Thursday, September 12, 2013

When the Enemy is Your Friend - Chapter Four

Chapter 4 (Thursday) – Day of the Murder

It was a party—a real one. No balloons and cake were present. Like most frat parties involving booze and girls, this party was no exception. Alyson felt nervous to be walking up to the large home sporting Greek signs that was pulsing with loud music.

“Hey, Bree, are you sure I’m invited?” she asked nervously, looking behind her shoulder.

Bree laughed. “Sweetheart, you’re so green--like you believe there’s a cop on your heels.”

“Could  there be cops?” Alyson asked her levelly.

“Relax. Kevin invited both of us. And it’s PG-13 rated. He wouldn’t invite us somewhere unsafe,” she assured her as they walked up to the front door.

Alyson was at least relieved that she had been able to drive herself. Her great aunt had surprised her by giving her a car as a Christmas present and had her two grandsons drive it from the dealership to U of W on Alyson’s second week back. The car was white and had flakes of rust on it, so it was by no means brand-new, but she insisted to her aunt that age didn’t matter.

“It’s my first car!” she screamed, thanking her profusely on the phone, and she hurriedly made her first trip to go to Wal-Mart and buy decals for it. She was more than happy to let Bree hitch a ride whenever she was heading out to Wal-Mart or the grocery store, because she not only enjoyed showing off her ride, but she also enjoyed Bree’s company.

After Christmas break, Alyson’s relationship with Bree had changed. Alyson’s popularity seemed to climb drastically once her first articles began to show in the school newspaper. Suddenly everyone wanted to be her friend, and she wasn’t quite sure what to do with it.

“They just want to be your friend so they can get their story told,” Bree told her, sounding a little jealous.

Alyson raised her eyebrow at Bree and asked, “Do you want your story told?”

Bree snorted at the idea and said, “What kinda story would that be? A tragedy?”

“A drama. No, a tragic, fictional drama.”

“Agreed. So how about we don’t tell that story and I’ll just be your friend, huh? After all, you had the equipment all along to make yourself popular. You just needed the right…advertisement.”

“Enter, Bree,” Alyson guessed.

“Ta-da!” She said humbly, accepting the acknowledgment. Now she was looking at Alyson, her eyes flush with excitement and pride.

“You look great. How do I look?” she asked breathlessly, looking to Alyson like she was drunk with the idea of getting drunk.

“You look…gold,” she said awkwardly, surveying her roommates shimmery gold dress and pumps.

“Gold? That’s your idea of a compliment?” she reproved, making Alyson feel like the pupil once again.

“Were you looking for a compliment?”  Alyson asked with a bit of mock innocence.

Bree huffed and shook her head in exasperation, pushing Alyson ahead of her through the door. Her head immediately began bobbing with the music, and she removed her evening jacket to make sure everyone got a good look at her.

“Dang, girl,” one guy said, while another guy whistled at Bree. She smiled and tried to act like she didn’t notice their reactions.

While they were still in the front entrance she narrowed her eyes at Alyson. 

“Do I need to keep an eye on you in here?” she asked.

Alyson shook her head. “You insisted that I must experience at least one frat party. It doesn’t mean I have to drink or get into trouble. I’ll be careful.”

“I wasn’t asking if you would be careful! That’s exactly what I was afraid of,” Bree huffed again. “I can see I’m going to have to do some introducing.”

When they entered the dance floor, Alyson was surprised. She had no idea that Bree knew so many college guys.

“I don’t know them all,” she insisted after introducing Alyson to her boyfriend Kevin and some of his buddies. Then she teased, “But I know most of the cute ones.” Alyson suspected she was enjoying the feeling of being so knowledgeable in comparison with her freshman roommate. She could see it in the way Bree looked at her when Alyson was clueless about something. Alyson blushed when she walked past a couple that were openly making out and looked away in discomfort. Bree rolled her eyes and laughed.

“What did you think Frat parties were all about?” Bree teased her, holding Kevin’s hand lightly and giving him a peck on the cheek. He grinned over at Alyson, and Alyson felt slightly pleased that he was acknowledging her now that she was dressing differently. Bree also seemed less embarrassed to bring her along when Kevin’s buddies wanted to hang out. It was like they held a new respect for her. Well most of them seemed to respect her, but Alyson noticed that a couple of his friends eyed her body a little disrespectfully. Bree said something else then, but Alyson could barely hear her over the music.

“Oh! Allie, you have to come over here. I know you won’t approve of the drinking, but it really is a fun game,” she said, dragging Alyson over to a game of beer pong, where opponents basically played each other into a drunken stupor. Alyson hung back in shyness, but Bree and Kevin charged ahead into the body of pumped and cheering college students. When Alyson quickly lost interest in the game, she decided she might as well just leave the party and wait outside.

“God, what am I doing here?” She asked herself as she breathed out the cold air on the porch. This was a dumb idea.

