Chapter I
Gotta get out of
this funk. Yeah, it could be the weather and it could be that I have so much to
do that I choose to do nothing, but the truth is, it’s just me. It wouldn’t
necessarily be so threatening to have my head space looming in, but I know what
my head can do and it’s not just a “crazy” thing. It has been nearly one
straight month of rain, rain, rain—I can live with that. I’m a Washington girl
and have lived with that all of my life, minus the time I’ve lived in
California and Colorado. No, it is the “what-if” thoughts that rankle. What if
I had stayed single? What if I had gone to university right out of high school
and lived in a dorm and had life-long college friends? What if I had married
someone more wealthy and my job was only to go to the gym and work out and have
facials every day? What if I had some business prowess and built a successful
corporation and made a gajillion dollars every year? What if I could
compartmentalize my life to get a little more excitement out of it? What if I
took the Dark Side out every once in a while to feed it?
Here’s the
thing: I am afraid of the Dark Side. It’s not some schizo thing, it’s just that
I quite like my dark side and I chose a life that is decidedly “lite.” It’s not
filling, but it’s better for me. Every time I hear from Joey, it breaks my
heart and makes me think of all these questions that lay dormant. What if I had
moved to Las Vegas with him? These questions that are so much better left
unasked, let alone unanswered. I never was the girl who asked him any
questions, so I feel strange about wanting to ask them now. Too late, Chica. I
chose my path, and it did not include him. So scared then, and now I’m not so
much stuck, as I quite like my life, and not so much bored, as I hardly have
time to do this sort of navel-gazing, but lacklustre. There. There it is. My
life is so lacklustre that I must use the international English spelling of
certain words just to mess with Microsoft Word’s desire to want to change it.
No, I shout, no! You cannot change it. I change it back to the British “re”
each time.
Where am I going
with this?
About two weeks
ago, when I was looking for information about North Carolina because I felt a
certain desperation about wanting to know something about the place where Joey
lives now, I went on Craigslist to see what kind of job prospects lie in the
major cities there. There is nothing, or at least nothing on Craigslist. What
do people do there? Wait for hurricanes? Practice honing the better Carolina dialect—not that hick
sound from South Carolina? I popped
back over to Seattle and started cruising jobs here, as I do regularly. I have
always done this—whether I loved my job or hated it. I just like to know what
else is out there. (I see a theme emerging here.) I wanted to see if there was
any freelance work or glamourous (British spelling, notice that?) international
telecommuting to supplement my income, which I could do by giving up the
remaining hours of my day which I frivol away with sleep. There was nothing
that was just waiting for me to take it. So I looked at the crap that people
want to sell and the housing swaps to see if anyone from Tuscany or Seville
wanted to give up tenancy of their own elegant domicile to live here. No one
did. Then I cruised over to the Personals to see if anyone of the nanny’s age
wanted to meet her. At the moment, it is easier for me to concentrate on her
not having a social life than me. Very strange creatures looking for Strictly
Platonic.
If I was going
to look at freaky ads, I decided I might as well look at Casual Encounters.
When I first moved to Seattle, I got The Stranger for this reason and this
reason alone—to read and make fun of the freaky ad people, the people and their
weird-ass kinks and their bizarre lifestyles requesting the assistance of some
other interested party. I always wondered who that second or third party might
be because I could not imagine meeting someone from an ad. How desperate do you
have to be to meet people? Can’t you find them at work or at school like anybody
else? So I deemed them all social retards and would pick up the weekly Stranger
for my fix of l’etrange.
Anyway, back to
the Casual Encounters. Casual Encounters on Craigslist begins with a disclaimer
page that screens out Victorians and modern-day Christians (er, maybe
not—aren’t they the wacky individuals with strange sexual predilections?) by
announcing that some of the content a person over the age of 18 might see might
be sexually explicit. From this screen, the user is but one click away from viewing
said explicit content. One simple button that tells the Craigslist community
that yes, I am over 18 and no, I’m not bothered by sexually explicit content
releases and discharges Craigslist from any liability for molesting my moral
fiber. This I also find hysterical.
I have to hand
it to the folks who actually post what they want and what they’re looking to
get in the course of the next 3 hours because the Internet has certainly taken
strides that The Stranger never could. One woman is looking for a man to come
over and have sex while her husband is away at Costco with his mom—eww! There
are several ads from the same big, fat man looking for someone to have a
no-strings-attached quickie with—really? No Strings Attached? Not even a
thread? It doesn’t look like this guy is going to have much success and he
thinks NSA is going to get what he wants for him? You’ve got to be kidding. The
only way I could imagine a woman wanting anything with this guy would be if he
promised her she could move into his trailer with him and he’d support her
welfare ass for the rest of her life, or until he couldn’t stand it anymore and
killed himself. But that’s just me. See what I’m talking about? My head
space—so judgmental and evil. Why can’t we all just get along?
