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There's something romantic about talking to someone on the phone, even if it is the romance of 1983. I could feel close to him without the fear of actually being close to him. I never had to worry what I looked like, if I was blushing, never had to feel preoccupied by what I was wearing, by a body that stubbornly refused to do what I wanted. I sometimes wonder what would have happened if we had lived in the same city. Would we have stumbled drunkenly into bed and scared one another to opposite sides of the room the next day? Could we have ever gotten to know each other in the same way if we hadn't been confined to opposite sides of a cellphone signal, 1,300 miles apart, nothing to do but rummage through every story we have, one long conversation in which every fifteen minutes someone said, "Oh oh oh"?
There was one thing we couldn't talk about — my case, which limped its way through the courts for six long months. The preliminary motion was lost, but the assistant district attorney filed an appeal, which we won, and one and a half years after I was mugged — and about two weeks before I planned to see Nick in person, not for the first time but sort of for the first time — the kid who mugged me pled guilty. He got fifteen years. It's a long time. And it's a bad trade for two purses and about $150. But like I said before, the worst thing that happens to you could, unexpectedly, lead to the best.
Anyway, I flew down to see Nick soon after that. I already knew I was in love with him. But that was so cuckoo, so entirely bananas, that I thought I must be mistaken.
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I don't cry in restaurants much anymore. I cry in airports.
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How could you love someone before you even kissed them? Before you even held their hand? I would try to dig up the old catastrophist in me, rooting around for possible dealbreakers: What if he was bad in bed? What if he had the Eagles on his iPod?
Try as I could, I never was able to drum up the old shrieking, familiar angst. Maybe I just knew it would work out. Maybe I had calmed down with age. Maybe I had finally realized that the people we love do not come perfect and fully formed to us, that part of the fun is to shape each other and learn from each other. And you know what? Nick does have the Eagles on his iPod. And turns out, I think that's totally adorable.
I don't cry in restaurants much anymore. I cry in airports, where it's just as hard to hide. I cry in bed, too. Not because of fights we have (we haven't had those yet). I cry for silly, random reasons. I cry because my cat is going to die one day, before I'm ready, and life without him feels unfathomable.
"This is such a stupid thing to cry about," I say.
"I actually think it's a pretty good thing to cry about," Nick says.
I cry sometimes that Nick will be taken away from me. Not that he will cheat, or break up with me, but that he will somehow be ripped from my life. It is hard for me to love something without worrying that it will somehow leave. So I have nightmares that I get sent to an internment camp. I have nightmares that I am trying to board a train to his place but it never stops, just keeps passing me by as I stand on the platform's edge, waiting indefinitely.
We are lying in bed one morning — my leg draped over his side, his hand running along my bare thigh. "I keep worrying that you'll go away," I say.
"But I just got here."
"I know." I start to cry but it's softer than it used to be, less barbed. The tear from my cheek drips onto his back. "It took you a long time."
"Is that bad?"
It isn't bad. "It was just lonely for a while."
I don't remember what happens next. Maybe we have sex. Maybe we drift off to sleep. Maybe we lie there, not saying anything, and he turns to me and kisses my damp cheek, and I run my hand through the soft, short crop of his hair, close my eyes, and sigh. I do know one thing: Whatever happens, I stop crying.
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| ABOUT THE AUTHOR: |
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Sarah Hepola has been a high-school teacher, a playwright, a film critic, a music editor and a travel columnist. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Slate, The Guardian, Salon, and on NPR. She lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. |
©2008 Sarah Hepola and Nerve.com
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Commentarium (21 Comments)
Sarah - You made me cry in a not bad kind of way. Here's to caring about and loving enough to cry about it. Happy 2008 to you.
Sarah, I've been a long time reader (originally of your blog, then of your writings on The Morning News, and at Nerve). I just wanted to say that I'm glad you've found what sounds to be a great guy. I hope it works out, and I trust that it will.
--David
I would have thought with the salon gig this would have been finally over? Oh well. It is sub headlined the end.
Yeah, Sarah Hepola. Your story made me cry. I am happy for your success. Heather Frankie
Is anyone else disturbed by the "weepy-white-woman-protected-by-John-Law-from-the-scary-Black-guy" narrative going on in this story? He got FIFTEEN YEARS for mugging her in post-Katrina New Orleans, but sometimes bad things like that can lead to good stuff like cuddling in bed and being consoled about your cat possibly dying at some point in the future.
I'm not trying to say that she doesn't deserve love and joy... but damn. I propose another column entitled "Crying in Restaurants about Uncritical Reflections on Race and Class."
thank you i cant say more right now but my heart feels i am unable to finish right now i just hope and pray
to tell you the truth am not sure how to ue the comp so well lol not sure how to get basck to finish your story but thank you for having me hope
I agree with you, RAZA. This column has always felt self indulgent to me, but this last one goes too far. He gets 15 years, she gets cuddles and sympathy?! and this is somehow supposed to prove that something great can come out of something terrible?! I'm just amazed at the level of self indulgence here.
Thank you for your story; it made me happy - but also melancholy - which I like. jd02
Ouch, these comments are cruel! Please tell me why somebody who mugged the writer deserves to be the subject of her dispassionate treatise on class and race? Under the circumstances, I think the writer has more right to feel this was a fair sentence as you do to think it's excessive. If someone mugged my wife, I'd want him locked up AND kicked in the balls as well, but that's just me.
Sarah, as someone who is 12 years into a sweet, loving, and happy marriage with someone I met and fell in love with online, may your days be filled with happiness and all the best kinds of tears. Thanks for sharing your story.
I double-checked, and the mugger is described as black in only one place in the article. Just delete the word in that one spot, and read it again, not caring about the race of the mugger, and see if you like it better. I'm personally grateful that a) Justice prevailed, at least eventually, and b) Sarah found someone to make her cry for different reasons. However, I still am left not knowing how you get on your return flight home if someone steals your ID in the middle of the trip.
great article, very intense. Nathan
Hi Sarah. I'm glad you met a nice guy. I hope it works out for you. But let's get real... You don't really know him very well. You are not yet truly in love. Relax, take it slowly, maybe you two are compatible and will live happily ever after. But you don't know that yet. Also, it seems quite unprofessional of your boyfriend to get involved with a participant in a current case. (Even if you did not directly discuss the case.) Isn't this a violation of his ethical guidelines?
A lovely addition.
A lovely ending, and yes, incredibly wonderful things come out of nowhere from the smallest of choices or coincidences, or even from what seem like bad things at the moment. Love came to me, also, from a person I didn't expect it from or intended to look for it with. As for the mugger -- who knows what his record was. But in some respects, he got off easy. If one of Sarah's party had a gun, he or she would have had the right to shoot this piece of crap dead (and I don't care what his race is -- aremed robbers are pieces of crap, period). If the case had gone to trial, their relationship arguably could have been a subject of cross examination, but it would not "disqualify" either of them from testifying.
P.S. I went back to the first article in the series. You didn't know how this was going to end when you started, did you? Makes it all the more fun.
I've read the last portion of this series many times, and it makes me smile. It's real, and I thoroughly enjoy it.
Respect to the author of original work. I am want to say thanks for funny post, and thanks to google and yahoo for perfect blog search.
Hmm, nice. im out right now.
Wow and wow!
Whay are you don't write about politic?
Why are you don't write about politic?