“It
is quite amazing when someone who is supposed to know you better than any
other human being, someone who is supposed to protect you, care for your dreams
and desires, can shatter those dreams so completely, so seemingly casually, and
for such a reason.” She agonized.
It
seemed strange to her that economics would be the decider,
especially given her history of making major life changes based on emotions and
values with zero attention paid to money. Someone who can give up millions a
month in salaries just to have quality time, someone who can “make do” with a
10th of the income, making sure the family, the relationships, and
health, gain primacy, someone who basically has never cared a damn for the
little green pieces of paper, suddenly has to hear that those pieces of paper
are the reason she cannot have her single greatest Desire in life. Seems strange
even coming from someone who knows her a little bit, and frankly dumbfounding when
coming from someone who has known her most of her life, someone who presumably
knows just how much this means to her.
She can remember back to when she
was all of twelve yeas old, and starting to figure out who she was and what she
wanted from her life. As far back as that she knew this was what she wanted, and
as much of it as remotely possible. She would manage, make do, make the adjustments
necessary in her life, lifestyle, and behavior, to accommodate this great Desire
of hers. Over the years it had only gotten more crystallized, and had become the
bedrock for her personality. This was who she was. Her name, her nickname, her
entire identity had become bound up, to so large an extent, with this one Desire
of her life, this one mission, this meaning that she sought to give to herself.
Life,
as it does, threw her its share of curves as she grew up.
She had her highs and lows, as does everyone, some more than others. Through the
manic highs and the abysmal lows, through the paradise and the hells, through
self destruction and therapy and pharmacology, this was one of the things that
held her together, one of the essential parts of her personality, of her deepest
heart, that managed to survive. There was never even the slightest question in
her mind of relinquishing this Desire, of giving up this hope, of letting go of
this need. That would have been like letting go of the very base of herself, of
becoming someone she wasn’t, of discarding who she so deeply, so fundamentally
WAS.
Then, things got better, after a
lot of bad times, the OTHER appeared. Things became almost magically,
miraculously OK. (Maybe she should have been warned then? Things that seem too
good to be true so often are. But she just didn’t see any signs.) The oh-so-long
felt agony, the indecision, the loathing of self and everything else, the desire
to opt out, all faded nicely into the background, confining themselves to the
merest of rare occasional twinges. She had a good run with that, years and
years of calm, placidity (is that an entirely good word? She wondered), stability
(highly over rated she always thought), adjustment, and all those other desirable
states of mind the mental health faculty keeps harping on about. Good things,
she supposed, although it did cause all of her creative juices to dry up for a
while. Apparently she could not make art unless she was in conflict, or
unhappy, or something.
That lasted a while, and the
universe gave her the tiny little part of the Desire that she saw as the first
step, the foundation of her empire of Desire, the first installment of the many,
many to come. Then, things started sliding again, though the process was subtle
enough to completely avoid being noticed. The next step, the second
installment, kept being put off, further and further, for one reason or
another. There were major moves, life upheavals, just wasn’t the right time,
trying but not managing to, trying other avenues, and so on and so forth. By the
time she noticed what was happening, it was six years too late. Still, one must
try to correct one’s mistakes whenever one notices them, so she took a good
try.
It wasn’t meant to be. Physically
and emotionally devastated by the attempt, she gave up the idea of achieving
her Desire through the regular method. The alternative seemed to be something
only she was interested in. the OTHER had neither the time, nor the inclination
to be frank, to bother with such things. Maybe one installment was enough for
the OTHER, maybe the idea of the alternative path was not a welcome or
comfortable one (although the OTHER claimed to have been interested in the
alternative for years before they had ever gotten together), or maybe the OTHER
just could not be bothered to make so much effort for something that didn’t matter
so much to them. She had to keep trying, for the sake of the first installment
if nothing else, for she could see how essential it had become for the first
one. Whatever the OTHER’s reasons for reluctance, it fell completely to her to pursue
the matter, to try as hard as she possibly could.
No hope. The law, the social attitudes,
the mentality of the people with power in the alternative scenario, all
conspired to deprive her of any possibility of achieving her Desire through
these alternative channels. One tiny window was left open, one last shred of
hope, one last reason to keep trying, but unfortunately for her it was
something the OTHER must follow up on. And she was beginning to be more and
more sure that the follow up would not happen. And she was right. The whole body
language, the attitude, the lack of drive of the OTHER was a clear indication
of the reluctance to do this. She kept needling, and it didn’t make a difference.
Eventually she simply gave up.
As she withdrew more and more
into her shell, backing up from the agony of false hope, and somehow trying to
gain control over this gnawing need, the almost obsessive want, she made
efforts, for the first time in her life, to achieve the state of numb zombie
existence she had rejected in the past. Now she aspired to be that blank, a
blankness she had fought in her past, that she had ripped apart just to be able
to FEEL. Now, feeling only meant more pain than even she was able to handle. Plus,
with the first installment being her responsibility, she knew she could not
afford a breakdown. Nor was “opting out” an option any longer. The only choice
left was to stop feeling. She withdrew more and more, attempting to block
things from affecting her, from making a difference. Some people noticed, and
commented, some didn’t, but she began to go blank letting the pain sink to the
bottom, rising up only in silent midnight weeping fits, or curling up when she
was alone.
Eventually,
the OTHER began asking. The change had become noticeable enough to
penetrate even the masks and party faces she put on habitually these days. Every
time the OTHER asked, she changed the topic, or denied it, or tossed it away
lightly, not wanting to get into a crying fit, or a shouting match. Even arguing
seemed more effort than she could manage these days, and she could not remember
the last time they had had a fight. She just let it all slide, curling up
within herself with her pain, unwilling to let anyone see, ask, analyze. Maybe love
was ebbing, maybe it had just become too much effort, or maybe things had just
become too much to take. What was left was to keep going through the motions,
keep feeling only the nice things, and to bury the agony deep enough to ignore.
Still, the OTHER kept at it,
asking, and asking, and commenting, figuring out at least some of the unhappiness
lurking behind the forced smiles visible all day, until matters came to a head.
And what are the reasons for the reluctance? Nothing much, merely doubts about
economic capability 10 years down the line. After a lifetime of knoqing, and
half a lifetime of togetherness, this is what she got. Her deepest Desires, her
need, balanced on a MAYBE, never mind what that does to her, her mind, her
heart, and the relationship. “Can anyone be that unthinking?” she wondered, “and
can anyone ignore what this is doing, and will do, to the US? What it is doing,
and will do to the first installment?” maybe those things don’t matter to the OTHER
so much, or maybe the danger is really unfelt and unappreciated. She, on her
part, can feel the drifting, the distances growing, the pain starting to become
more than the love can support.
The shell beckons, walls begin to
sound more safe than restrictive, and feeling and emotions seem to be overrated.
Maybe it is time to become reformed, to join the average humans, to become
typical – typical woman, typical partner, typical.