I cleaned out my
linen closets this morning. Afterwards, I compiled a queen-size bed’s worth of
baby stuff to go to either Baby Boutique or the Goodwill or the consignment
shop. Then I went downstairs to our newly acquired family room/fitness room and
moved the sofa and media center so that we could fit the two new machines in
there—at least I hope we’ll be able to get that elliptical trainer and
treadmill in there. At least one will fit, and I don’t want to get rid of the
StairMaster or the Nordic Track. Another of my problems—never wanting to give
up anything to get something else. Then I folded towels that don’t go in any of
the bathrooms due to their color or texture, which, because of this, are
relegated for use at the beach or to clean up spills or when the basement
floods, like after a month of rain.
Feeling pretty
good about my morning’s work, I went back up to my computer and decided to get
some work done for work. Instead, I started wondering why Joey never called
back and I knew that, whatever our history and whatever he’s doing now, we were
never really an “us” and we will probably never be friends, which means I will
probably never get to know what he’s thinking when he sends me random messages.
The key to this
bug I have is to be open with A. about it. If I keep this from A., then I am on
a slippery slope and it seems like only a matter of time before I’m in alleys
shooting up heroin—just that close, so you can see my moral dilemma. Spare A.,
but lose myself in a lie of a life because of a secret so big that I am
irritable and waiting for my next fix. It’s the first step to recovery, they
say—admitting that you have a problem. So I tell A. I tell him in the kitchen two
nights before I have my first conversation with Joey in four years. I tell him
that I received an e-mail and that I’ve been obsessing over it. He goes about
his business as usual. At least he isn’t reading the goddamned Wall Street Journal—that’s the worst,
when I can’t get his attention and don’t know if he’s listening to what I’m
saying because he doesn’t put the paper down. But he is doing the dishes and
listening to whatever talk radio station he listens to when I’m not home
because the sound of it is just noise to my ears and the hosts and callers are
equally fetid. I don’t care what the subject is or what the call is about. If a
radio host has a contrary and arbitrary and dictatorial sound to them, I know
I’m not going to like it. I tell A. my dilemma even though this dreck is
droning behind us. I tell him about the provocative e-mail. He thinks how nice
it is that an old friend is staying in touch. To draw on the wisdom of
Scooby-Doo, Awrrruh?
Okay, I will
have to make this sound more like something pressing. So I tell him that I love
Joey and have always loved Joey. He thinks how nice that I had a youthful
romance that still carries with it good feelings. Mother of god, this guy
should have been named Pollyanna. Let’s take it a step further. I tell him that
I am consumed with this thought that he sent me that picture and I don’t know
why—either to say, remember this and wasn’t that a nice time, or to say, fuck
you, don’t you wish that was our kid under those arches, or for some other
probably more innocuous reason that I have yet to think of, but the point is, I
can’t stop thinking about what Joey’s doing and where he is and wondering what
my life would have been like if I had gone ahead and followed him, but that I
believe I made the right decision not to follow him.
Ah, finally. He
looks like he is contemplating something I have said. He’s tracking this now.
He can see that he has married a crazy girl and that she might be
obsessive-compulsive, at least with anything other than managing piles of
clutter. He can see that I am torn and have a dilemma. He can see that I am a
girl who loves big and is vast of heart who thinks about things and is open
about them and doesn’t keep secrets. He can see that the depth of affection and
trust I have for him is enormous and that even if he doesn’t love me
passionately, I embody passion and for this, he will always hold that
long-lasting ember of love for me and admiration for my reckless ways and will
bide his time while I cool my jets and he can outlast any crazy dilemmas I may
have. I get that he is thinking all of this, but I guess incorrectly. When he finally
speaks, he says, if you leave, leave the girls here.
Again with the
Huh?
A., I say, don’t
you get it? I am telling you this because I am not going to leave you… not for anyone else, that is. I might leave
you for some other reason, but not for another man because my personal
philosophy on trading men is different man, new shit. I prefer to deal with the
shit I know than to figure out new shit. And I woudn’t leave you for a man I
already knew because I don’t know him anymore and already made a decision a
long time ago not to follow him, so please, please banish that thought from
your head that I would leave you for some abiding love that is in no way
grounded in any kind of reality. Okay, he says, and we hug. I feel like I have
just kissed a boo-boo on one of my children, except that this is my life
partner, well-chosen and very maddening.
Five phone
calls: the first one, I called him on Friday after he sent his cell phone
number. I thought he was still in California. He called me right back after we were
disconnected. He was in a mall in North Carolina chasing his son around. He
asked if I was still in Washington, and I said I would be until I was dead.
What a response! Yeah, that’s sexy. I always say things with a smile on my face
so they don’t sound so tragic, hopefully more comic, but geez. Still. I told
him A. loves our house and wants to install a lift when we’re too old to drag
ourselves up the 30 stairs to the front door. Okay, he now knows I’m still
married to the same good guy he didn’t want me to marry 10 years ago. Then he
had to go because they were going to find Mommy. He said “Mommy” with the same
intonation that he uses on words that have unspoken meaning—like “lunch,” which
I believe he uses as a euphemism for sex. Call me slow. He asked if my number
was my cell phone number and told me he’d call me back.
