The flood of emotions surrounding the deepest love I have known.
37 posts
Tale Of The Tat
Tale of the Tat
I was recently asked if I have any tattoos…
Elizabeth and I had been together for about 18 years, and married for about 14, when I walked into the den and said, “I’m thinking about getting a tattoo.”
Her response was, “If you do, you’ll never again have sex with me.”
Do not judge her. I had no tattoos when we met. In her mind, I wasn’t “that” guy, and I am not that guy. I was wrestling with a changing body in a changing world. Andropause is only an excuse in some regards, but hormones are strange drivers. Regardless, she had every right to dislike the idea of having to look at permanent scar where one had not been before, just as I had the right to consider willfully creating one.
Her response struck me. After my first marriage, a burden had been lifted from me in one regard. That marriage was aggressive and angry. That ex was controlling and manipulative. Freed from her, I had started to find myself again when I met Elizabeth. She supported me and helped me in wonderful ways.
Unknowingly, her response to my thought of a tattoo brought up feelings from my previous marriage. The feeling that I was no longer in control of my own being. This only added to the wacky hormones and feelings of bewilderment and isolation I was experiencing. I did not resent her response, but I did not know how to deal with it either.
At a following Christmas, she gave me a gift certificate to a local tattoo artist whom she had selected, expressing she realized it was wrong of her to control what I might do with my own body.
I appreciate her understanding, but now I was left with a new quandary. The gift represented a new form of control. I did not get to pick where I would have the tattoo done, or when, or who would do it. There felt some restriction based on price, size and perhaps body location. I had envisioned passing some martial arts test in my instructor’s city, and celebrating with a tattoo. Now, I had a gift from a woman whom I love dearly, a woman who does not like tattoos, for a set amount within a given time-frame. The feeling went from, “you can’t” to “you must”. Again, I felt left out of the equation.
It took time. Months passed while I internally debated the situation. Do I or don’t I? I am sure Elizabeth wondered through all that time when I would come home to show her the dreaded tattoo. I finally expressed that I just couldn’t do it, because I would be doing it for the wrong reason. I hated wasting her gift, but I just couldn’t use it. Sadly, this all happened near the end of things. It was swept up as part of it, though I feel it was not. It may be an example perhaps, but not a part.
The world has changed since Elizabeth and I met. Tattoos have moved from accepted to expected. I was recently asked if I have any tattoos. I do not, and I never will. As an act of contrition, I will not get something that would upset her so, even though we are no longer together. This is my choice, even though she will never know - an act of my love.
2024/02/22
More Posts from Keithrm
I Am Alone
Originally Written and Posted July 10, 2012, edited in 2024
I am alone.
The dream was like most dreams. Something observed. Something I was a part of, yet detached from. It began as an odd, nonsensical musing about the American Indians battling their oppressors. The scene quickly shifted to strange, almost Dickens-like imagery, an odd series of narrow water locks, more like flumes, and youngsters fooling their betters out of cups of cream with feats of magic and escape-style trickery. Large whale-like creatures rocked the small boats that worked through the locks, each whale larger than the one before, as if Escher himself had a hand in the maze like twists and turns of the locks, and the creation of the whales.
Suddenly we were in a home. I say, ‘we’, while I was clearly all by myself, I could feel her. I was more than just me – I was a part of a ‘we’. She was in another room, getting ready for something. This home was not like any place I have ever been, and yet it felt familiar. Upscale, with all the flourishes that bring her comfort. She was bustling about, filling the air with her bounce, as she always did. I was in a vulnerable, prone spot in some back corner of some back room.
She appeared in the open door of the room where I lay, and said, “Well, I’m on my way. Won’t be back tonight, and then tomorrow, we’ll be off.” She had that slight English lilt that she adds when she uses her favorite British phrases. But, “we’ll be off,” did not mean we were going for some ride. As casually as she said it, the phrase was devastatingly final. Panic ran through me.
I chased after her as she stepped out of the front door. “What?” I yelled, but she did not hear or did not respond at first. Outside, the yard is covered with the flotsam of a moving day. Neighbors and passersby are picking at the debris like crows on a carcass, yet the sun was shining and the air was damp with morning dew. I made it to the porch where I felt the need to cower behind a pillar, in retreat from the busybody collectors. She cheerily flipped her shawl over her shoulder and helped a Mr. Butler to negotiate the purchase of a garden hose by one of the neighbors.
