When Mz came to stay four years ago (temporarily, supposedly), I'd thought I'd never want to live with someone again. I'd been living alone for thirteen years, happily.
But after she slept on my couch a couple weeks, I invited her to stay for real. That meant she slept on the couch for another year and a half before the landlord knocked through a wall to make her a bedroom, and she lugged home on the bus a rolled-up mattress.
At the time I met her––first online on a Shatner fansite, then in person walking the Camino across Spain––I'd thought I'd never love anyone new again after my mother had killed herself nine years earlier.
It hadn't been a Garboesque hand-to-forehead declaration,
"I shall never love again!"
Love simply looked like too much work, like digging a garden in a beaten-down yard, and then all the labor of planting, weeding, watering . . .
I didn't have the emotional oomph to want a garden, even.
But this wasn't like gardening. She was like the flash of sunlight off the bell of a tuba in a marching band.
Now that she's moving out, I rather [secretly] wish I could live with someone I love who loves me.
I think of my friend Jill who's getting married in a couple weeks after being single for thirty years. (That's the wedding I'm making 100 German chocolate cupcakes for.)
She says she can't believe how nice it is to live with someone who cherishes you.
I'd like that, maybe. I have the energy for it now. But what sort of human would that be? A lover? A husband-type?
And how do you locate such a one? Dating?
I am not inclined . . .
But after she slept on my couch a couple weeks, I invited her to stay for real. That meant she slept on the couch for another year and a half before the landlord knocked through a wall to make her a bedroom, and she lugged home on the bus a rolled-up mattress.
At the time I met her––first online on a Shatner fansite, then in person walking the Camino across Spain––I'd thought I'd never love anyone new again after my mother had killed herself nine years earlier.
It hadn't been a Garboesque hand-to-forehead declaration,
"I shall never love again!"
Love simply looked like too much work, like digging a garden in a beaten-down yard, and then all the labor of planting, weeding, watering . . .
I didn't have the emotional oomph to want a garden, even.
But this wasn't like gardening. She was like the flash of sunlight off the bell of a tuba in a marching band.
Now that she's moving out, I rather [secretly] wish I could live with someone I love who loves me.
I think of my friend Jill who's getting married in a couple weeks after being single for thirty years. (That's the wedding I'm making 100 German chocolate cupcakes for.)
She says she can't believe how nice it is to live with someone who cherishes you.
I'd like that, maybe. I have the energy for it now. But what sort of human would that be? A lover? A husband-type?
And how do you locate such a one? Dating?
As they say:
I am not inclined . . .
Maybe a lovely new friend will drop from the sky.
If not, I will be happy living alone. After all, I know how to boil potatoes.
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Moomin cartoons by Tove Jansson