FINDING "THE ONE"
PART TWO: LETTING GO
By Brian Hodges/Greenwich Village Gazette
fell in love twice
during my college years. The first was a love forged on pure will and
endurance rather than a mutual yearning for each other. The second was
pure and meant to be – yet it was unrequited. In both cases, my
better judgement often told me that I should just move on and be done
with it. But in each case, something more primal told me to hang on for
dear life. In the former, that primal something was a need to be right –
or more specifically, a need to not be wrong. As for the latter,
I was simply convinced that love would somehow find a way. Like so many
people in their quests to find the one, I had found somebody –
two in four years actually – who I thought was a likely candidate, and I
tried desperately to hold onto her. I learned the hard way that
sometimes, oftentimes, in order to find the one, you must first
learn the hard process of letting go.
My relationship with Veronica was doomed from the start.
Even before we became a couple, we fought about everything. Not healthy,
sexually charged arguments either – although that’s what people called
them. We were always angry with each other. Our relationship almost
seemed more out of convenience. We had the same major, worked together
on projects and had comparable looks. We figured, heck, why not? During
our two-plus year relationship, we found many excuses not to break up
even though we both knew that breaking up would have been wise. We were
co-producers on a show and didn’t want to mess up the work relationship.
We had said, "I love you." I had taken her virginity. We had gone on
vacation together and didn’t want to take all those pictures off the
wall. Veronica knew me better than anybody else in the world. I was
scared of losing that constant in my life, no matter how miserable it
made me.
Diane was a different story altogether. We got along
great from the first moment we met. We just had a natural chemistry.
Even before we had met, I was drawn to her. I picked her out of a large
crowd in a student film and said, "Hey, who is that?" Later on, I
would think of this as a sign that something between us was fated. The
relationship between Diane and I was complicated. Whose isn’t? We were
never officially together, although there were a few select
evenings. The night we drank a bottle of wine by the Charles River in
Boston and talked into the wee hours. The night we first kissed by that
same river. The night I returned from Los Angeles after several months
and we made love for the first time. Yet amidst all this, Diane was
flaky. She was the classic case of "doesn’t know what she wants." She
was involved with somebody else, but said that she wanted to be with me.
She said that she loved me truly, madly and deeply one day, but then
would cancel a date the next because she had to clean her apartment. The
more my mind nagged at me saying, "She can never be what you need her to
be," the more my heart cried out, "Don’t give up! This is fated!"
Logically (to me anyway) I did have my reasons for
persevering. With Veronica, more than anything, I didn’t want to be
wrong. She was my first really serious, long-term girlfriend. She was
the first girl I had said, "I love you" to and meant it. We had history.
That’s what Veronica always said. "We need to stick this out because we
have history." It had made so much sense every time she said that. We
had come way too far to admit to each other – and to ourselves – that we
had somehow wasted this much of our lives, failing to figure it all out.
I had once told her that I would marry her for crying out loud! How
could I end something like that?
Diane did just the right amount of wonderful things to keep me thinking
she was perfect in every way. She would make a promise that this weekend
we would just jump on a plane and fly off to Colorado together. (She
worked for an airline and got cheap tickets.) She filled me with such
hope for the two of us. I wanted to do everything with her. Road trips,
camping, football games, crossword puzzles. Maybe I was too afraid to
admit that I was wrong about this too. Maybe this strong feeling of
"meant to be" was false. Maybe she just didn’t have it in her to be all
that I needed her to be. Because inevitably, by the time the weekend
came around, other plans had come up and our getaways to Boulder, New
Orleans, Los Angeles were always postponed, never to be rescheduled.
No matter how much we resist, finally we have to give in
to what we know we must do. The Band-Aid approach always seems like the
healthiest way to end a relationship. One swift, definitive action so
you don’t lose your nerve a few days later. But like a heroin-addict who
quits cold turkey, there is still a period of de-tox. Even after
breaking up with Veronica, we tried to remain friends for over two
years. It took that long to figure out that we just weren’t good for
each other’s lives, period. It seems like it should have been easier to
get over Diane since I had moved 3000 miles away. But to me, distance
was a non-issue. I would have moved back to Boston in a heartbeat if she
had asked me to. So in each case, I slipped back into my old ways.
Veronica and I became "friends with benefits." I wrote Diane letters
telling her how much I wanted to be with her, and once again we made
plans to meet somewhere in the middle courtesy of her handy flight
benefits. Predictably, the savage arguing began once again. The romantic
excursions were once again postponed. Once again, I found it impossible
to let go of this person who had been a major part of my life for so
long. And once again, I could never let go of this person whom I felt
fated to be with for the rest of my life.
To let go is to admit failure. It means something didn’t
work out. It means, in effect that you weren’t good enough.
Rather than let go and cut our losses, we often strive and labor to
prove that it’s not true, to prove that we are invincible, impervious to
wasted time. So we remain; in no better position than we were before. I
feared that I would never find another who knew me as well as Veronica
did. I feared that I would never love again the way I loved Diane. I
desperately tried to hold onto both. But, the harder I held on, the more
it all seemed to squeak just beyond my grasp. I did finally concede
defeat. It was quite scary; first to admit failure, and then to
knowingly and willingly let what I had been striving for slip away. In
the end, I left it up to blind faith. Call it fate, karma, God’s Will.
Whatever. I simply had to trust that letting go was ultimately necessary
in furthering my quest of finding the one.
The search for "The One" continues next week.
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©2001 Brian Hodges. All rights reserved.
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