Breaking The Ice


Dell-irium
February 4, 2009, 1:45 am
Filed under: Internet Love, irish language | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

The more that happens in my life, the less I write about it.  It’s been a busy week, so I’ve been a lazy blogger.  Busy, and my keyboard seems to have developed some sort of disease that makes it only register every second letter I type.  Infuriating.

It’s always sad when a love affair ends; whether it’s with a life partner or a household gadget.  We rely on these things to make our lives work smoothly, and it’s a real shock to find that you’re suddenly free on Friday nights, that nobody is going to fix the broken light in the landing, or that it’s not possible to print a Word file in a hurry anymore.

Although I don’t have anything nice to say about my laptop right now, I’m feeling generous when it comes to this teapot (and everything else on this site).

teapot

Yum.

Yep, I know it’s a lazy post, but it’s nearing 2am and the only things on my mind right now are finishing the RTE Guide crossword and dreaming teapot themed dreams.

Óiche Mhaith

 



Perspective
January 28, 2009, 1:02 pm
Filed under: LOVE, Single life, breakup, philosophy | Tags: , , , , ,

While reading the final chapter in Joan Didion’s ‘The Year of Magical Thinking’ I found myself letting go.  Of everything that I’d been hanging onto… every last regret, every resentment, every bitter thought I’d been harbouring against the Pirate since we broke up. 

The timing couldn’t have been better… I’ve been thinking a lot today about the Pirate and our relationship, as he brought someone home last night.  I’m delighted that he’s moving on, but earlier today I was distressed at the thought of anyone changing the great dynamic we have at the moment.  The someone he brought home last night is the same someone who stayed over on New Year’s Eve, and I felt threatened at the thought of another woman coming into MY house and interfering with our time together.

Now?  Well, I can’t say the idea appeals to me, but I can’t expect the Pirate to put his life on hold just because he’s still living here.  His staying was as much my decision as it was his, and I’m willing to deal with the consequences.  I’ve also accepted that MY house is, in fact, OUR house.  Sneaky inner child.

Yes, I know that I seem amazingly calm and philosophical about all this.  It’s because of the massive dose of perspective Joan Didion just treated me too.  The Pirate, his actions, and his romances, are never going to really matter.  Because we’ve already decided that ‘we’ will never be.  Because there are better men, and bigger dramas, in my future.  Because I don’t love him anymore.

Maybe a little change would be a good thing.  I’ve been neglecting my personal life of late; indulging in anti-social behaviour and spending way too much time in bed.  I haven’t even been drinking as much tea as usual.  Tomorrow, I’m back on track.  Fine-tuning that work/life balance and brewing a pot of Rooibos.



Out with the Passion, in with the Pictionary?

Hope everybody out there had a Happy Everything. 

Christmas and New Year here were manic – I had three friends stay for New Year’s Eve, which turned into a week and a half of non-stop reminiscing, philosophising, dancing and romance.  As a result of the madness, I’m really enjoying the silence in the house the last couple of days - everyone is settling back into their daily lives.  I’m feeling very homely, cooking and baking every day.  I’m broke, but I can always find the cash for fresh ingredients and kick-ass coffee.

In good old ring out the old, ring in the new tradition, the Pirate and I have decided to go our separate ways.  For real this time!  We’re really enjoying living together as friends, but there were a few awkward moments over the festive season as the Unlikely Valentine and his friends spent quite a lot of time here.  It’s time to move on.  The Pirate has given his notice on the property and started the search for new digs.

Napoleon Dynamite returned yesterday after a looong absence.  He got me a Silverchair album for Christmas – he remembered that Ana’s Song is one of my all-time favourites.  Sweet kid.  I feel wretched as I gave in and drank the bottle of whiskey I’d bought him during one of our Big Nights.  I’ll replace it with a more expensive bottle to make amends.

It was so wonderful to catch up with everyone over the holidays – two of my guests travelled from Germany, and one from England.  It was amazing to be reunited with the most special people in my life for a few days.  They’re my kind of girls – up for anything, and willing to analyse it all the next morning over breakfast pints!  The biggest theme of the week was PASSION.  I’ve been having my Christmas Fling with the Unlikely Valentine, the Femme has been enjoying a dalliance with a local bad boy, and the girls met a few interesting characters while they were here.

The situation with the Unlikely Valentine is as complicated as ever, but I think he’s out of my system for now.  I saw a LOT of him over the holidays, and we moved our relationship up a few notches – introductions to friends, prearranged rendezvous, and boardgames.  Where’s the excitement?!  I got used to waking up beside him every morning, discovered where the stash of loo roll is kept, and grew familiar with the in-jokes.  I’ve had high fives from his mates, and he even offered to cook me dinner one night.  Enough with the romance already!