Then she turned, looked at me and responded to my earlier cry. “Oh, didn’t you know? I won’t be coming home tonight, and then tomorrow, we’ll be off.” I understood it from our reality. She would be working out of town, and appended to that was, “we’ll be off.” Not “off” as in leaving for a trip, but “off” as in the turning out of a light. I felt the sorrow swell up in me. I could feel the corners of my mouth curl down, like a child about to bawl. I clung to the bit of column I crouched behind, hiding from the crows. I peeked out to catch a fading glimpse of her as she gave Mr. Butler a final word and began to head to her car. “I’m sorry,” I cried, the tears swelling up as I cowered and clung to the pedestal, avoiding the gaze of the neighbors. I watched her as she drove away.
I woke, the sorrow thick. I am alone.
What About the Blind Girl?
(Written 12/10/2013, not previously posted, edited 2024 and posted on Tumblr)
The dream started like most dreams do, wispy and vague. There is a gathering of a few people I know, though I cannot identify them. They present me with a horse, of sorts. The horse slowly morphs into a large dog, which we all take for a walk.
As we walk, I become more aware of the group, though I cannot see a face. I feel comfortable with them. These are more than merely friends or acquaintances, they are close companions, one of them extremely close, and yet shrouded in a dreamy veil.
I am told, in a rather soft and indirect manner, there is a new person in the group whom they all want me to meet. The young lady is blind. She is quite chipper. The group and I, along with the blind girl, lead the dog with a long red leash as we walk along a low grassy hill in a populated area that feels oddly familiar.
The grassy open area morphs into the interior of a house I have never seen before. I could not really see it in the dream. I was aware of walls and rooms, but cannot describe the layout or color, other than to note there are several sets of stairs that have no banisters or railings. The blind girl walks around the house with ease.
I ask her, “Are you counting?” Indicating her ability to know where she is by the steps she takes. She replies, “Yes.” I am amazed at her ability to walk and talk, and yet keep count. Suddenly we are all in an upper room. The blind girl descends set of stairs that has no banister and no wall. She loses her footing, and falls from sight. There is a collective gasp.
I lunge toward the edge where she had fallen, and then quickly dash down the stairs, but the blind girl is gone. There is no sense of urgency. Instead, there is a feeling that everything is all right. Suddenly a table appears with my ex’s father sitting at it. He calls his two grown sons to the table for a game of cards, and invites me to play with them. His demeanor is firm, but not grim. That was his way.
I place a coaster on the table, and he moves it. He then notes the table itself, giving it a firm rap with his knuckles. The bleached wood makes a solid knock sound. “This is a strong table. Good wood,” he says. He grabs the corner and twists it using superman like strength, causing the corner to splinter but not break or detach.
With a spirit like movement, he floats toward me, getting close for a whispered conversation. “I had a thing for one of my secretaries once,” he says. I look at him shocked. He questions me, “But if the house is burning?”
I reply, “Well, I would be the last out. Everyone else goes first. That’s my job.”
“Exactly,” he states, with a sense of pleasure in my reply.
While this conversation takes place, there is a sense the hosts within the house are in chit chat conversation. Some are wondering about the blind girl, while others are talking about ‘her.’ The woman they indicate is my ex, the daughter of the overbearing figure who is questioning me. I could feel my heart flutter and nervousness rise.
The father turns back toward the card table, and I turn around looking deeper into the house. I see that I am in a well-adorned living room. I wonder where the blind girl has gone. Then I see a young lady whom I seem to know, in a dreamlike fashion. I recognize her as a dear friend of my ex. She is a tiny little thing of a woman, putting on her coat and preparing to leave.
She comes over to me and gives me a good-bye hug. The hug is friendly, with an understanding. I begin to choke up. She and I slowly spin a quarter turn, and then the friend releases her grip. There in front of me is my ex. She did not look anything like she really looks, except in the face.
She has a classic hourglass figure, and wears a gown of day-glow orange. Despite the seemingly garish color, the gown is fashioned like Cinderella’s dress, and in the foggy muted nature of the dream, creates a glowing princess visage. She comes to me, wrapping her arms around me. I hug her, and we hold each other close. She does not feel like her real self, the shape is all wrong, but it is she. Her emotion, her personality, her warmth comes through loud and clear.
Like a figurine atop a music box, we began to turn in a slow, floating spin. The emotions well up in me. I fight hard to contain a wail. My eyes water as I soak up the warmth of the embrace. For a moment, from a third person perspective, I can see my ex turn her head and look at me, though I do not look at her. She is smiling. Knowing her happiness adds to the depth of my feeling. It takes more effort to contain a weep of despair.
I concentrate on my breathing to hold back the emotional onslaught. In and out, breath after breath.
Dream becomes half dream, which becomes waking consciousness. I became aware of my actual, real life breathing. The breathing of the dream in time with my real, deep, deliberate breaths. Emotions crawl over me like a pet cat seeking rest.
