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Yes, my friends were online, but their attempts to assuage my panic attacks felt plastic and preoccupied. And most of them didn't want to maintain a continuous stream of daylong conversation. I entered a state of IM withdrawal. The free-flowing minutia of my day had no outlet for discussion. I felt pregnant with random notions, hack theories, scraps of trivia, gossip and anecdotes. I clicked over to my Buddy List every few minutes to see if MauledByStaplers was logged on; the few times he was, I couldn't bring myself to ping him — it felt stalkerish and, strangely, too intimate. What was he doing over there? It didn't matter. Our quirky keyboarded rapport was shot. Suddenly life felt too serious for ironic exclamation points and onomatopoeia.

Time passed. I was single. Dating was misery, and made all the worse by the lack of an IM partner to whom I could talk to about exactly how unbelievably fucking miserable it was. Sounds crazy, but for weeks after his screenname turned gray, I felt an almost uncontrollable urge to message him about how horrible the previous night's date had gone in that old familiar, silly, semi-tongue-in-cheek inflection.

SayWhatAgain: so he takes me to this party which is actually not a party, but five people in a gaudy apartment doing nothing, and they're all talking in british accents with total sincerity about which brand of gin is best. gin! it was like being in an episode of Mystery! but even more boring and without the fun cartoon at the beginning.
MauledByStaplers: Your message has been sent to my mobile communication device.

The alleged device to which the automated response referred was an enigma to me, and if it actually received the few IMs I sent to it, these receptions produced no fruit. My days became quiet. I was forced to deal with the turbulence in my life without digitally transmitted assistance. In short, I began to relearn how to shut up and work. My threshold for both panic and boredom slowly rose.

I felt an almost uncontrollable urge to message him about how horrible the previous night's date had gone.


It's been two years since then. I've been dating someone new since last summer, and I recently mentioned to my friend Maggie that sometimes he and I go an entire twenty-four hours without speaking.

"You mean you don't IM?" she recoiled.

We don't. In fact, I don't think he even has Instant Messenger. He doesn't have the kind of desk job that I have — the kind where you don't so much "check" your email as stare at it for hours and hours like an autistic child. He has no clever screenname with which I can associate him, and though I message with coworkers and friends, I don't have any uninterrupted twenty-four-hour conversation in my life anymore. Even though he's the person with whom I want to share all the mindless details of my day. He disappears and reappears from morning to evening with lunar regularity.

At first I didn't like it. At work, I'd think of something I wanted to tell him, then realize it would have to wait until later. Even emailing didn't work — he'd take hours to respond. Eventually I came to terms with the fact that whatever ridiculous ideas or narratives were rooting around in my brain, I was just going to have to wait until nighttime to pour them all onto him.

Turns out, I like this way better. It gives me time to filter and organize. Here's what I do: I take all the inanity in my head, and I make a nice little smorgasbord. Like any good smorgasbord, it's served all at once, a mélange of many different textures — of worries and stories and crackpot hypotheses — both sweet and savory. I arrange everything on an attractive-looking platter, and when I finally see him at night, my smorgasbord is ready to serve, as is his. Had we dished them out piecemeal, they just wouldn't have tasted the same.  






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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Will Doig writes for all sorts of fabulous and exciting magazines. He was raised in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Today he lives in Brooklyn.


©2008 Will Doig and Nerve.com
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