All I ever wanted from him was passion.  And with the time we’ve spent together, that passion has faded.  To put it very crudely, “If he doesn’t want to strip me naked and fuck me on the kitchen counter every now and then, what’s the point?”  That’s an excerpt from a conversation with friends last week, and I have the feeling it’s going to stay with me a while.

The Femme, meanwhile, has ditched her bad boy due to similar issues and raised her standards.  She will now only consider a relationship with a man who can answer the following questions:

 a) Who is Charlotte Bronte?

b) Who wrote The Grapes of Wrath? 

c) Who is your favourite poet?

With the return of Napoleon yesterday we decided a few drinks were in order.  The four of us (The Pirate, Napoleon, The Femme and myself) went to one of our favourite pubs for the Monday night trad session.  The place is a legend – great music, perfect pints, local poets and a cosy winter atmosphere.  The Femme and Napoleon excused themselves early, and The Pirate and I were left to remember times past and discuss the new dynamics of our friendship.  Time well spent.

I’d like to make a New Year’s toast - to true friends, literate men and happy homes.  Happy New Year!



Christmas Eve in the Drunk Tank
December 24, 2008, 9:10 pm
Filed under: LOVE, Parents, Relationships, Single life, heartache | Tags: , , , , ,

Christmas is like being wrapped up by your friends and family in a big, warm cuddle.  It’s about showing the people in your life that you love them by buying them novelty bottle openers and heart-shaped frying pans.  It’s a time to bond with people in the pub by singing Christmas carols and relishing the annual free drink from the barman. 

We’ve always had wonderful Christmases – two great parents, four excited kids, and a big family gathering in Dublin to celebrate on the day itself.  The sad thing about our family gatherings is that the numbers have been dwindling since our childhood.  This year is proving to be the most distressing so far – I saw my Grandfather yesterday, and he told me that he wishes he were dead.  Wow.

I’ve mentioned my Grandfather before – an incredible, inspirational man who sadly has a tendency to see the worst in everything (and everyone) around him.  He’s taught me so much throughout his life, and it pains me that the biggest lesson I’ll ever learn will be from his death.  He’s alone.  He’s alienated most of the people who care about him, he’s frightened and bullied the nursing staff he’s met over the last few months.  He has refused offers of help and mocked the thoughtful efforts of his neighbours. 

The lesson is so obvious that I’m not going into it.  The message I’d like to spread in my last pre-Christmas post is one I’ve written before:

Love the world – it’ll love you back.

Tonight I’m going out with The Femme, a couple of her friends and… the man.  Yes, the Unlikely Valentine is still on the scene.  There have been phonecalls, messages, and a couple of rendevous.  It’s all getting a bit pedestrian.  I’ve made a conscious decision not to touch a drop of the bad stuff over the holidays – let the early mornings, extravagant meals and epic Monopoly games begin!

Happy Christmas



Unlikely Valentine
December 20, 2008, 3:34 am
Filed under: LOVE, Relationships, Single life, wisdom | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

This is a story about a boy.  My clearest childhood memory is of him giving me a Valentine’s gift when we were both seven.  We were preparing for our communion that year, and although I didn’t know him well I knew him well enough to be suspicious of the gift.  He was a boy, and a bad boy at that.  I can still feel the terror of that moment; being handed a gift-wrapped present in front of the whole class on my arrival at school that morning.  I was sure that it was going to blow up in my face, that it was a horrible trick designed to embarrass me.  It was a grey teddy with heart-shaped glasses.  Three years later he repeated the gesture. 

He was my first Valentine.  Years later, my first kiss with tongue.  Aged 14, my first encounter with male genitalia.  From the age of 17 onwards he was a regular feature on my weekend scene, which mainly involved drinking too much and collecting experiences with men to entertain my friends with during the week. 

I don’t think I’m going to be able to find the words to tell this story properly.  I wish I could describe the feeling of seeing him on the dancefloor on a Saturday night, after studiously ignoring him all week in school.  The strobing lights, 90s music and grinding couples fading into one another as his gaze held me helpless.  The agonizing anticipation of those moments, the electric expectation finally giving way to ecstatic relief as he touched me, held me, danced with me and kissed me like nobody else could.

We slept together, once.  We’d finished school and I was in town with a friend of mine, enjoying our new-found freedom and testing the rules of the real world to the limit.  The night, and the booze, led me to his single bed in a rented apartment crawling distance from the club. 

And the years rolled by.  I met him again, on another visit to the hometown.  Another drunken night, another nightclub.  I was obviously going through a responsible phase at the time; I didn’t take him home with me but I did take his hipflask as a souvenir.