I fight back tears.
It All Went Wrong
Originally Written May 11, 2013, edited in 2024, never posted (until now 02/13/2024)
In a dream, I walk into the gym to begin teaching. The room is not as it really is, but is a dream-spun training room. The floor banks from the entrance down to the far right corner. The students are scattered about. I have difficulty getting them to pair up and get ready for training.
Several older grapplers are near the entrance of the room, playing with the timer, until they finally make it malfunction completely. One of them had tried to set it to do 100 minute rounds. I try to explain that the clock doesn’t allow it, besides, who would want to work multiple rounds longer than an hour and a half? As we all gather around the timer in an attempt to fix it, one of the larger grapplers puts me in a poor headlock, eventually tying up his own hand within his gi so that he cannot release me, while he also cannot set the lock. Though not threatened, I cannot get free, nor could the grappler free himself from his own grip. Eventually I slip out of his trap, and continue to try and instruct the unruly class.
A student, with his girlfriend partner, uses the focus mitts improperly, holding them as well as striking them. In effect, he feeds himself for his own kicks, which he executes toward his partner – a very dreamlike distortion that is physically impossible but seems normal within the dream. I chastise him, pointing out that the feeder does not strike, the striker does not feed. I then proceed to show the class the next combination to work.
I select a student with whom I am familiar. I have her use the larger Thai pads and feed for me as I demonstrate a kick sequence. As I began to throw my kick, she backs up, slipping magically through the wall, forcing me to stop mid kick. With the partner gone, there is no way to demonstrate the sequence. The class, which seems to be about five groups of two or three people each, becomes even more unruly.
In frustration, and feeling class time is nearly done, I begin to exit the classroom. I pass by several folding chairs near the entry way, chairs that had not been there earlier. As I pass the chairs, which at first appeared empty, I realize they do have people in them, and one of them is upset I had not noticed her, though I really had not noticed the people there at all. I decide I need to return to the room and formally close the class and apologize for having not provided a good training period.
As I turn around to reenter the room and address the class, there she is in one of the chairs. She turns to look at me, and I lose all words. I stammer, trying to apologize to the few students for the clumsy nature of the class, but I cannot focus or form words completely as I became more and more aware that she is right there looking at me.
I turn to leave and she gets up. We both met up in the entry hallway. She has with her a small child, six or eight years old, who is proud to announce that he had just gotten his middle name. I have the sense the child is a nephew of some kind. As the three of us walk out to a main room, I congratulate the boy on his new name, and then he turns and simply evaporates. It is only then I get a full and clear look at her.
She looks as she did decades ago when we first met. Her hair a bit longer then it had been in our last years. She is wearing a very familiar heavy blue sweater, black open weave shawl, black shin length skirt, black transparent hose, and black shoes with two inch heels. A very common outfit for her, one I have seen her in many times. The sight of her and that outfit creates a sense of continuity, of past, of familiarity.
She moves to a well-padded sofa that does not have arms. She sits down on it, and says, “I think I have a Valentine somewhere.” She has several small gift wrapped packages, each in a metallic paper, one yellow, one blue, one green, one red, and so on. She begins carefully opening a bit of the wrapping to look inside, searching for a suitable Valentine offering from her store of emergency gifts.
I beg her, “Please don’t. Don’t.” I cross in front of the sofa and sit beside her. As I sit down, she turns and sort of curls up, her head against the back of the sofa, facing downward, as she brings her knees up on the seat. I sit against one of her knees, my back lightly resting beside her head. I keep repeating, “Don’t. Please don’t.”
In my dream, I fight back tears. I feel a bawl growing in me. My dream moves from dream to half-dream. I am neither awake nor asleep. In my real self, I can feel the tightening of my chest. My throat is clamped in the grip of holding back a cry, my breathing small gulping inhales as I avoid exhaling, knowing that a long expire will result in an uncontrollable burst. My eyes feel heavy, full, warm, and wet, my closed lids holding back what would be a torrent of tears.
As I rise from dream toward waking, I realize I am physically experiencing the feelings in my dream, and holding back its sorrow. Moments of effort remove the rhythmic pumping of my breath, and allow the tears to dry, and the hammer in my chest to cease. I wake.
It all went wrong.
Some would say I should let it all go. Let go of the love. Forget the memories. I’m only hurting myself by hanging on.
Then I realize, it is never wrong to love someone, even if they do not return it.
2024/02/23
Lonely Because
(2024/02/12)
I am not lonely because I was not loved,
But because I was loved.
I am not lonely because I never loved,
But because I love,
And I threw it all away.