Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Apple Store Doesn't Sell Lesbian Oranges


What makes or breaks a relationship? If you look back at the lineage of women your heart has loved and your mind has left, can you see a trend?  Maybe you’re the one who always leaves first or the one who always leaves last.  For me, it’s a combination.

Breakups that come out of nowhere are traumatic and require friend or professional therapy.  At the bare minimum, the ones that end too soon are startling and cause one to “wake up” to the reality that came around the corner and surged a 64 oz. Slurpee onto your chest.  Next, your senses are instantaneously invigorated like when you put on reading glasses that are 2.00+ the strength of your God-given sight.  You see the granular colors in your dog’s coat and the wrinkles that make erosion lines across your pores.  It’s cruel, I know, but we’re all getting older and there isn’t much time to wake up to reality.  So, this is how the benevolent Being(s) gets our attention.

When I went through my most recent breakup—yesterday—, you can imagine that I was startled.



  
Our love eased in slow and blurred the lines between platonicism and intimacy.  I didn’t see our bond occurring.  Sometimes friends turn to each other.  Looking back, I’m glad it happened.  If anticipated, I’d have been guarded and pushed off solace that got me through hard times, lonely times. 

Since I met her at the Verizon store, we’ve been inseparable. Each day starts with a click of her apptribute to check the weather.  On the way to work, I check for 2girls visitors who popped in overnight.  Many lunches ago, I introduced her to my Facebook friends.  Our relationship doesn’t stop there; we are together, near the crackling electronic fire, while Netflix movies fill empty evenings and until the expanding crow blows up and topples those damn laughing green pigs.  She is inches from me while my pores cry desperation tears, soaking the sheets, and my mind reminds me of a new girl that is to come, and then she sings of a new day with her alarming apptribute.

My brother commented, “What are you going to do next?”
“I don’t know.”  I stared at his question, feeling a huge hole under my rib cage. 
My sister’s childhood bestie commented, “How can that be?”
I stared at the screen before I admitted my rising guilt.”  I don’t know. The chemistry is gone.  I feel guilty because I’m just ‘using’ now.”

I’ve been used before, and I know how much it hurts.  I never thought of myself as one of those. When Ex#1 and I broke up, she wasn’t exactly ready. I felt a gap building between what I wanted to do with our time and what we would talk about.  I simply said, “This relationship is ending. We can fake it for two more years, or we can get through this amicably and get ready for someone new.”  I was much wiser then.  But getting older sometimes means losing touch with all the important stuff that was pointed out during Kindergarten or printed on large fanciful posters lining the walls of a tender life.  Now, I have to admit my weakness and find younger strengths because I, too, have become advantageous. 

A new friend chimed in, “You know, there’s a 12-step group called IDT (I Don’t Touch).”
It was sweet of her to offer. She put herself out there.  I know I need help.  I’ve allowed an innocent desire to become a time-eating addiction and, now, I can’t see my life without my best companion.  It’s time to admit that I’ve been using, hoping to fill animated holes inside of me.  What was I thinking? I don’t know how it got this bad.

“It is time,” an authoritative voice booms from the back of my mind. 

I need to recognize that there’s only so much she can give and weigh that against what I need.  It’s apples to oranges. I just pray I don’t use the first animate object that comes my way that way. 

3 comments:

  1. "can you see a trend? Maybe you’re the one who always leaves first or the one who always leaves last. For me, it’s a combination."

    Aww...man...see, even though I promised too, there's a reason I've been avoiding commenting or submitting to this blog...I'm sure it's going to curse me with some sort of "lesbian break-up hoodoo." Well, now that I read this post...psha, it's pointless. You know, when I was young"er" I always broke up with everyone. Something happened since me and the last "big" ex brok-up, though. Now that I'm in my 30's all I have to do is hear the word "sweet." If someone says, "Oh you're so sweet." It could mean, "damn that was a great one night, one weekend, one month stand...don't expect me to call you back." Recently my six-month girlfriend said "you're so sweet to me," and I physically cringed. I heard, "I've grown used to you. this is comfortable..." I've been waiting for the other shoe to drop all week. Also, I refuse to ever be sweet again!!! Also,if this one doesn't work out. I'm so done dating. I'll start a blog called, "Lesbians who know how to date and hate it with a passion :)." -Me

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  2. Me,
    Thank you for bringing to my awareness the need for a hoodoo removing kit. You’re not the first person that has declined from posting for fear of ruining everything, causing relationship apocalypse. It’s clear that I’ve missed a great marketing opportunity. Going forward, I will offer such a kit for the low price of $59.99. In the meantime, I pray that you’ve knocked on wood b/c you’re gonna get whammied for this one, “)!

    Your post made me giggle. I didn’t know why, and so I read it again, and I giggled again. Not only do I thank you, like guest blogger #2- B.B., for coming out of cyberspace and planting a boot mark, but I felt your vulnerability. The thing that doesn’t make sense is that you’re the one breaking up and so you seem to be on alert and in control. I wouldn’t worry about anything—except that you’ve got me worrying that you’re going to start a competing blog that’s going to be way more beneficial to our community. You know, you can always pick a pen name that your girl can’t decipher and be the reoccurring guest blogger who teaches me, and dating-inept lesbians like me, a thing or two.

    Here’s the only thing that doesn’t make sense. You say that something happened in your 30s. Now, when you hear the word “sweet” you think this means she’s going to leave…because she’s used to you. “Comfortable”. I don’t see it but much gets lost in translation, so I’ll assume that you heard something in her tone. Before you start getting prices for u-hauls, just make sure that she’s not being deceptive and buying time. First, are you really “sweet?” If not, be sweet. Second, maybe “comfortable” was a bad thing for the one who is long gone but it’s a great thing for the one that warmed the other side of the bed through this winter. When #3 left, someone gave me the best advice. “Be where your butt is.”

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  3. This post caused another person to come out of cyberspace. My friend "Shrinkables" still owes me a post because she's a great thinker AND writer. For now, she's got this to offer:

    "I have a love/hate relationship with this post. Glad the blog is doing well!"

    Hopefully there will be more news from her soon.

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