He did call me
back on Wednesday. I was just leaving tennis and had to finish setting up my
plans with my tennis partner. He said, “You play tennis?” Yes, a little. Don’t
you remember, you big thug? The last time I saw you, I suggested we go hit the
ball around a little, but you wanted to stay in. What else is new?, he wants to
know. Well, it’s January and I decided to get a jump on training for the
triathlons I did last year. You did a triathlon?, he asks me. Yes, actually
three of them. I don’t place nor am I competitive, but I’m doing them and
they’re a lot of fun. Yeah, that’s great, he says. He sounds genuinely… what?
Impressed? Surprised? Who’s to say?
What else is
new?, he asks again. He does seem interested. It does not seem as though he’s
just asking this to kill time while organizing his fil-o-fax. Oh, well, the
girls keep me pretty busy. They’re energetic. I opened a preschool a couple of
years ago, so they’re in preschool a few hours a week. Really? How much do you
charge, he asks. I tell him. Wow, he says. What? That seems expensive? No,
well, it depends on where you are. In L.A., two half-days a week was $500 a
month, and here, it’s $160 a month for three days a week, he tells me.
What else is
new?, he asks. I’m running out of stuff. I am a mom and own a business and am
working out and playing tennis and have gone back to school and there is
really, really nothing left, except that I am supremely vexed about his
interest in me. I really want to know what is new with him. I don’t know
anything about this guy, like how his life is, or why he keeps this tiny,
little, ungraspable thread going with me all these years. I tell him my stuff,
like how I’ve gone back to school for child development, and how I started my
business doing tutoring in the afternoons. Amy and the high school boys, he
says, bemused.
What? Geez.
Well, I’m no
Mary Kay LeTourneau, I say, although I may consider using her marketing plan:
do this trig problem, flash a little bra strap...
It is easy and
awkward talking to this guy whom I only knew as Joey and now announces himself
as Joseph. Who is Joseph? Surely I’m speaking to the elder Mr. Miller because
the guy I knew was named Joey. When did “Joseph” happen?
He wants to make
more money. He sold a crackerbox house in L.A. for nearly a million dollars and
found a lovely big house on a 400-mile-circumference lake in a little town
called Cornelius just about an hour north of Charlotte. His real passion would
be to have a wine bar, which, I say, I can see, but then I’m embarrassed and
tell him well, in some past life I could see that, because I haven’t known him
at all for 15 years, and probably never knew him to begin with. So I just say,
I think you’d be a genius at that and leave it at that. He says he wants to
make more money because he’d like to spend more time with his son and go to
preschool with him and hang out, but they are a single-family income household.
Why?, I say, nearly sneering. I don’t know where it comes from, my judgment
about this. I don’t own a self-editor, and things slip out. Part of me thinks
maybe he is single again, but he was just last week going to find Mommy at the
mall with his son, so I know that is not it. Then I think he is not working because she used to be some high-powered
salesperson who traveled to New York and that is why he’s home hanging out and
making phone calls, or why he didn’t give me a work number. But these are not
the case.
I ask myself
that same question every day, he responds. And I don’t touch this subject of
her not working, not for a second.
Then another
telephone line rings and he tells me to hold on, then comes back and says he
has to take this call and will call me back. The next morning, he calls me.
Miss Baker, he says, using the voice I am very familiar with but find it
curious that he is so familiar with me. Mr. Miller, I say back. But the thing
is, I am subbing in my preschool class for a sick teacher. I cannot talk and I
tell him I will call him back in an hour-and-a-half. I do, and he acts
peculiar. Is this a bad time?, I ask. Yes, he says, again with the loaded
inflection. And I quickly remove myself from the call and then nothing. Ten
days of nothing. It is heartbreaking that I give a rat’s ass about having some
contact with this guy, now man, Joseph, née Joey.
So for ten days
I have been gazing at my navel, working, re-vamping my web site, fielding calls
for early enrollment for preschool, taking in new tutoring students, assessing
current students, saying good-bye to students ready to move on. I have re-hired
a former employee, gone to the mountains to ski but didn’t because of avalanche
danger, and been a bit apoplectic about my car, a goddamned German job that
never fails to cost a minimum of $1200 just to fix some minor hose. In other
words, my life “lite” keeps plugging along.
It will be
interesting to see how this year plays out. I do want to be content. Mostly I
am. I am every year, except I wasn’t during the 3rd and 7th years of marriage,
but that’s another song for another day. My life is good. I have absolutely no
call to complain, except for the things I leave undone, and thank goodness for
the confession of sins that I get to do once a quarter or so when I go to
church because that is my favorite line in the absolution of sins:
Most merciful God,
we confess that we have sinned against you
in thought, word, and deed,
by what we have done,
and by what we have left undone.
We have not loved you with our whole heart;
we have not loved our neighbors as ourselves.
We are truly sorry and we humbly repent.
For the sake of your Son Jesus Christ,
have mercy on us and forgive us;
that we may delight in your will,
and walk in your ways,
to the glory of your Name. Amen.
Free at last, I
think, and exhale.