Today was the first time I saw snow on my commute since April, when the last dusting happened. Today was the first time I saw snow on my New York commute. I wonder if there will be more a year from now.
The sun has gone under its blanket about half an hour ago. The sky is still a dark blue, illuminating the white strips of snow along the tracks. The cars that race past the train, at least those on the fast lane, all have their lights on, and from the comfort of my seat, I see them as alien spacecrafts in the sky. The commute to New Haven didn't have cars along the train track like this, and I usually saw them with their red tail lights glistening like Christmas tree lights.
Making peace is the step I am trying to take today. "Making" peace, not just talking about it, analyzing it, but rather, making it, making it with myself, with the life I have now.
Just before I started writing this entry, I realized, already thinking about peace, that I have spent much of this year being away from peace, or having no peace because I was busy in the war with the French girl. She is constantly surprised at how long it is taking me to get over my anger and frustration with her. Just this past Friday I got upset that she chose to spend Friday night with her guy than with me. She doesn't understand why I was still upset.
You can't blame her; it's been so long, this relentless war. But luckily, it is dying, breathing its final months.
What I was thinking wasn't really about her. It was about how I have preoccupied myself with tension all this year, so out of touch with peace. Watching the snow, watching the anonymous cars and their headlights, I remember the feeling of peace when I started commuting to Stamford. But I also remember the weekly battles with the same French woman. It was a proxy war with my past that I couldn't fight then, as a child, as a teenager.
Saturday night I went to a concert with the pianist, who gave me free tickets to hear one of the best known violinists play with a pianist at the 92Y. Afterward we had a poorly prepared dinner at a nearby restaurant and then the battle started. The snow was falling heavily when she refused politely and indirectly my entreaties to go home with her. She tried to make the best out of the walk to the bus stop, but I was upset. I told myself before hand to not get upset if she said no, but as always, I couldn't take a rejection. It didn't matter that nothing good would have come out of going there with such an ambiguous relationship, as I could tell first hand from many experiences in the past few years. It didn't matter. A rejection was a rejection.
Peace was nowhere to be found inside me despite the quiet streets, the quieted city blanketed by a quiet blizzard. I couldn't sleep that night. The heat was making whistling and clanging sounds, but the loudest clanging came from inside me. I spent the night absorbed in my own chaos.
The next day we followed up on our plans to go to the opera house to see a recital by an upcoming male tenor, the next star, the next Pavarotti, perhaps. We enjoyed it. But afterward I had to tell her, simply, but not without immense difficulty that it was best if we didn't have any communications at all. She stood up and was about to leave. I touched her hand without really knowing what I was going to do. She gave me a hug when I told her that in the end she needed to know at least that I liked her a lot. She said she liked me too. But without words we knew that was somehow not enough.
Then she left. This time her back to me.
She wanted to be friends. Like all these other women who somehow couldn't handle what I wanted to give and what I wanted from them.
This is how drama permeates my life.
I walked from Columbus Circle where I saw her last all the way to Herald Square where the milonga would be. On the way I picked up a lamb gyro from what I was told the best street car in the city, a block from Rockefeller Center. That made me feel better. The City, I could always count on to make me feel a little better. It was cold. My winter clothes were still in New Haven. I was wearing my corduroy jacket for the opera house. But I was sad. I felt numb inside. I couldn't understand why it always happened to me that women in the end wanted to be my friend. But I was grateful, and I told her too, that she didn't try too hard to be my friend, like the French girl did. She is a bitter Russian woman from the middle of Siberia. She knew that life was never fair, that she could never expect much good from life.
And if I am not her knight in shining armors, there was no reason for her to be in my life.
There wouldn't be drama in a person who lives with peace. I am full of drama and of little peace. I realized it slowly. I got to the milonga before the pre-milonga class even started and I felt an urge to explode, let me feelings go. There was a friend who didn't take the class and who was just hanging out. So I had her sit next to me and I asked her if she had ever been in a situation where she wanted to be the friend of someone she didn't want to date but that he refused that friendship. I asked because I wanted to sympathize with the pianist. It hurt me to see her turn around and leave.