And then last night.  A familiar voice called out my name across the crowded beer garden of a local pub.  And there he was.  Older and rounder than the last time we met, but the same indescribable charm.  I was defenseless.  The evening ended in his house, drinking cans and talking shit into the small hours.  This morning I woke up in his bed, cursed myself for my predictability, then made the most of the familiar yet mysterious body lying next to me.

That’s the thing about him.  The mystery.  All those years when we were in school together, we never spoke about our weekend flings.  I never knew if there’d be a next time, and that intensified every touch, every kiss.  He’s a lot of things, and leads an interesting life, but to me his biggest redeeming feature is that he’s a little bit dangerous.  Because he drinks hard, gambles big, talks straight and lives for himself. 

A no-strings relationship might not sound like the key to happiness to a lot of people.  But in my 25 years the relationship I’ve had with him has been the most straightforward and possibly the most satisfying.  It’s not love, it’s not even friendship, but it’s honest.

The oldest lover I’ve ever had was exactly 19 years, 364 days older than me.  “Teach me something.”  “The only thing I can tell you, the only thing I’ve learnt, is that it’s all about the passion.”  I don’t think it would be possible for me to feel the passion I felt this morning for someone I was in a long-term relationship with.  I’m not saying that passion has to fade over time; I’m saying that in most relationships that passion is never given a chance to grow.  Distance, uncertainty and anticipation are the elements that make our relationship what it is. 

I had to take the morning after pill today.  Stupid, stupid, stupid.  We had a brief discussion last night, during which we apparently decided that we were ready to start a family.  The drunken mind is a truly fascinating, frightening thing.

 



Controllable Desire
November 12, 2008, 9:14 pm
Filed under: LOVE, Relationships, Single life | Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

I met some interesting people last weekend, and was lucky enough to be involved in some wonderful conversations.  One of the comments made was that people are more attracted to those who are in love.  I think this might explain the curious number of prospective suitors I’ve met lately – right now, I’m in love with the world.

I had a date last night with a really nice guy – he’s Canadian, he enjoys travelling, he’s passionate about his job and getting the most out of life.  Yeah, he’s nice.  Maybe too nice.  The men in my life need to be able to disagree with me, debate with me, challenge me and stimulate me.  Full of ideas and opinions and… personality.  The Canadian and I are in the early stages of getting to know one another, and he seems to be in ‘agreeable’ mode for now.

This weekend I’m meeting a guy who took a liking to me in the pub a few weeks ago.  We’ve been out together once since then, and my feelings towards him are still undecided.  We went to the cinema last week, but due to conflicting schedules and early mid-week pub closing times we didn’t have a chance to do anything before or after the movie.  He’s hot.  He’s not afraid to share his opinions on the world.

I think it’s obvious from the above that there haven’t been any real sparks flying.  No intense passion, no uncontrollable desire, no butterflies.  But there have been smiles and laughter, mild feelings of warm fuzziness, and a great game of poker.  I don’t want to be truly involved with anyone for a long time… I just want the freedom of single life, with added board games and the occasional hug.

 



Lightness of Being

 

A few years ago I read The Unbearable Lightness of Being.  It blew me away.  It’s a novel by Milan Kundera set in Prague in 1968, and although I’m sure the book is of huge political and cultural importance I was most impressed by Kundera’s philosophy.  His observations throughout the book provide an inspiring insight into the human mind.

Years later, I fell in love, devoted three years of my life to a certain beautiful person, and skipped the country when our relationship disintegrated.  Months later we caught up and spent a night talking about ourselves, our love and our loss.  One of the comments I made that night was that I felt at the time as if I had an invisible audience everywhere I went.  I’m always looking for the approval or admiration of this group of fantasy critics. 

Often, when I look back on a situation in my life where I behaved in a manner most people would describe as promiscuous/loud/irresponsible I can honestly say that I was just looking for a good story.  Life is more interesting when you say ‘yes’, and an interesting life leads to interesting stories.  My critics, immaterial as they are, love a good story.

Last night I watched The Unbearable Lightness of Being for the first time.  It’s a beautiful film, and really captures the characters as they were written.  Today I did a little more reading, and came across a quote that resonates deeply with me:

“We all need somebody to look at us. We can be divided into four categories according to the kind of look we wish to live under. The first category longs for the look of an infinite number of anonymous eyes, in other words, for the look of the public…
The second category is made up of people who have a vital need to be looked at by many known eyes. They are the tireless hosts of cocktail parties and dinners…
Then there is the third category, the category of people who need to be constantly before the eyes of the person they love. Their situation is as dangerous as the situation of people in the first category. One day the eyes of their beloved will close, and the room will go dark..
And finally there is the fourth category, the rarest, the category of people who live in the imaginary eyes of those who are not present. They are the dreamers.”

So I’m a dreamer.  It’s a theory I’m going to keep in mind over the next while, as I’m sure it has practical applications in gaining a deeper understanding of those around us.

