Wednesday, August 18, 2010

On love and destiny

In my twenties I was fond of saying, "You will know if you are meant to be a couple if you can travel well together.  That is a true test."  I am not sure where I heard it first, but I thought of it often as Robert and I traveled in Europe together (Germany and Austria to see his family and then other cities as we could navigate) as a gift from my parents for my college graduation.  As history would show, we did not fare so well.  We were not great traveling companions as truthfully, our relationship was probably over before we'd even left.  I just wasn't ready to let go.  Robert had opened my eyes to an artistic, laissez-faire lifestyle, where one could follow his dreams and money could allow you anything.  He was a true Bohemian and philosopher, an extraordinary musician (he played a classical guitar that could bring tears) and thinker, but also a rich young man with a tortured youth who was trying to reconcile this dichotomy in himself.  The times were heady.


He was magic to me.  A diamond with sparkling eyes even as the torment of injustice clouded the clarity.  I'd loved no one like him not only because he'd allowed me to see myself too as more than suburban, as beautiful, as an artist with a voice and a vision, but because he had a compass for truth and was not won over by flash, smoke and mirrors.  We read The Illuminati Trilogy and saw black and white magic everywhere.  Losing him broke me on a psychic level because I still could not see the magic in myself and I'd believed our coupling to be celestially ordained.  I thought all the shine was his.  We were victims of the sex, drugs, and rock and roll of youth, but there had been light.


My heart was rescued when Ismael, a gorgeous Spanish sculptor, creator, cyclist, reggae connoisseur, whom I'd known for years as a classmate and friend, came back into my life.  He was, he is, like no one I had ever known then or since.  No one had been as gentle with me in my life.  No one had honored me, treated me like a queen, loved me that way.  When we were first together, I melted in the pleasure of him.  He was tactile.  He handled everything with care, a real naturalists long before this was popular.  He showed me nature and taught me to seek the special quality in even the smallest thing.  We walked in the woods of Vermont, considered life and the abundance in nature in such a real and present way.  He did not mess about with chatter but talked with conviction about the things that mattered to him.  He was so lithe and sensual and physical and present.  We lived in different states and he would not settle for a life in the city on my terms.  In the end, he was right, but at the time I did not want to give him up.  I fought and fought viciously, I am afraid and regret the small things we did to hurt one another to make the break.


Foolishly, I ran to the arms of Khalil, a phony record producer in Atlanta and got myself so twisted and hurt and confused, that I feared allowing myself to love ever again.  After him there were lovers and affairs and hopes, but I was not able or willing to commit myself again.  Fear racked me and while I hoped there was a love for me, I did not hang my hat on anything or expect it to come.  I truly let go and was rather shallow in my relationships for years. 


When I think of how I have come to find myself living in Barbados with a husband and two beautiful little girls, and I often do, I can really cherish the lessons learned, the loves, the heartaches.  It is because of this incredible journey that I wonder about the expression "soulmate" as it is usually used to describe one's current love partner, and embrace it as a collection of people who guide us to this penultimate moment.  This moment too is not perfect, but there is a comfort, a security, a sense of our need to do it together.  Even in the blind moments of rage, there is a desperate pull towards Didier that is thrilling and romantic and terrifying and calming all the same.


I have been thinking about love for the past week now, after reading of the love between Lady Antonia Fraser and Harold Pinter, a love affair and marriage that lasted over thirty years, after both had been previously married for eighteen years!  Before our paths crossed, Didier had been married for fourteen years.  On seeing him that first day in the restaurant, I just knew that this would be a significant love and it is.  I have been driven to the edge of sanity by this man but have also experienced the calmest me I have ever known.  I can close my eyes and see us as old people, see our daughters trusting in life and love by the look in our eyes. 

Save Khalil, I have been in touch with my lovers past and I have seen them grow more into themselves and find loves that have helped them soar.  They have started families, continued creating and developing into fine human beings, artists, fathers, loving partners, and I love them for driving part of the way on our journey.  And with Didier, always driving the car, literally, but letting me navigate some times, figuratively, we have found a way to travel together.  Well.  He and the girls are my life and I am not sure where we are going, but I hope we will all go together and do it for a long time.



(c) Copyright 2010. City Mom in the Jungle

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