"Love is nothing, nothing, nothing like people say
you gotta pick up the little pieces every day..."
-Liz Phair, Love is Nothing
"For a heart beats the best in a bed beside the one that it loves..."
-Lady Lamb the Beekeeper, Crane Your Neck
For
a while, it felt like everyone else was falling in love and I was just
falling apart. It was like some kind of pheromone phenomenon. Everyone
around me was talking and dating, mating and relating, getting engaged
and pregnant and coming together. Normally, I couldn't care less about
people and their paramours but when so many people were coming together
in such a small amount of time, it threw me for a loop.
And I kind of felt down about it.
I never wanted to be the kind of person who was happy
simply because I was in love. I've said it before and I'll say it
again: you don't need another person to be happy. I really believe(d)
that. I know my writing and whining about being lonely doesn't always
(or ever) reflect that philosophy but even loners get lonely...right?
But
what if I'm wrong? What do I know about love? I've always thought I
had the level head, that my heart wasn't tainted by crushes or heavy
feelings and I could dole out decent advice about the topic because I
was removed from it. I could think logically. But maybe you can only
know so much about love from mere observation. Maybe the best way to
know about love is to live it, to love and be loved.
But
how do you start to love? How do you know if you're doing it right?
How does any one of us know? The heart doesn't come with a handbook.
Love is universal yet it seems the way in which we all come across it
and experience it is unique.
And what if happiness, or at least some form of it, does come from love? If you don't love, are you missing out on happiness?
We
are inundated with stories and music and movies based around the
concepts of love and happiness being intertwined. It can really screw
with your perceptions. And I think, no matter a person's stance on love
and happiness, we are all a little bit brainwashed into thinking love
is how you obtain happiness.
I don't know what love
means to me. I've never been in a relationship and haven't had strong
feelings for many people. In fact, the only feelings I've had have
only been in the past couple of years. And I have to wonder if there's
been a part of me that's forced myself to feel these things so I can
feel like I'm normal, that my heart does in fact work. I'm still not
entirely convinced.
And to give myself some credit
and because I don't want to make myself sound like the most horrendous
troll ever birthed, I will say through the years, girls have been
interested in me. I'm not so disgusting that no one wants me. But with
these girls...I just didn't want them. I'll admit there's been
interest over the years but it's never been mutual. It's either been on
my part or on their part.
And in some ways, their
interest in me was almost as bad as no one wanting me because I still
ended up alone. I could take comfort in the fact that I didn't have to
be but I never wanted to lower my standards and date girls I wasn't
interested in. But Brannon, you couldn't have known unless you tried it! Maybe you're right but I didn't and I can't change that now.
But
being liked and not liking someone or liking someone and not being
liked has been a source of frustration for me. Maybe I should have
tried harder to make things work but was it too much to expect to want a
mutual infatuation? Maybe that's not the way it always works and maybe
it was never mean to work for me like that.
Even the
movies and television shows and books have depicted characters not
feeling each other only to be madly in love by the third act. Maybe I
just haven't gotten that far. So why is it I can see the credits
coming?
I am alone. I am lonely. I want a friend. I
want a girlfriend. I don't believe in marriage, but damn it, I want a
wife. I want to be with someone. I want to sleep with someone and
learn about two bodies together. I want to love. I want to be loved. I
want to know what all the fuss is about. I want to know what all the
books and movies and television shows meant when they showed two people
falling in love.
I've often thought I was meant to be
alone. Some people just don't mesh. I always thought I was defective.
But I'm not sure if that's right anymore. How misguided we are to think
out of the billions of people on Earth, we won't find someone
compatible. I'm not 100% sure there's someone out there for everyone
but I do think there's someone out there for most people. The problem
lies in the actually finding that person. It's not that they aren't out
there, it's that we might never encounter them. What if my soulmate
lives in Bulgaria, y'all?
Kude si bila prez tseliya mi zhivot? O, da, v Bulgariya.
I
also don't like the idea of relying on the other person to be happy.
Sure, love can bring happiness. I'll concede to that. But I don't
think that should be the be all and end all to happiness. It always
makes me sad when a couple are parted for any number of reasons and one
person crumbles. Do we really attach so much of ourselves to our
partners that when the partner has passed, we can no longer function as a
single individual? Are we somehow lessening ourselves by doing that?
Are we saying we are not enough of a person to press on? Are we that
weak?We need to realize that people will not complete us like a puzzle.
We are already whole and complete. We are not made to interlock but to overlap.
There's
a part of me that knows I'm not a monster. I can be loveable but the
fact that I have not been loved all these years makes me question it.
And I don't mean love as in someone enjoying my company but love as in
someone wanting to be with me in an exclusive romantic relationship.
Sure, there's been crushes but no one's been crazy about me.
I
want someone to be my veins, you know? I don't want someone to be my
blood, to be the source of my life. I just want someone to be the
conduit to help the blood flow. I want someone to help me help myself.
I want someone to love me and show me it's okay for me to love me. And
in that love, I want to be made whole, but not by the other person
filling the void. I want them to show me I can assemble my own parts.
I
think it's kind of romantic to think of someone else completing us but I
also think it sets us up for small deaths. When we pour so much of
ourselves into someone else, we neglect who we are. I don't want
someone to be my strength. I don't want someone to be my confidence.
Because people are fleeting. People come and people go and even the
best relationships end, whether it be by choice or death. And when that
person, that strength, that confidence is gone, we are only left with
ourselves, the ones we put on hold to harbor someone else.
I want someone to help me improve myself instead of just
being that improvement for me. I don't want a better half. I want a
better whole to help me become a better whole. Maybe love is helping
someone else become better and independent and self-sufficient. Love is
giving a skill instead of taking a feeling, teaching someone how to tap
into their inventory of talents so they can apply them to other
pursuits once you are gone. Maybe love is empowerment.
And
when that person goes away, I don't want to be devastated. I don't
want to come apart again. I want to hurt without hemorrhaging. I want
to cry and carry on because you can't get strength from a corpse or a
divorce.
But what do I know? Maybe I'm romanticizing it as much as those who say we are incomplete without a partner. I guess I'd just like to think I'm at least taking steps toward a more logical approach to love. I'll admit I don't know much but I think love is more about complementing rather than completing someone. Or maybe I'm totally off and need someone to step in and help me flounder and figure out what love means to me. After all, love is one feeling with a million different meanings.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
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