Which are you?

 



Seven Bean Mix
September 13, 2008, 12:16 am
Filed under: LOVE, Relationships, Single life | Tags: , , , , , , ,

Life took me by surprise today. 

I was having a lazy, uninteresting, uninspired afternoon.  Vegetarian Shepherd’s Pie was as exciting as things got around here.  Until I got a call from a wonderful friend of my mams – an aspiring matchmaker.  She’s been trying to introduce me to someone for months, and was delighted to hear The Pirate and I are no longer an item. 

We agreed that Someone could call me, and that I’d keep myself free until I meet him!  He got in touch earlier on, and he’s fantastic.  We haven’t met, and won’t until next week, but I like him.  It’s hard to make a good first impression when there’s so much pressure, and he did brilliantly. 

I also heard from Plan B this afternoon.  Plan B and I met randomly a long time ago, but I’m convinced we knew each other in a past life, or something… we connected so well when we met that I didn’t even ask him what he did for months.  We’ve never had the need for small talk.  I christened him Plan B straight away, and the name has stuck within my circle of friends.  The Pirate was Plan A at the time. 

If you’re wondering where The Sage comes into all of this, I’m not sure that he does.  He was really keen to meet up last weekend, but changed his mind at the last minute.  That’s fine with me, but he managed to turn it into some kind of drama… he didn’t explain himself at all, then said ‘I’m just fucked up’ and hung up.  Hmm.  It was his idea to meet up, and neither of us really had the time for it -  I wouldn’t have suggested it in the first place.  I’m fine with us not seeing each other until it happens of its own accord, which it eventually will.  He’s called a few times since, and I enjoy our conversations, but that’s as far as it’s going for now.

I’ve promised to save myself for this mysterious Someone, which is exciting in itself – and also saves me the effort of thinking about anyone else for a while.



A Story for Bedtime
August 20, 2008, 2:15 am
Filed under: LOVE, Relationships | Tags: , , , , ,

One of those nights when only the realisation that my tea has gone cold denotes the passing of time.

I feel as if I may have cheated you with the short excerpt from M’s life earlier.  I don’t have many details about the last episode that I can share, but I can give you some background.  M’s dalliance with her ex/fiance (from now on referred to as J) began around 4 years ago.

4 years of will they, won’t they, on again, off again.  4 years of tension, arguments, disagreements, alcohol and drugs.  4 years of emotional distress, fading self-confidence and a desperate desire to be loved.  Really LOVED. 

I’m lucky enough to have been truly, deeply loved once.  I’ve had songs written about me, notes left on my pillow, a whole catalogue of in-jokes.  I know what she wants, I understand what she craves.  J has no idea.  J is in his mid-thirties, unemployed, and living rent-free with a mate.  He has a child from a previous relationship whom he consistently ignores, forgets and avoids.  J has debts and drug issues and, as we’re discovering, a tendency to deal with issues using violence.

‘Use your words.’  Not something we should ever have to ask of grown men.

I know that love isn’t perfect.  The fantasy might involve white horses and gallant knights (or at least a steady income and GSOH) but in reality, love sometimes lives at home with its mother, changes its underwear once a week and carries the beginnings of a beer belly with pride.  I’m aware of all this, and aware that M needs to make her own choices (and mistakes), but a huge part of me wants to forbid her from going back to J.

Yes, that’s right – after all that’s happened, she still wants to be with him.  I think she sees his violent outburst as the declaration of undying love she’s been waiting so long for. 

I don’t want to begin to imagine what he might get her for Valentine’s.



Table For One
August 12, 2008, 8:43 pm
Filed under: LOVE, Single life | Tags: , , , ,

There have been a few tears, a lot of laughter and numerous pots of tea this past week.  All steps along the way to readjusting to single life, I suppose.

Truthfully, it’s been a magical week.  I’ve woken up every morning ready to embrace the day, and enjoyed every moment.  Ice cream in the park, alone.  Lunch in town, alone.  Reading all the books I’ve been meaning to.  Smiling at strangers.  Laughing out loud at… the weather, other people’s children, life.

I spent a few days with my wonderful grandfather, and was grateul for the fact that I could really give my attention to him the way he needed.  In fact, I’ve been able to give myself more fully to everything this week - I have no distractions, no plans, no commitments. 

I feel as if life is an adventure again.  And that’s exactly what life should be. 

I don’t want security, I don’t want romance, I don’t want monogamy.  I just want to live every moment to the full, enjoy all my friends as I should, and treasure my family for the wonderful people that they are. 

I might sound like I’m over-dramatising the situation when I say I feel ‘reborn’ – but it’s the only way I can describe this wonderful sense of freedom and energy that I have.  People have commented that I’m glowing, and I feel as if I am.