Here’s
how not to begin
a relationship.
Tell
the guy,
straight away, that you’re
moving. Not something
local, but two thousand miles
away. See Johnny
run.
But
he doesn’t.
For whatever
reason,
he plays
along with the temporary
charade. Heck,
the move
is two months away. Maybe
he’s
just playing the odds.
Most relationships
don’t make it
that far anyway. Not in the
age
of swiping left.
Not when
messages
continue to
come in
on OkCupid, Plenty
of Fish, Match.com. Not when
there
are
ample
opportunities for hookups on
Grindr, Scruff, Manhunt and Squirt. A week
or two, maybe three.
A chance
to have
a companion join you to try
out that hip Thai restaurant
your friends
won’t go to because
they
prefer
sushi and who pays twenty-five
bucks for pad thai anyway?
Surely
moving on will come before
moving.
Except
it doesn’t.
So, go figure,
this dating thing has legs.
But
keep
talking about that move.
Mention
the comprehensive
rental
sites
you found online for
your future city.
Throw in repeated
references
to issues
with booking the movers,
offer
daily updates
on packing up your condo, recall
a couple of
great
cafes
you discovered
in your new
city while
scoping out possible
neighborhoods
during a trip there
in January. Surely
the fling
will wind itself
down. If Johnny won’t run—maybe
he’s
got a lingering
knee injury—he’ll
at least
have the
sense
to turn and walk away. Hell,
passing time on
Twitter
would be a
better
investment.
But
Johnny misses
every
chance to
say goodbye and
cut his losses.
(Are
there
even
any losses?)
During
the entire
time
that Johnny keeps
hanging around, agreeing
to yet
another
date, pepper
the poor
guy with all your baggage.
Go easy
at first. Share that
you’re a
vegetarian.
That’s not technically
baggage, but
it’s sent
many a suitor on his way. (“So you eat
chicken,
right? Fish?”) Let
it sink in that the
whole
ordering
Chinese
food thing just got
impossible. No sharing the
Mandarin Mu-Shu shredded
pork. Or
the Szechuan
beef.
Or
the
barbecue
pork buns. Chop suey
is hardly
a palatable consolation.
Who really
wants seconds
of bean
sprouts?
And
yet
he still
eats
with you. “I don’t mind vegan
spots,” he says.
Oh oh. That’s a clear
sign he’s
thinking of hanging on. The
ones
that stick around into the
second
month always profess
to be cuisine-flexible.
They
make a
point of mentioning
every
time they
prepare
a vegetarian
meal
at home. (“Pretty
much. Except
for the bacon.”)
So
Johnny hasn’t run. Nor
has
he
walked.
Apparently that GPS feature
on his phone
isn’t working and who can
get
around without it these
days? “West”
is nothing but a rapper’s
last name.
Kick
things up a notch. Talk
about the meds
you’re on.
For depression.
Actually, for being
bipolar. Wait for it...he’ll
walk. Whichever
direction.
There’s
always Uber.
But, no. Johnny says, “I’m okay with that.” Repeat
the diagnoses,
adding “really,
really”
before
bipolar.
Johnny
stays. Forget
all that’s messed
up with you; something’s gotta be
wrong with Johnny. Maybe
he’s
just slow at processing.
Maybe he
prefers
to break
up by text.
Ghosting’s become
quite
normalized
these
days.
Johnny
texts.
Johnny phones.
Johnny FaceTimes.
Talk
about your eating
disorder.
Go into detail
about the extended
hospital treatment
last year,
followed
by the stint
in a group home. Make
it clear
that you made no
progress.
Still messed
up. Again, “really,
really”
messed
up. Listen
as Johnny calmly asks questions.
Non-judgmental
ones,
just seeking
to understand.
What
the hell?
In
another
week,
disclose
the doozie
of all doozies,
the deal
breaker—talk
about your time locked
in a psych ward. Twice.
Still
Johnny stays.
There’s
nothing left
to do but to channel
an epidemic.
Sure, it
dashes
the whole
moving plan, but make
it clear
that staying in the city
is just a default.
It’s not about the
relationship.
The six-month
lease
doesn’t
prove commitment,
especially
when
you share that
the landlord
won’t impose a
penalty
if you bolt after
five. Let
it be clear.
This is temporary.
The whole
world is on hold.
The
relationship
waddles
past the two-month
mark. There’s
still a newness
to it. Plenty
has been
(over)shared,
but maybe there’s
still some
googly eyes
at play. All the quirks
have been
disclosed,
but they
haven’t
really
shown themselves.
By gosh, maybe whatever
this thing is has
a future. For
god’s sake, don’t
be a
leech.
Give the
guy some
space.
Don’t be
one
of those
doomed
gaga couples
that abandons time with
friends
and spends
all their
free time
together.
Get
out. See people.
Maybe
even
dash off for a weekend
away on your own. Attached,
perhaps,
but with that fierce
independent
streak
intact.
F*ck
you, COVID-19.
No
friends.
No getaways.
Not even
dinners
out in which the waiter
is an extra
person
to converse
with. (“So
you’re a
full-time university
student,
too? How do you manage?”)
Make
it just you and Johnny. He’s
your Plus One to
everything.
Except
there
really
isn’t anything other
than outings to see if
they’ve
restocked
flour in the
grocery
store and
to search
the
drugstore
for
that new
woodsy spruce-scented
antiseptic
someone
mentioned
on Facebook.
It’s just you and Johnny and Netflix.
And
walks. Lots of walks in areas
strategically chosen
where
there
won’t be
other
people.
Keep
that Johnny-and-you-against-the-world-and-all-its-germy-germs
thing going.
Cross
the three-month
mark and watch as it still goes
on. The virus,...Johnny
(actually, Daniel),...the
wonder
of it all. It’s yet
more proof
that I know absolutely nothing about relationships.
2 comments:
Johnny. Oh, Johnny…er, Daniel. Sounds like my kind of guy. You've hauled out all your stuff, and still he wants to be with you. Wonder what that means. Hmmm.
Two like you would never make it. Two like him would never make it. One like you and one like him might just make it. If you want it to. If you let it.
It's true that opposites can actually be complements. It's just a matter of how you view it.
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