When people ask me why Iām a good cook, or how I learned to dance, I answer with pride that itās just part of my family legacy. There are things that youāre so surrounded with that you take them for grantedāthings like reading books every day, learning to swim, international travel, loud yelling during all house arguments, and politics at dinner time. On the other hand, power tools terrify me, polite conversation baffles me, and I never really understood how healthy relationships worked.
You read that right. Iām the product of a miserable twenty-year marriage. In my immediate surroundings, there were very few couples who I wanted to emulate, because most partnerships seemed stagnant or dysfunctional. The few I admired ended in (untimely) death or divorce. What Iām trying to say is, when Iām hanging out with my three close co-workers on the APW team, all of whom are badass babes in long-term loving marriages, it feels like being surrounded by magical unicorns.
Magical unicorns who are speaking a terrifying language.
Because as much as abuse and addiction and cheating are tragic, heartbreaking things⦠they are also things I viscerally understand. But I understand NOTHING about going out with someone to dinner and having nothing to sayānot because your relationship is in troubleābut because youāre tired, and you actually just want to eat and not do the dishes afterward. Or the trial by fire of raising a child with someone and not hating each other at the same time. Orāeven scarierāmaintenance sex. The whole fact that it exists, freaks me out. You can tell me what it is, but I still canāt actually imagine it.
Married people like to tell me āThereās good years and bad yearsā like itās basic common sense. To put it in context, my longest relationship has been three years. We did not have that problem. So all I can think of is how do I know I can handle the bad years? How will I know good years are coming? My parents had nineteen bad years.
What If Iām not a Magical Unicorn?
But why am I thinking about this all NOW? Because Iāve met someone. Sheās so gorgeous I forget to breathe and so generous I canāt tell my friends about our epic courtship or else theyāll think Iām bragging. Nobody else has matched me in touch, in playful adventure, in the path weāre on, in our goddamn love languages, and in my deep love for pork belly and kimchi. For all intents and purposes, you could say Iāve met āthe oneā (sincere apologies for the hallmark sentiments).
And thatās why I keep looking to the happily married. Because, guys, I really, really want to hold on to her, and all of a sudden Iām having panic attacks about THE REST OF MY LIFE. Iām seeing visions of kids and a home and how sheād laugh when sheās wrinkled and grey and how soon she might die and how much we have to do before that happens and how will I ever live without her. Not dissimilar to some of the same anxieties engaged people seem to face right before the wedding, but Iāve just decided to move up the worry-wart timeline. Every relationship Iāve had so far had crashed and burned, so this time Iām trying to do it right. Iām learning (from the happily married friends) that love can mean ease instead of work, and that partnerships should enhance both people, not diminish our brightness, and that the ideal relationship heals instead of opening wounds. And thatās cool and all, but I still functionally donāt understand HOW it works.
HOW do you know if youāll still love someone when theyāre old and grey? How do you bring yourself to have sex just to āstay connectedā? How do you build a life with someone that doesnāt turn toxic? And for those of you who say āyou just doā or āyou just knowāā that sounds familiar. I ājust knowā how to belly dance, and I bet you donāt.
When single is your comfort zone
But if Iām being honest, itās not that commitment itself is terrifying; itās how easy it feels. We were talking about children a few weeks in. On our fourth date we chatted about sexual histories. Weāre planning on five months of world travel together, and itās only been ten weeks since we met. It feels crazy. (Is it crazy?)
So then, when will I be ready? When will I actually feel like I deserve the type of person who will fly anywhere in the world just to see me for a few days? How can I guarantee that I wonāt fuck it up because some part of me doesnāt functionally believe that the romance I dream of is actually attainable?
Because coming from a family full of dysfunction means being utterly comfortable on my own. My motto is āIād rather be single.ā I like not having sex unless Iām revved up, and I like not seeing someone unless I really want to. I cherish the wooing, the emails in the inbox, the surprise dates, and the effort to look sharp. I pride myself on my independence, on sleepovers with my friends, on keeping my own schedules, on not asking for permission to do anything in my life. I like being accountable to only me. How do I give that up when I donāt know whatās on the other side?
Iām terrified. Terrified that long term love is⦠boring. Terrified that all my insecurities (about my body and my ability to love) will get in the way of anything I try to build. Terrified Iāll end up feeling claustrophobic and tied down. Terrified Iāll wake up one day and find out Iāve been cheated on, or she decided she was tired of me and instead of two years in itāll be ten years in and my whole world will collapse because itās all so interwoven.
May The Odds Be Ever In Your Favor
And thatās the crux of it isnāt it? If you donāt have trust, trust that if you hand your heart to someone it wonāt be broken, that you wonāt regret it, that thereās an outcome that might be in your favor, then how do you do it? How do you think weāll beat the odds? Itās bad enough Iām a skeptic at heart but trusting love? Itās going to take a long time and many more examples than just the few APW team members. I mean, four of my friends are recently divorced. And it looks like HELL.
Which means all Iāve got now is today. And today, Iām the gross kind of sick and sheās made me two soups from scratch. I could get used to this kind of love, maybe. Meanwhile, Iām bookmarking some serious breathing exercises for when all of this āfalling in love with your forever personā thing gets to be all too much.
So tell me APW, how did you know when youād met the person you wanted to marry? Am I the only anxious lover, or were you totally freaking out too? And does it get bettER?