Falling/Jumping
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.
I have been fortunate to love and be loved by a good number of people in my life. Some have been family—brothers, parents, cousins, one very special nephew (so far). Most have been friends; a few have been lovers. But I have only fallen in love twice. I know this after the fact, because falling in love hurts. It causes deep emotional distress, which is why it’s called “falling”.
One theme that has come up in this symposium has been that we love in many ways. We all experience a number of things that we call love. Some of these are more demanding, more emphatic than others. I am identifying a particular kind of love: it’s the kind into which we fall, but that’s not necessarily something out of our control.
The first time I fell in love, it was after I had had a few serious relationships, with people for whom I cared deeply, and who cared for me. I had even lived with one man for a brief time, sharing a car and a table as well as a bed. But I knew fairly early on in each relationship that it was impermanent, and each of them understood that as well. Will was different for me. He was an artist, the kind of person I had always imagined I would settle down with. He was handsome, quirky, smiled easily. He was also straight, but he wanted to be my boyfriend. We spent time with each other, kissed a bit, just enough for me to become attached to the idea that we might always be together. Will went back to art school. We exchanged love letters, mix tapes (people mock those now, but they really were wonderful things), and he included me in his art. But for Will, a boyfriend was, by definition, a temporary thing. He could never have a family with another man. He could never experience holidays, or growing old with a man. He was Ennis to my Jack before Annie Proulx wrote Brokeback Mountain. I held out hope for longer than I should have, and he eventually had to make things clear to me. It hurt in a way maybe most of you know, but which was entirely new to me. In that moment I had lost all control, and I knew I would always be alone.
Fast forward a year or so. No serious relationships, focused on finishing my undergrad work and moving on, I was happy. Good friends, interesting projects and research (simulating supernovae!), and student government were plenty to fill my time. I graduated in 1998, but before I left Raleigh I met a young man named Jason who was visiting from Cleveland. We had great conversations, had a lot in common. We were even decently matched in Scrabble. He returned home, and we kept in touch by email. I moved to New Mexico shortly afterward, and as I was getting into the car for the cross-country trip, a swallowtail butterfly wing floated in. I kept that wing above the sun visor of my car as a symbol of my leaving home and starting my own journey.
Jason made it clear fairly early on that he was completely opposed to long-distance relationships. He tried to get rid of me by making me read Atlas Shrugged but it didn’t work; in fact, our discussions of the book served to cement our feelings for each other. (Yes, I just invoked an Ayn Rand novel romantically. Cue flying pigs.) One day, thinking quietly on my own out in the beautiful desert behind the trailer I was renting, I looked at a place in my mind I hadn’t visited in a while. Every emotional part of me reeled at the thought, but every intellectual, reasonable part of me said “He’s the one.”
The most surprising thing that had ever happened to me followed next. The mere act of deciding to fall in love with Jason caused me deep emotional pain. It was so intense and so frightening I thought I had broken something inside me. The pain brought me to tears. I didn’t understand at the time, and I still don’t fully. But I knew that I had changed myself in some fundamental way. I was no longer the person I was used to. That, I think, is the essence of falling in love, and why it hurts so much when you realize it’s happened.
We eventually managed to live in the same place. When we were alone and settled in a few days later, we held a quiet ceremony, exchanging a few vows, and I burned the butterfly wing. And it didn’t hurt one bit.
“I was no longer the person I was used to. That, I think, is the essence of falling in love, and why it hurts so much when you realize it’s happened.”
This whole post is amazing, but I particularly resonated to this bit.
I’ve fallen in love in a way quite close to the particular way you describe twice – Jaybird was one of the times – and I have recently come to the realization that part of the reason THOSE times were so terrifying, so different, is because those times, once I’d accepted the importance of what was happening and stopped walling myself off from it, I was willing to change almost anything about my life at the other person’s need or behest. If they asked me to, I would. Scarier yet, I would *want* to. I would be eager to do so as quickly as I could.
I mean, we all change for the people we love – or at least I’ve changed in many small ways many times to make my life more suited to the people I wanted in it – but generally for me that is a grumpy, balky thing, one that happens with foot-dragging and (in secret) snarls and not at all if I feel like the other person expects (or worse yet, needs) me to do so. They should take me as I am, or we just don’t need to be friends, I mostly think about people. That’s how I treat people, after all, generally speaking – I like them how they are, not some idealized version of what they could be, and I’m sort of horrified by the idea of anyone changing anything about their lives on my account. So many wonderful people in the world, why wear yourself out trying to suit each other if it turns out you don’t. Over time, sure, one realizes that the shape of one’s life has changed because of various people one loves, and that’s actually quite nice and the world as it should be – but I would never *set out* to change something about my life for someone. Even if I thought I should, I’m just not able to be that sort of person.
Except those two times. Those two times, once I’d gotten past the terror/flight response, what I felt was much more like – Sure, I’ll change. Whatever. Is the new person I need to be still a good worthwhile person? Okay then. Let’s set about it. (I should note – usually I didn’t have to change ME all that much. Mostly, I am the me I was when I met Jaybird online at 17 – but I’m not the same one I would’ve been if I hadn’t eventually, suddenly decided it was okay to fall in love with him. And some of the changes I made were to things I hadn’t previously seen as changeable at all.)
It fascinates me that for you, it was that the change happened in the moment of deciding. I’m not sure whether that’s true for me, as well: I experience my decisions as less momentary and less rational.Report
I think it’s the moment of recognition that hurts; it’s like in the fairy tales, the giving of your heart opens you to dangers you did not face before even as it imbues you with magic.
On Mike Dyer’s most excellent post on marriage, I told how my Sweetie expressed it in terms of trees; there’s him, there’s me, and there’s this new tree that sprouts of ‘us.’ Sprouting is painful, root and leave intermingle.
Beautiful, beautiful post, @boegiboe. I’m so glad we live in a world where you and Jason can openly express love; a right that too many of us take for granted.Report
@maribou we met our mates at the same ages, too.
I think we may be secret sisters, a different kind of love. I’m very glad for it, too.Report
@zic Me too.Report
@Maribou, for me it wasn’t so much that I would change in ways Jason wanted, though that turned out to be true, but it was that I was no longer in control of myself the way I had been before. I was two people, and one of those people would do as he wished. And I think I agree with @zic that it’s the moment of recognition when the pain strikes. Years later, Jason spent a year in Paris working on his dissertation. One evening, I found I just couldn’t sleep, and I couldn’t do anything else, either. I ended up bawling my eyes out on the bathroom floor until 2:30 in the morning, when I knew Jason would be awake. I called him and told him what was happening; that it felt like someone had cut off my legs or something. Thinking about that as another moment of recognition of being in love makes a lot of sense.Report
@boegiboe Yes, it does.Report
S’wonderful S’awful nice S’paradise that you should care for me….Report
I’m verklempt. Thanks for sharing your story. It brought tears to my eyes. Love transforms us in ways we can’t predict.Report
“He tried to get rid of me by making me read Atlas Shrugged”
This may be my favorite line from this site, ever.Report
Also, this is a fantastic post all the way round.Report
Heh, I consider myself a libertarian, but reading Atlas Shrugged almost made me get rid of myself.Report
It’s so personal. Thanks for sharing.Report