Drama is for those who can't just let go, who hangs on the sentimental for as long as possible, making a taffy out of it just so he can drag it out a little longer.
It was good to be with my friend. She was, to my surprise, going through her own drama that she didn't want to specify either. At least we commiserated each other, and we reminded each other that in the end friendships are important, and we were the living example right there.
The turning point for my decision to make peace was this morning. On the train I realized I couldn't understand and therefore couldn't accept that a woman who likes me would still not date me. She felt guilty she couldn't give me what I wanted when I was giving her more than she could ever expect from a man. And her guilt materialized into sharp pain whenever I showed disappointment with her distance. She couldn't take it anymore so she had to cut it off. I thought that was such a stupid reason to break up. It would be my reason to break up with her, not her reason since she was the one getting the better end of the "deal", if that is the best way I can put it.
At work I couldn't take it anymore so I got myself a notebook, went up to the cafeteria, and wrote an imaginary letter to her, demanding that she explain to me why her guilt was the reason we weren't together. Why it could be accepted as a reason to break something that had so much potential. As I wrote it out, I started to make peace.
I realized making peace is not about making sense of the nonsense. It's about letting go of things. Letting things be. Not controlling everything, not even to comprehend it, for the desire to comprehend is very much a form of desire to control. I started to allow the reality that people will do what I might not find reasonable, and no amount of reasoning on my part, overt or just in my mind, would change what other people do. The best way is to accept it.
And slowly, I started to let go of the past, the future that I fantasize. I started to let go of the beautiful few weeks we had together, minus the very few battles. The images that had been hurting me started to find their places in the peaceful seats of my heart. The image of us posing for the New York Times photographer as we looked at the twilight over the Washington Bridge that evening before the hurricane came. The image of all my poems I have written to her. And many more. Many remain difficult, and just the thought of them creates a constriction in my throat.
But at some point, I was started to see the phrase I think she deserves to know, that I think I deserve to hear from myself. "Don't feel guilty about not giving me what I wanted. I never thought you took advantage of me. I always felt grateful to have the opportunity to show my love." It's true. No woman I can remember had allowed me to go so far, to be the gentleman I wanted to be, to treat a woman the way I wanted. All these women were so afraid of what I was offering that they just fought back much sooner than the pianist did. It's true I deserved someone who liked me just as much, who lived up to the erratic and irrational expectations I had at a given moment. But I wasn't focusing on that then. Having written that imaginary letter I started to remember how happy I was, how I was looking forward to writing her the poems, to getting her the flowers, or just opening the door for her. My happiest moment was when she told me that no one has ever made her feel so special before. She gave me that chance to be the boyfriend I had always wanted to be.
Making peace means letting go. It means not let the ego get in the way. It kills me to know I have failed. I have failed to build a long-lasting relationship. It kills me that a woman I cared about could just break something I thought we were both building, willing to build. Obviously, as with the French and India girls, it was torture to see them choose someone else before my wounds had healed. But whatever right I have to be angry, the problem is that it doesn't do me any good. It doesn't matter if these women become my friends or not; I am tired of spending another month being angry, being spiteful over a lost past and a forbidden future. I just have to live in the present.
One day can't change everything. I wish today I can make peace with the French girl and not let her current relationship get to me. I wish today I can see the pianist and not feel regretful that we couldn't build what we wanted. But I am not so far. I will see her tomorrow because she is coming to the practica now. I wonder if by then I will have made enough peace to offer her my olive branch. It still feels like defeat: friendship. It still feels like it is the best I can get from not winning. A consolation prize. But my anger, my frustration, can't compare to that with the French girl's even before I started suspecting her nascent relationship. I hope I am maturing in this sense. To let things go. To live in the present. To live in the present for my own sake, not for someone else's, not for someone else's desire to be my friend, to have my company. It is for my own peace that I will decide how I interact with these people who just couldn't handle my love.
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