“Party too hot for you?” asked a deep voice from behind her. Alyson jumped with a start and the breathed a sigh of relief.

“Oh, it’s you Jake.”

He was looking at her funny, and Alyson suddenly felt uncomfortable. “Have you been drinking?” she asked her editor.

“Naw, just a couple. Nothing to get me wasted,” he insisted with a bit of a slurp. Even as he drew closer, he was staggering slightly, and Alyson felt like recoiling from the smell of his breath.

Alyson turned away to look out into the night as though something interested her out there. She wasn’t sure how to act around drunk people. She knew, according to Bree, that some people were funny drunks and some were mean drunks. She wasn’t sure she wanted to find out what kind of drunk her editor was.

As she hugged her arms to her chest, she realized she needed to do something. She needed to draw a line for herself. How far was too far? Had she crossed her own line? It wasn’t about what people expected anymore. Alyson knew people expected her to get silly drunk tonight and go home with some guy who wouldn’t remember her name in the morning. People expected her to cheat if she didn’t get good grades and it was considered normal for her to pursue a guy aggressively if she liked him. This was all typical for a 19 year old college-girl. But somehow, Alyson didn’t want to be the normal, average girl. She wanted to be above the expected. She wanted to stick out in a good way and not let people’s perspectives, conservative or liberal, govern her decisions. She knew she didn’t want to end up like her parents, but she also didn’t want to be exactly like Bree. She wanted a balance between the two. Was that possible?

Her phone buzzed in her small carry-on purse, and Alyson wasn’t all that surprised to read a text that said that Bree didn’t need a ride home because she was going to stay with Kevin for the night.

“Is that your boyfriend?” Jake asked her, clumsily trying to read the text on Alyson’s phone.

“No,” she huffed, annoyed by the kind of drunk Jake was. “It was my roommate – she’s apparently ditching me for the night.”

“Ditching you? Who would ditch you? You’re like, the awesome Christian girl. Everyone knows you,” Jake said convincingly.

Alyson paused. “What do you mean everyone knows me?” she asked.

“Why everyone knows you. All the guys talk about you. You’re like the virgin girl on campus,” he laughed.

Alyson’s face grew hot. “All right, Jake. You’ve had enough to drink tonight. I think I’m going to go home,” she said, feeling hurt by his impression of her.

“Aw, don’t be like that. You can’t blame a guy for being curious. I mean,” he burped, “you’ve been hiding under those skirts for so long. Little miss untouchable. And then, here you are. In a little black dress, and I just want to dance with you,” he said, reaching for her.

“No, thanks,” she said, twisting from his grasp and backing into the house. The assault of music found her inside and she winced when Jake stumbled in after her.

“Come on, Allie. Just one dance,” he said.

“Jake, you don’t know what you’re doing. You’re going to regret what you’re saying in the morning,” she said crisply, facing up at him, her lips twitching angrily.

“Don’t be silly, I won’t remember what I’ve done in the morning. And you won’t either,” he encouraged.

Suddenly, amid the din of music and the pulsating, gyrating bodies around her, Alyson noticed something eerie. A boy was staring at her from the stairs. Normally she would have felt pleased by a boy’s attention, but the look in his eyes made her shiver instead. His eyes were angry, piercing her black dress and undressing her with his eyes. She thought she even saw him take a picture of her. Alyson instinctively covered herself with her arms and moved a little closer to Jake.

“Jake,” she prodded him, “Is that Max on the stairs over there?”

Jake narrowed his eyes and said, “What’s emo boy doing here? He’s not a Theta Delta Nu.” He turned as if to go reprimand him, but when Max saw him approaching he immediately disappeared. Jake grinned, turning around towards Alyson and said confidently, “That took care of him.”

Alyson was still looking at the stairs anxiously when Jake grabbed her waist and pulled her to his chest.

“Dance with me,” he whispered harshly in her ear, and Alyson felt like vomiting from the smell of his breath once again.

“Jake!” she cried, “Let me go!”

Jake ignored her cries and crushed his mouth against her lips, a tongue finding entrance in an unwelcome place. His beer-soaked breath exhaled into Alyson’s mouth and she felt like gagging. Alyson struggled to get an arm free from his strong hold and finally succeeded, only to immediately slap him. To Alyson’s horror, while Jake looked slightly stunned, he didn’t reléase his hold and in fact he only looked amused.

“I love how you just slapped me like that was supposed to hurt,” he quipped, not releasing his hold on her. Alyson would have welcomed any interference at that point from anyone who was willing to rescue her from this unweclome make-out session.

As if on cue, Lyla walked up to them and when Jake saw her narrow, angry eyes, he instantly released Alyson.

“Lyla, babe, I was just going to get us drinks,” he insisted. But a little smile was on his lips and he looked down and winked at Alyson.

Alyson expected Lyla to be angry with Jake, since apparently they were together, but instead she turned on Alyson, her eyes flashing and her teeth peeking out menacingly.

