Thursday, February 23, 2012

Just What I Need


There have been many times in my life when I didn't get what I wanted.  At those times I was angry or sad or just plain confused by the turn of events.  Then weeks or months or years after, I would look back and think, "Wow!  Thank goodness I didn't get that then because if I had, I wouldn't be able to experience and truly appreciate THIS right now."  It's not like I look forward to disappointments and sadness, but at least now I can sometimes know that when I'm in the midst of these disappointments, even if I can't see what that is, there is something (or someone) that will make me better and happier and a more complete version of who I am meant to be.

There have also been times when people have entered my life at just the right time and showed me or taught me exactly what I needed at that moment.  I talked about those romantic interests that have shaped who I am a few days ago, but I want to mention and thank another person who has become such a great influence and source of calm and confidence for me the last few years.


It was, as sometimes great things are, just happenstance that I even came to meet her.  I was wandering the internet one day here on Blogger.  If you are on a blog hosted by Blogger, in the header at the top of the page there is a link that you can click that says, "Next Blog" (don't do it now!) and it will take you to a random blog on Blogger.  In the early days of my blogging I did that quite a few times just looking for inspiration and ideas from other blogs.  It was while doing that a couple of years ago that I stumbled up a woman and writer who touched me deeply.  She wrote of her pets and her life as a nurse and being a single woman long before anyone had thought of blogging about such things.  Her stories of Harlan, a dog who she says found her when she was at a point in her life when she was trying to overcome her fear of dogs, touched me as an animal lover.  (Fair warning - if you decide to read the Harlan Chronicles, bring a LOT of tissues!  You're going to need them.)

From there, I was hooked.  I think I read nearly everything she had ever written on her blog up to that point.  She was funny and insightful and a pleasure to read about.  I started following her blog and she started following mine.  Over the next couple of years, it seemed every time we would write something, the other person would respond with, "Oh my gosh!  I am the same way!  I totally get where you're coming from."  We discovered we have the same birthday!  When I shared with my readers the cupcakes I had made for my birthday treats, she was reminded of birthday cupcakes she herself had made a few years earlier!  Our upbringings and thoughts and experiences and even the content of our blogs was sometimes so similar it was eerie.  It was like we were living the same life in many ways only she was 15 years ahead of me.  It was like I had found a long-lost soul sister.

Every time I post an entry, I think, "I wonder what Joan will have to say about this."  I make sure to check her blog for new content as often as I can and look forward to her Advice on Love or her travel adventures.

She has, in many ways, been such a source of hope and inspiration as I have struggled romantically the last few months.  I often receive advice and "words of comfort" from friends and family assuring me that they get what I'm going through or that they know where I'm coming from and they are sure they "everything will work out" in the end for me.  But it's her advice and words of encouragement that I often find the most comforting.  As a woman who didn't find true love until she was 38 (the age I am now) and didn't get married until she was 40, I know she gets it.  She gets what it's like to want love in your life and yet to not want to be pitied.  She gets how ridiculous it is when someone says they hope you can find someone to "take care of you" when you've been doing a very good job of doing that yourself for a long time, thank you very much!

Recently I posted the clip from "When Harry Met Sally" where Sally finds out Joe is getting married and she comes to the realization that it wasn't that he didn't want to get married but that he didn't want to marry her.  I've been going through some stuff lately (perhaps I'll share more here later) and that clip kept running through my head like it was on a loop.  Joan's response was that, once again, we were so similar.  She used to run replay that scene over and over again on her VCR before she met her husband.  Then she said that she wanted an invitation to my wedding that she is sure is going to happen in the next couple of years.  Whether that is true or not, I don't know but I'm sure she has no idea how much that hopeful sentiment meant to me at that moment.

Finally, because I have such respect for her and her opinions, I was moved by her response to my recent Valentine's Day blog entry.


Joan, Whether we ever meet IRL (in real life) or not, I just wanted to thank you for the support and encouragement you have given me the last couple of years.  It's just what I need just when I need it.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

A Thank You Note


In case you just tuned in, Tuesday was Valentine's Day. ...or as I like to call it, "Being Single Awareness Day".  Because unless you turn off all radios, tvs and internet sources (especially Facebook) and don't actually leave your house, it is difficult to not be barraged by how wonderful it is to be loved by your husband/wife or boyfriend/girlfriend.  For those of us who don't have any of those, we can feel like odd man out and it's difficult to NOT be aware of the fact that we are single.

So this year I'm single.  But that hasn't always been the case and as I look back at all of the men (and boys) that have passed through my life.  I am overwhelmed by a wave of gratitude.  While these relationships have come and gone, they have all taught me valuable lessons that have made me the woman I am today.  I like that woman and so I would like to take this opportunity to publicly thank some of those men (and boys) for helping to make me the woman I am today.  (Some names have been changed to protect the not-so-innocent.)


To Luke:  In 2nd grade I gave you a love note.  You corrected the spelling of your name and gave it back to me.  You may have missed the sentiment, but I didn't miss the lesson.  It is you that I thank for the opportunity that I had to compete in the city-wide spelling bee in 7th grade.


