me more pain than any Id ever known.
I had made her into some goddess and as such, Id also given her
the power to strike me down. The real woman was oblivious, perhaps even
happy in this new relationship. For me, it didnt matter. The fantasy
woman left me heartbroken and eager for revenge. I hadnt yet learned
that when the world stops revolving around you, it manages still to
spin on.
Gary Glauber © December 2003
gigwords@optonline.net
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