The Crush

I thought today's blog was appropriate given the irony of the situation. It is a repost of an original piece I wrote on July 21, 1999. It was originally posted on the Hullabaloo Raves Message Board which now resides at http://www.hulla.info While the three page discussion no longer exists on the current incarnation of the Hullabaloo message board, I have posted its three pages at the following links so you can follow the discussion and gain context for the discourse which ensued. Please assume that none of the links on the following pages are current or functional. At the time, I was a 23 year-old raver, stuck in a go-nowhere relationship. For reasons I may discuss at a later date, friends called christened me "pErMAsKeTcH." Partly because I was older than the average Hullabaloo raver, partly because of my highly introspective expositions, and partly because of how prolific these writings were, I was held in reasonably high esteem by almost all of the Hullabaloo community; I was, by all accounts, a celebrity philosopher in the eyes of many of its members:
Crushes, Love, and Relationships: Page 1
Crushes, Love, and Relationships: Page 2
Crushes, Love, and Relationships: Page 3
The irony is that I took the leap of faith I wrote about in the original post. And it led to the best years of my life. It led to years of living a charmed life that I thought was too good to be true. And perhaps it was. For when it ended, the situation wasn't the same; for when it ended, I was completely in love with my wife; for when it ended, we had brought into the world--and into a broken family--a beautiful daughter, Kaitlain Rita Lai Yee Cheung.
And thus begins my original post, dated July 21, 1999:
Here's something that I've come to recognize, at least in my situation, over the years (since I'm sooooo old).
People do tend to over-analyze, or at least spend a lot of time thinking or imagining when they're in a relationship--especially at the beginning stages of a relationship.
But that doesn't make it wrong.
I find that sometimes it's this thinking intensely to yourself, bathing yourself in the emotion which is so powerful then, and cherishing the thoughts and feelings, because as the relationship progresses (if it does), things will never be the same.
Special, emotional. But this special prelogue has its own special feeling, when your feelings are usually still to be revealed to the other person, or when you're thinking of a good time, or how to say it...
Then there's a crucial point in your developing relationship.
The point when you decide that you want to make your feelings known.
When you don't think that the other person would be scared away, and trying to muster the courage to tell them, trying to ignore the very real possibility of rejection....
This is often one of the times it seems that your feelings are most intense--and most private-- because you're never before more certain of how you feel.
You feel tingles in your arms and fingers and your heart races--as much from anxiety and nervousness as from excitement and exhilaration.
I'm sure a lot of people have said what they wanted to say to nobody before this point. And take a mental snapshot of how you're feeling.
Trust me.
Because once you get the courage and admit your most inner--most private--most passionate feelings to the other person, things change.
You've just admitted things to yourself.
Past the point of no return, not only have you admitted unrecoverably and embarrassingly your strong feelings for someone, but you've unknowingly admitted them to yourself, possibly for the first time.
You notice that while you still share feelings for this person, that they've changed a little in their quality, now that you've admitted it both to them and yourself.....
I've found that the most intense, special feelings you have are the times just leading up to that.... The feelings definitely change after that.
Not necessarily better. Not necessarily worse.
But you know what I mean.
Different.
Not so "special" anymore, because it's not your little secret crush anymore.
I'm telling you this because I'm experiencing this for the first time in over three years.
Those of you who know me, know that I'm quite a bit older than the average age of most of us Hullaboarders. And those of you who know me also know that I lived with my last girlfriend for over a year, in our own house.
But things, we both new, weren't quite right.
We always got along.
We never fought, ever
And we were always able to function as a couple.
Sure, we cared about each other. Sure, it was the most secure feeling in the world to know that you could just walk home, and waiting for you would be someone who cares for you--who could listen unconditionally to your concerns and your fears. Someone who could make it all better, just by being there.
But the relationship, as time progressed, evidently began missing the vital sparks that make it worth while. The butterflies in the stomach and heart flutters had long since subsided. This is what it is like to be married....
Oh, don't get me wrong. Marriage is a long-standing and respectable institution. But even at my age (at the time I wrote this, I was 23; I have since married; and I have since separated), I'm not ready. Perhaps at one time I thought I was. But I realized as time goes on, perhaps we care about each other, and perhaps we get along--two components of a marriage that many couples don't seem to have--and it was unfortuante. But could we truly say that we still loved each other?
In fact, it was difficult to admit, but over time, it became difficult even to say it to each other.
And we realized that we hardly shared any common interests or common ground. I'm not ready to give up partying, and she's not really into raving (she's even older than me). I'm not ready to commit, especially when her ambitions are so different to mine. I am on the verge of completing my honours degree in biotechnology (I have since completed it, and also completed my Masters degree), and want to pursue a career in research, and eventually business. I could not reconcile with a simple desire to become a receptionist or a secretary.
I found it increasingly difficult to relate, and by the time I reached my current academic position, it's even impossible to explain things that troubled me about my thesis, or indeed what my thesis was about. Not being able to party with her, not being able to share my academic career (my life) with her, nor any of my hobbies or ambitions made me question whether we were stuck in this relationship because ending a three-year cohabitating relationship is somewhat akin to the violent amputation of [insert name of any appropriate body part here].
Regardless of whether there were sparks or or whether there was true love or not, it still hurts, because it's so much intermingled with your life that you can't conceive of life without her--even if it wasn't the most exciting part of your life.
And then you stall at this point. Perhaps for days, perhaps weeks..months... Sometimes it takes a catalyst to help you make the final plunge. You know that no matter how many times you think it over. You know no matter how supportive your friends and relatives are and will be, that there will still be long, lonely nights ahead, crying yourself to sleep, if you can even. (I'd like to take the opportunity at this point to say that it is *really* easy to fall into a drug trap here.... DON'T! ps. same with rebound )
Perhaps there has been a relationship germinating all along, and you never realized it.
Perhaps there is a relationship waiting to be conceived. In either case, sometimes another special someone that you've known and tried to suppress feelings for for the longest time reveals their deep, dark secret--they have feelings for you, too.
And no matter how promising the prospect of this relationship is--no--it does not make the separation that you know is coming--is necessarily coming--any easier.
But you have new-found confidence and drive to make the right decision. You know that you've been stagnating in a relationship that wasn't meant to be. Just because nothing catalyzed its disintegration before this point does not mean it was meant to be. You tell yourself this over..and over.... and you wish if only you could believe it.... if only you could truly believe that ripping off your right arm was worth the risk of this new venture.
Who knows? Of course, there's no way of knowing... But you decide to take the chance. your number one fear of being alone--not having been truly alone for three years--shows its pain on your face.
But with your new-found confidence and empowerment given by the prospect of a promising new relationship, you turn away, stop watching your old past float away, and set out to experience feelings and perhaps even express your feelinngs in ways all but forgotten...for three years...
There are only two alternatives. Status quo, or brave new world. My one most important hope of my life is that I choose the path that leads me back to happiness I once knew, and not to an emotional rollercoaster of loneliness, despair, despondence.......