To Vance:  In 7th grade you gave me my first kiss. That's a big deal in a girl's life and I have to say, "Well done."  All subsequent kisses have been sought after because I enjoyed the first so much.

To James:  We only ever went out once, but it just took the once for me to get the lesson you had to teach.  You said I was indecisive and you were right.  It is because of you that today when someone asks me where I want to go to dinner or which movie I want to see, I no longer simply defer to whatever it is that they want to eat or to see.  If I have an opinion, I voice it.  No longer do I eat in restaurants I don't like or see movies I don't care about because I said, "I don't care".  "I don't care" is no longer in my vocabulary unless I really don't care.  Thank you for giving me the courage to voice my desires.

To Richard:  You were my first real love.  You were the first man to buy me flowers.  You were the first man I really danced with dressed in taffeta and fancy shoes.  You were my first real boyfriend. You were the first man I ever thought of marrying.  You were also the first man to teach me that I wanted a man with drive and ambition in my life.  I want a man who is not content to sit back and watch life pass him by.  You helped me to realize that because that was not the man you were.  After a few years, the paths of our lives changed and we parted company. But for a long time after, you were in my thoughts.  You were the first man to tell me you loved me.  Thank you for that.

To Seth:  You taught me how the other half live. You took me to restaurants nicer than I'd ever been to.  Your car was the fanciest I'd ever ridden in.  You showed me how to interact with people in a way that was respectful of myself.  You taught me that having expectations of others was okay. You also taught me that a man can, at the same time, be caring and callous. In many ways your affluence showed me how little I care about those things. The fancy meals, sexy car and big house didn't make you a wonderful person.  No amount of money could ever have made me love you. You were kind and sweet to me, but no one else was immune to your judgement.  Whether someone was fat (which I was at the time), trading with a "3-handle" (at a time when you were approaching your 30s) or "damaged goods with baggage" (divorced with kids), you never failed to point out what you perceived as their "flaws".  Your emotional cruelty to the people around me taught me about your "flaws" and the damage that is done with words.  Thank you for helping to make me more empathetic and understanding of the ways we are all imperfect.

To Ian:  Thank you for being my friend. I am not the same person I was more than 10 years ago when we met and you have played a big part in that. You have shown me that a man and woman can be close without being intimate. From the start, ours has not been a relationship based on eros (passionate love), but instead on philia (friendship).  Before I met you, my world was very black and white.  You taught me that the world is, instead, shades of grey. We have spent many an evening huddled over a few (or more than a few) "adult" beverages discussing everything from life and love to home maintenance and how we really do need to get back to the gym. Nowadays, we are a bit older (and hopefully wiser) and our time together is more likely to be spent at a neighborhood restaurant rather than a smoky bar, but it is time that is important to me and I hope will always be something that I will have in my life.  

To Sam:  We met under interesting circumstances at a pivotal time in my life when, for me, being alone was definitely preferable to being with a man who was not right for me.  I can say with all certainty that in the brief time that we shared I learned that I do, indeed, have "deal breakers".  If you had asked me in my 20s what my deal breakers would have been, I would have been at a total loss. Whether it was because I had so little regard for my own wants and needs or because I was so desperate to be loved, I often spent time with men that I knew were not right for me from the start.  I am thankful that that fate did not befall our relationship and that I was able to recognize my need to get out before any hope of a friendship was lost. From you I learned that I can't date a smoker.  I'd never dated one before, so I didn't know how I felt about it.  Now I do.  You also reinforced for me that I need a man who is actively involved in life and the great big world around him.  I want a man who sees every day as a great adventure and is prepared to get out and truly experience all that life has to offer.

To Troy:  I hope that I am able to put into words what you have meant to me and how profoundly you have changed me.  Meeting you was like a blind man witnessing a sunrise for the first time.  He may have been told how beautiful it would be, but until he saw it for himself, no words could adequately describe the utter awe he experienced at that moment.  You were the first man who truly fed my soul in a way that I hadn't known it hungered for. You showed me that discussing the difficult times is the only way to get through them and that a fight doesn't mean the end of the relationship.  You shared with me your home, your family and your spirit.  It is because of you that I have a fire for adventure burning inside of me.  It is because of you that I have criss-crossed this country astride my very own motorcycle.  It is because of you that I have the courage to be single right now and to trust that the love that I long for and deserve will come along some day.  You showed me that I am funny and clever.  You showed me that I should embrace the parts of my personality that I've always been told I should try to cover up.  You showed me that whether I fail or succeed, I should always take a chance on myself.  You cared for me because I am strong and weak, brave and scared, serious and silly.  You taught me to recognize these traits in myself and to see them as gifts that I should treasure.

You also taught me that sometimes I need to leap even if I can't see the spot where I'll land.  I wish I would have taken those chances on us in the beginning.  I wish I would have said "I love you" every time I thought it instead of being scared that you couldn't say it in return. Maybe if I had dared to take that chance on us, things would have ended differently for us.  Maybe not.

I hope that we will be in each other's lives for a long time to come, but if that is not in the cards for us, I hope you know that I love you and I wish you success and happiness in every endeavor you choose to undertake.

                                      Most sincerely and with much love,

                                                                                   Heather

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin