Comment Rescue – First Loves
This post is part of our Love Symposium. An introduction to the symposium can be found here; all of the posts written for the symposium can be found here.
Esteemed commenter North shared this personal and moving story of first love in the comments elsewhere, and I thought it deserved wider exposure:
He was one of my best friends (let’s call him Morgan) about a half year older than me and on top of it a gymnast. Those of you who don’t know gymnasts probably won’t groc to the significance but I will lay it out starkly; in terms of raw eros the boy (for we were both boys) was incredibly beautiful. We were in our mid teens and spent enormous amounts of time together night and day. My experience is unique, perhaps, in that I cannot say for absolute certainty whether my love and lust for Morgan predated my actual experience of intimacy with him or whether the intimacy came first. I guess it’s unique also in that my crush was not unrequited en-toto; we never actually -discussed- what we were doing but we covered the very basic A-B-C’s of sexual education. Then the passage of events drew us apart, I was introverted and uninterested in athletics; he was extroverted and very much in sports. He even went to the Olympics (though I don’t believe he placed) but whenever our orbits would intersect the un-discussed silent adventures would continue.
I cannot speak to Morgan’s view of the matter but it put me in a curious position in that my crush and my romantic interest was something I’d actually experienced to a significant degree. Putting up posters or sighing over fellows on TV didn’t occur to me for years to be honest; I could count on (occasionally) getting my hands on the real fellow. So I was cursed or blessed to miss out on that aspect of the gay experience. In any event the years passed and we both became (very young) men. While I do not recall experiencing much in the way of public terrorizing of gays the silent assumption was that everyone was straight so I made noise about interest in girls and I know he dated. In time I began to get the feeling that his interest was waning, it was a continuum I would say with him instigating initially, then gradually the roles reversing over the years until I was the motivating partner. Throughout these years we remained friends but increasingly distant ones as our orbits continued to diverge. One Christmas as part of some inane family meal (his family and mine dined together often on holidays) he looked me dead in the eyes and told me he wanted children. I somehow knew that there was serious meaning behind the comment and I touched his leg under the table and (very earnestly for I believed it when I said it) told him he’d make a wonderful father.
That summer I formalized plans to move to Minneapolis to learn something of the big wide world. He called a day or two before I left, asked me to call him back and I somehow didn’t get around to it. That decision will haunt me until I die; what was he calling for? To wish me luck? For something else? I will never know. I grew and learned so much in the States and eventually returned to Canada for university. We were in the same city and he was even more beautiful than I remember though we again crossed paths infrequently. I considered trying to reach out now and then but so much was unspoken, my shyness was ferocious and I had another budding relationship developing. He married a woman in my last year of university. I went to the wedding; he was ineffably beautiful. Their wedding theme was singing, guests had to sing a song to get the couple to kiss (in lieu of clinking glasses). My sister and I did this clowning shtick where we sang the song from “Beauty and the Beast” only with us stopping at the title line because we couldn’t agree on whether the groom or bride was the “beast” and had to repeat it to try and resolve the conflict, on the final (third) sing through we ended up finally singing it by identifying Morgan’s mother as Beauty and her husband as the Beast. The people laughed so hard they spilled their wine and the entire reception stood and clapped. Morgan and his Wife both hugged me, that was the last time I touched him.
I still see them on the rare occasion, they live in the same area as my Mother. Morgan is a police officer now and with agnostic Jesus as my witness he’s more beautiful now than ever. His wife is a gorgeous kind and sweet catholic girl. They have four blond haired blue eyed moppets, mind meltingly cute and happy children.
Is Morgan a gay man deeply closeted and living a lie? I do not believe it could be so. Morgan had a gay uncle who his family was generally open about. His family’s embrace of me as a gay man was unconditional and lacked any hint of falseness to it. Morgan himself is a deeply confident and gregarious person; I cannot see him foisting such suffering on himself. I have mulled the question over and can only assume he is/was a Kinsey 2.5-3.5 who is probably capable of going either way. A bisexual most likely then.
Ironically this lends a certain twist to the knife of history- had I been a different person, a more open and direct one, how would his and my future have gone? I adore my husband who I love to death and we suit each other to a T but you never ever forget your first love. I would never dream of trying to broach the subject to Morgan. We inhabit different worlds and the time for trying to sling such ropes is so utterly past as to render such efforts petty, grasping and cruel. There is too little to be gained, far too many people to be hurt, to say nothing of ignorance sometimes being bliss. If I could wish myself the true answer from Morgan would any answer he gave be a pleasing one? No I don’t think it would.
In any event, by the time the space between Morgan and I yawned wide enough for burgeoning teenage hormones to begin trampling through the internet had introduced itself to me as a phenomena. I was connected to an international network of gay people like myself who provided both for the wholesome social contact and the more sordid and tawdry aspects of any human man’s life so I had no need of distant fan obsessions or crushes. No posters on my wall or hours spent listening to a public entertainer in a daydreaming haze.
Share your stories of first love, or the one that (maybe?) got away in comments.
(Note: I recommend locking away the alcohol while you do so, so as to prevent unnecessary drunken Facebooking or phoning; let sleeping dogs lie, people).
The first time I met my first love was in church. I was 4, and I went by myself because I thought I should go to church. (It was just a short walk down the street I lived on at the time.) He was, to my 4-year old eyes, beautiful. His father taught the Sunday school classes, and was tall and handsome. His mother helped, and was kind and pretty; they both spoke gently and in a way that seemed to value goodness in people.
