I Believe In Love

“Thing is, I hadn’t learned,” I’d say to you if you were listening, “I’m just learning, right now this second, how I used you like a mirror to see myself.” The harder and more crystalline the person, the better, because if you’re too soft, I have nothing to reflect on. I mean, isn’t it why you liked me too? I always reflected your desires, sometimes really basic ones like cuddling and talking about books, but sometimes looking into my eyes was seeing your own spirit wound tightly and lovingly to mine like ancient tree roots. 

That’s probably not how you’d express it, you don’t say it in words, you just hold me like you’re about to fall off a very steep embankment. You tried to make space for me by clearing off a table and buying new sheets, but that’s not the kind of space I’m yearning for; everything you do is a closely controlled surface sweep. I want to go deep. I had a hard time asking you for what I needed because performing the minimum seemed to be so difficult for you, I didn’t want to ask for, or be, “too much”. You thought kissing passionately meant I was counting each and every kiss! That’s an absurd idea — like, duh, I just wanted to tumble headlong into ecstasy because although I do believe in the searching, fearless work one does for oneself before truly loving another, loving another is the only true means to restoring a state of oneness. It’s the immaculate will, life’s longing for itself. 

So yes, to answer my own question: I believe in love. 

It’s a revolution to see myself and hear my own voice, to love myself. She says ‘yes’ to difficult conversations, she asks for what she needs, she also says ‘no’ when enough is enough. She looks in the mirror and says, “You are enough.” 

We have to look into ourselves to understand what plagues us, what follows us, what has made us, and why we may be stuck performing Sisyphean feats that fatigue us. You once told me you have a very active internal dialogue — what’s it saying? Does it spin in eddies or flow forward? Open the door on the past and honour it by looking closely. There will be many, many stories contained there. Read them. That makes me think of all the little roadside shrines in Japan where people light incense to their ancestors saying “thank you for bringing me here, I will try to honour you”. I hope you use your exceptional will and power to unearth whatever’s gripping you —dislodge that sludge and move into it. Don't be afraid to change. I love you, I do, but I need a year. 365 days without you. Can we see where we've grown then? 

What follows is the rest of the story. This is how I got here.

365 Days Without You

"Do you believe in love?" I asked him.

"What does that mean? It's like asking if I believe in air," he said back. We were snuggled up on the couch, my legs fixed on his lap, his restless hands massaging my calves and feet. 48 hours previous, he'd walked in the door with his brother, my roommate, and I got up to declare, "I'm Carmen. I live here."

"You do? I didn't know that. Very nice."

In a later conversation, he said, "I don't understand why people say love at first sight doesn't exist. Of course it does," without directly referencing our first meeting.  

Truth is I'd known about him for exactly a year already. 365 days. The first time my roommate and I hung out together he told me I had to meet his older brother. I never take things like this lightly when people I admire declare them because I'm a true romantic and I believe in true love. And love at first sight. And the whole spectrum of what's possible in love. Even the possibility one can be addicted to love. Maybe I just missed mentioning the word "true" when I asked him that day on the couch. 

But what I'm truly longing for, and have been missing no matter how much I tried to stir it, is the foundational love before all other loves: self-love. It is so often said that one must love oneself before loving another. That used to annoy me. I mean, what's the proven test for self-love anyway? Can it be declared in language or is it more gestural or is it how you behave toward others? What is the exact moment you KNOW you love yourself and are ready to love another? Girlfriends, aunties, self-help books, my mom, Elizabeth Gilbert, and many gay boyfriends have relayed this piece of wisdom to me over many tearful and confused episodes of longing for a man I believed to be the "the one", now just another tick on the long list of embarrassing love stories that coulda'been.

I knew they were right and yet I couldn't relate to their anecdotes and struggled. 365 days ago, I started to slow things down. Self-compassion tapes. Got into yoga. Moved out of an unhealthy neighbourhood. Stopped partying so much. As long as I can remember (and my journals from age 9 onward concur) my reflex had been self-hate. It's extreme, but when I'd really slog into the ugly shit of my psyche, there was a lot of rancour, disgust, and hatred there. 

Then last summer an artist friend came to visit from Mexico bearing news of his butterfly projects and also his recent sobriety. 

"I'm on a virtuous cycle," he said.

"WHAT IS THAT?" I needed to know. I'd been stuck in a frustrating rut of bad affairs and existential unhappiness (which is very unbecoming on a person with my energetic disposition).

"You know vicious cycles? Well it's the opposite of that." 

He said he stopped all substances (mainly weed and booze) and though the results weren't exactly miraculous, he was experiencing a lot more productive time and more clarity in that time. No hangovers, no fogginess, no excuses, no laying about and so his good fortune, or virtuousness, was increasing exponentially. I'd been scouring the web all summer looking for detox centres or places to go and fast for a month (Jeanette Winterson had done it in Germany and it sounded awesome). ANYTHING to change how I felt and press reset on my life, but in my unhappiness, I even saw this desperation as a typical part of my cycle - was it all just more of the same self-hating shit? This virtuous cycle thing, something about that felt possible. 

I stopped drinking that night. And a new cycle began. Almost like my real birthday.