building this life

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Sometimes I imagine my fingers reaching for your knee. How we will be sitting, side by side, our faces illuminated by the soft glow of lamps, hands and knees hidden in darkness beneath the lip of the bar. It will be a tentative gesture--part exploration and held breath and exposed wish. The first of many leaps.

 

Later, I think on how your hands will hook my waist. Strong and confident, driven by need and desire and a sweet sort of wanting. But how that'll come only after. Only after I've opened small gates to you. One after another after the next.

 

Because you will never take what's not already been given.

 

You are made of a thing I hardly know how to touch or place or name, but would like, very much—more than anything really—to taste.

 

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on wanting (and not needing) a man

  I spent years of my life sending up a small payer of thanks each time I crawled into bed alone.

 

It was such a sweet moment. That breath—that suspended moment between one day and the next.

 

I loved going to bed alone—recognized it as both a blessing and a privilege.

 

And as a thing that would not last forever.

 

It was at a time when I was healing and learning and stumbling at such a ferocious rate that the solitude of nightfall, and the inevitably of sleep was manna from the heavens. Sustaining and necessary and a very great blessing.

 

I went to bed alone, night after night, because I wanted to. Needed to.

 

Because I was not in a place to share myself with someone in that way.

 

 

Once upon a time a man I loved asked me how I got happy—if I did it on my own, or if I did it with someone else.

 

On my own, I replied, knowing those three woulds mean I'd have to walk away from him.

 

I got happy on my own, which is, to this day, one of the very best things I’ve  done in this life.

 

I got happy on my own—meaning I figured out that happiness is but one sliver of a full life. And that all things ebb and flow.

 

And part of figuring that out was crawling into bed alone. Because there was a time I crawled into bed with a man I wasn’t nuts about and that took something from me—something so personal and so vital I never wanted to do that again.

 

But I knew, even then, that there would come a time when it would end. And that, even if it didn't, it wouldn't always be so sweet.

 

Because needs change. And experience has a way of shifting and shuffling priorities.

 

Eventually, I knew, I’d go to bed with someone else.

 

And what a blessing that would be.

 

Born of a desire, and a choice, and the inevitability of luck—capricious as luck mostly seems.

 

But that desire is a tricky, little bugger. Mainly because people attempt to read into it like tea leaves—divining mystical information where there may not be any.

 

Because the thing is—and I can’t believe I’m saying this (since this is what people always say to me)—it’s not that deep.

 

Because sex is a thing. And oxytocin is a thing. And companionship is a thing. And a man’s arm reaching out for you at three in the morning after you’ve gotten up to use the restroom is one hell of a thing.

 

And those things…well, I can pretend to not need them, or want them, except that I am human, with, as Mary Oliver calls it, a soft animal of a body.

 

So yes, I would like to find a person to crawl into bed with night after night.

 

And for reasons surpassing my understanding I want that person to be a man--for better, or for worse, that’s how I was packaged up and sent into the world.

 

 

I lived alone for two years.  And loved almost every moment of it.

 

But hell if loneliness wasn’t a thing.

 

And I’m not talking about the-get-good-with-yourself-sort-of-loneliness—the kind that people always reference because they think maybe you don’t like yourself and if only you did, then you’d never be lonely again.

 

I mean loneliness of the variety that has seen my entire adult life in New York City, where I have faced nearly everything alone.

 

So when the time came to leave my studio apartment, faced with boxes and cleaning supplies and the daunting task of resolving the previous two years, I stood in that small space with a paintbrush in one hand and a blank wall before me, and I sobbed.

 

Because I felt so tremendously alone.

 

Because it was yet one more thing I had to do by myself.

 

And as my shoulders heaved and my chest rattled there was the very physical need to be held.

 

Embraced.

 

The soft animal of my body wanted nothing more than for someone to take me in their arms, press their face into my hair, and whisper small words, full and good.

 

And that need, that desire, was so physical, so immediate, and so totally consuming that it was a very real sort of terror.

 

Abject loneliness.

 

 

Several years ago there was an article making its way around the internet and quite a lot of people had quite a lot to say about it.

 

I’m going to remember it imperfectly, and I’ve already made peace with that, so I ask you do as well.

 

It was about a woman in her thirties who’d never had sex.

 

And in the article she so bravely discussed the particular loneliness and frustration and fear born from that.

 

And, as tends to happen on the internet, everyone, everywhere had an opinion.

 

And all I could think was, How can anyone comment on this? How can anyone, anywhere have anything to say? Unless, of course, they’ve found themselves in that very same situation?

 

Because, let’s be clear, getting married and divorced by that age, while heartbreaking and difficult, is not. the. same. thing.

 

I think of that woman often. That nameless, faceless woman and how she hadn’t been touched. And how that lack of touch divorced her from her body. Created a space that simply couldn’t be filled by her actions alone.

 

And how giving voice to her many feelings was a way of claiming the experience. Of quieting the shame. And accepting the lonely.

 

I can’t comment on that woman’s story because it is not my own.

 

But I can say there are specific realities to still being single (and single at twenty-eight in this particular city) that someone who is not cannot possibly understand.

 

 

I live an incredibly lucky life. This is not lost on me. But I’ll be damned if I don’t get to say that eventually I’d like to move my life forward. And it is my great wish, that that will mean climbing into bed and sending up a prayer of thanks for the person next to me.

 

 

This is what I believe to be true:

 

A person can be happy and content and with a very good life and want someone to share it with.