When He was in the room, I found it hard to even speak.
Which got worse when, the next fall, I started kindergarten, and He was there. That the goodness of His parents had spread to Him was obvious, He was popular, but didn’t participate in the bullying and teasing other kids did. Which endeared Him to me even more.
Over the years, my devotion never wavered. I was deeply, madly in love. And it showed, everyone in my class of 25 (we went through school, the same basic group, from k to 8) knew I had a hopeless crush on Him. I never really even considered any of the other boys (or girls) as potential for a romance. And of course, my feelings, deep and devoted as they obviously were, were not returned. Others teased me about them, constantly. But He never did; if He didn’t ignore me, He at least spoke kindly and gently.
Then my life unfolded with it’s horror of a pedophile. I often escaped into fantasies of being loved by Him instead of being loved by an old man in his ’70’s. By the time high school came, I was still deeply devoted, and at least it was something He and I could joke about. He began dating a girl from another town who went to our school; she was also a good person, and I felt happy for Him in that; even it He didn’t love me. As you might expect, I found love in all the wrong places and relationships. I never dated anyone from my school; I suspect I thought it would be a way of being unfaithful; but I dated a few boys my age from other schools, and a lot of men already through high school; a couple in their ’30’s. I was, of course, sexually active; having a pedophile in your life will do that to you. And it was the ’70’s, there was no reason for a girl to hide that or be ashamed of it, so I didn’t.
One day, on the school bus, He sat down with me. I was shocked. I knew He and his girlfriend were having trouble. He told me that they’d broken up. I asked why. He said she wouldn’t go all the way. And asked if I would.
“No,” I told him. “I love you. What you’re asking for isn’t love.” I couldn’t believe I was saying it; I wanted to say yes, to convince myself that sex would turn him to love. But I knew better; sex wasn’t love. I didn’t want not-love with Him.
He married his girlfriend, they had some kids. I, meantime, met my Sweetie, and found true love. My sweetie has many of the same qualities I’d seen in my first love; a gentle way of speaking, refusing to be mean or tease. And so much more.
Last I heard, my first love and his wife were divorced and he had a drinking problem. This was not from a reliable source, so I hope it’s not true.Report
What a lovely story, if poignant. I am happy for you that you got to share what you did, and the rest can remain more precious for being a mystery.
And my first love is my husband. Everyone who preceded him in any kind of romantic role in my life was such a disaster in one sense or another that to describe those relationships as “love” would, in retrospect, be ludicrous.Report
“Everyone who preceded him in any kind of romantic role in my life was such a disaster in one sense or another that to describe those relationships as “love” would, in retrospect, be ludicrous.”
Maybe (make that “probably” or even “definitely”) I have been lucky in love, but though I have experienced romantic disasters and some spectacular flameouts, none were so thoroughgoing as to cause me to retroactively classify those relationships as “not-love”, no matter how ill-advised they turned out to be in retrospect, or how nuclear they ultimately went in the end.Report
Oh, I loved a few, in the manner of passionate, doomed and short-lived relationships. It’s not that I didn’t sincerely “love” anyone before my husband. But since they all flamed out rather spectacularly before any of them turned into the sort of relationship where the actual work of love needed to be done, now that I’ve been in a relationship for a decade it seems laughable to use the same term to describe what I do/feel now to describe any of them.Report
Thanks Doc,
I don’t really count Morgan as a romantic relationship per say, I loved him, sure and much teenage antics were gotten up to but I can’t honestly say we were ever an item since we literally never talked about that curious aspect of our interactions.
Ironically my first “date” was with my current husband, 15 some years ago. Good lord, I feel old. I was back 19 then.
Do you not feel some kind of special memory for your first? A lot of people (myself very especially) say that you never truly get over the first person you are with.Report
You are younger than me, my friend.
And no, however you might care to define “first,” I have no particularly special memories of any who might arguably claim that title. Nothing that would really give them a claim to specialness. I have a few fond memories of a handful of failed romances, little flickers from when there was still a little bit of magic in them, but nothing more than a bauble or two to juggle in my mind when it’s idle. And not a one that I am not entirely, gratefully over.Report
Shoot, there’s days when I’m not sure I will ever be over ANY of them.
Not sure if this makes me uniquely romantic, uniquely nostalgic, or uniquely stupid.
(A: Yes)Report
Of the women I’ve dated in my life, there are three whom I will never be over, and I think about them every day. I don’t think this is all that unusual.
Though the parting with each of them was painful enough that it might have something to do with my thinking about them as often as I do.Report
yeah, maybe “ANY” is a slight overstatement…but there’s 3 to 5 that crop up frequently.Report
Who my “first love” was depends on how you count it. There was the first girl I asked to “go with me” in the fifth grade. That was the first girl I felt anything about with any intensity. Then there was the girl that I became kind of obsessed with for 570 days. The first really intense case where there was some reciprocity came in high school. Nothing officially came of it except a pair of broken hearts.
I met my first real girlfriend in a rather typical fashion. I worked at a movie theater where she worked. She had a boyfriend at the time, but a mutual friend/coworker figured out our mutual interest (possibly because we each told her) and she set things up just as soon as they broke up. We were together for over four years though it didn’t end well (does any relationship that lasts that long end well?).
It was all much more epic as I was living through it than in retrospect.Report
does any relationship that lasts that long end well?
Well, the best-case scenario is that it ends when someone dies, so…no. Not really.Report