 

A person can be lonely (or not) and want a partner.

 

A person can be happy (or not) and want a lover.

 

A person can be totally good in their skin (or not) and want all of the above.

 

And these things--loneliness, comfort, sadness, acceptance--may all ebb and flow from within the boundaries of a very good relationship.

 

But let’s be  clear, being loved—unapologetically and guilelessly for who you are, flaws and all—I don't know if there is anything better than that in this life.

 

There’s a fragment of a Galway Kinnell poem that I think of often, the wages of dying is love. Meaning, because we have to die, we get to love.

 

We are actually paid in love.

 

Meaning: to love. To love to love to love. To love is the point.

 

Or so I think and so I believe and so I understand.

 

And so I want for my life.

 

 

 

(And so it’s just not that deep).

advice + attraction + many muddled thoughts

  Several years ago my mother gave me a small glass plate with a poem by Pete Hein, Shun advice at any price, that’s what I call good advice.

 

Eleven words.

 

Eleven words I didn’t understand.

 

But I toted it from apartment to apartment.

 

Because it was hers. And then it was mine. And I believe in history.

 

Thing is, the older I get, the truer it seems.

 

The more time passes, the more weary I am of small and pithy pieces of advice.

 

Be more casual. Don’t be too honest. Don’t say too much. Be light and breezy. Don’t reveal all of yourself too quickly. Do this. Don’t do that.  

 

I have found that advice is generally unhelpful. And worse, distracting.

 

If people want to share their experience, by all means. But to try to overlap one person’s story, on to another’s…well that’s just silly. Beside the point. A gigantic and befuddling waste of time.

 

To begin, you really can’t learn something until you’re ready to learn it.

 

And beyond that, there is no such thing as a roadmap, a template, a specific set of instructions for this life. (And thank God for that).

 

There is only the direction you want to go, the desire to move in that direction, and the willingness to figure out how to get there.

 

The older I get the more suspect I am of absolutes. And ultimatums. Of anything resembling a black-and-white, this-and-that dichotomy.

 

The older I get the more stock I’d like to place in the notion of  “loosely adept.”  Adaptive. Empathetic. Aware. Intelligent.

 

I had a friend who recently said to me on the phone, Oh Meg, you’re so shiftable, so easily swayed. It was condescending and unkind.

 

And I told him so.

 

At which point he casually laughed me off, Oh, what does shiftable even mean? I certainly don’t know.

 

And while it’s true that shiftable is not a word, we both knew what he meant.

 

Maybe I am shiftable. But maybe what it means is I’m doing the best I can to make the most out of changing and imperfect situations. Maybe I’m altering my view to allow for different experiences.

 

Maybe, maybe, maybe.

 

Maybe it’s just a little bit of synthetic happiness coming into play.

 

I’m especially weary of advice where dating and flirting and relationships are concerned because oh-me-oh-my do people like to give it.

 

And the older I get the more I realize that affection and attraction are out of our control.

 

Which means, advice ain’t worth a damn.

 

All you can do is show up and make a go of it when the when your frequency happens to hum along with someone else’s.

 

But you don’t get to choose the hum, or force the hum, or coax the hum. Yes, this can be a tremendously difficult thing to stomach, until it is not. Until you give over and realize it is the very best thing in the world. Because if it’s out of our hands then all we can do is honor what is actually happening.  And that has nothing to do with small and pithy pieces of advice and everything to do with listening to the gut.

 

This is what I know to be true: I’ve never hooked a man with a perfectly-worded phrase, never lost him with one either. I’ve never tricked a guy into liking me by softening my edges and making myself more palatable. Attraction tends to be a big-picture thing. It happens in that wordless place—it is a combination of synapses firing and smells registering and our bodies reading symmetry. All of this happens on a mostly unconscious level. And if we are really, really, (really) lucky we are aware of it—in so much as, we know something is happening and that it is bigger than us (and so get out of the way).

 

I’m old enough to know now that there are levels of attraction, and when you happen upon that highest level—that penultimate level that leaves you breathless and nervous, then everything else is a cheap imitation. And suddenly good is just not good enough.

 

Which means occasionally, we must wait.

 

There is no such thing as one-right-way. And the older I get, the more I am in awe of ambivalence. I say in awe because it a thing. Like, it actually exists. That I can be standing in one spot, looking at the one person I want to speak to more than anyone else in the world, and having but one thought: please don’t let him come over here.

 

Because fear is a thing. And it sits on each of us differently.

 

And just because one person does one thing, one way—well, that doesn’t mean anyone else will (or should).

 

The world is mostly painted in shades of grey—each of us calling it black and white according to our whims, muddling the landscape.

 

I just keep thinking about feeling the fear and moving towards it. Up the hill, water sloshing from my metaphorical buckets.

 

Because the view at the top…well, that’s the thing.

 

 

things, the importance of which, cannot be overstated.

green

 

Pants that perfectly fit a man’s derriere—not too tight, but tight enough

(a man's derriere)

A bouquet of flowers.

Renegade smiles--unexpected smiles

Intelligence

Clearing the table without being asked

Frozen margaritas

A made bed

A perfectly tailored suit

When a man offers a woman his seat on the subway, for no reason at all

Soft-scrub

Front porches and rocking chairs and cold lemonade

Thunderstorms, anywhere

The scent of a single cigar on a warm summer night

Eating hard-boiled eggs at one in the morning

Crawling into bed, bone-tired

A fine pair of heels

How much is possible in the morning if you wake up early enough