“Touch my boyfriend again, you little whore,” she spit out, “and I will personally cut off your hands.” Alyson sucked in a breath and knew instantly what kind of drunk Lyla was.

“You don’t need to worry about that,” she responded angrily, “I was just leaving.”

As she weeded her way through the crowd, a couple guys from the frat blocked her path.

“Hey, hey, hey, the night’s still young. ‘Sonly 11:00 baby. Where do you think you’re going?” One said, his words slurring.

“Let’s get you something to drink,” the other one said, slinging his arm around her shoulders and ushering her toward the kitchen. It took Alyson a good five minutes to shake them and convince them she wasn’t interested in drinking and that she really just wanted to go home.

“Whatever, we don’t need you to have fun,” one of the guys said and he let his beer slop onto the front of Alyson’s dress.

She headed to her car angrily, suddenly feeling ridiculous in her short black dress and stinking of someone else’s alcohol. She plucked her red earrings out of her ears as she walked, realizing afresh that doing something just for the sake of doing it was not always rewarding. There was no profit in the party she had just attended, she admitted to herself, but she’d made plans and gone anyways. A verse she’d read that morning came back to her, and she brushed it away quickly, knowing she’d taken matters into her own hands tonight. The verse read, “I know the plans which I have for you; plans to prosper you and not to harm you; plans to give you hope and a future.” Jeremiah something or other. Not important. God could put those plans on hold. Alyson was comforted to know God had good plans for her, but really, she just needed a little more time to figure things out on her own before she let God do all her planning for her.

Alyson was on the road by then, and was fumbling with the radio knob. It was 11:50 p.m. on November 6th. She couldn’t have possibly known what was coming, because at that moment she had her whole life ahead of her. She was sure that tomorrow her biggest struggles were going to be with unwanted acne, an insult from Lyla at the newspaper, or a B- on a paper.  Thinking about the issues that undoubtedly lay ahead was giving her a headache, and she watched the signs pass by her aimlessly, trying not to think about the pressures of the next day.

Suddenly she heard a scream, and it took her a few seconds to realize it was her own scream she was hearing. She jammed the brake to the floor and held her breath in terror as she felt her car speeding too fast, too fast to stop. She was trembling with relief when she realized her car had stopped in time, but she could not stop staring out her windshield in horror. What was that? It had to be what it looked like. Her two hands instinctively went to her chest and begin pressing her own heart back to life.

There was a body in front of her car. She was almost sure of it. But what was she supposed to do? Should she approach the body and see if she could administer CPR?  She thought she might remember it from that one emergency help class she’d had in the eleventh grade. Was it 30 compressions to 2 breaths? Or 15 compressions to 2 breaths? Or hadn’t they changed it now? Wasn’t it 5 sets of 30 compressions and then 2 breaths? She couldn’t remember for sure. She realized her hands were fumbling for her phone on the seat beside her, and she opened the car door as she flipped open the phone. She decided to check to make sure it was a body before she called 9-1-1. She threw the door open nervously, and left it open, the headlights flooding the still form before her.

“Hello? Hello! Are you okay?” She shouted as she ran toward the man in the road. He was face down, but although she saw no signs of wounds, she also thought she Heard him groan.

“Oh, God, oh God,” she kept saying over and over and found herself backing up slowly. Putting her phone to her ear, she began walking up the road past the vehicle. The gas station couldn’t be more than a mile down the road, could it? She picked up her pace, her tired vision suddenly sharp with wild adrenaline.

Why wasn’t it dialing?  She cursed, realizing she hadn’t even dialed, and with shaky fingers dialed 9—1--.

But something stopped her; it was the sound of an engine revving. Alyson turned around, and her frantic eyes suddenly filled with disbelieving anger.

“Hey! Hey, what are you doing in my car? Get out of there!” Two guys had jumped in her car and slammed the doors shut.

They’re going to run over the body, she realized with horror. They’re going to run over the body and there’s nothing I can do to stop them. She didn’t know whether she should run toward them or run away, so she stood frozen in place, instinctively covering her eyes as the engine revved. 3 seconds later, she realized she had heard no slam of tires against flesh, no sickening thud or tearing clothes. She peeled one hand away from her eye and sucked in a fast breath. The two guys were still revving the car, but the man in the road was starting to get up.

Backing up slowly, she flipped her phone back open and dialed 9—1—1. But she never got to send the call. She doesn’t remember his face, but what she does remember is that she backed into someone who was very much alive.

What happened next, she swears she does not remember.

When the Enemy is Your Friend - Chapter Three


Chapter 3 – Back Home


While all of Alyson’s classmates were buzzing with excitement over Christmas vacation, Alyson was depressed at the thought of going home. She packed her suitcase carefully, taking only her most conservative skirts and shirts. When she put her pair of “sensible” black shoes that had served her faithfully for most of high school into the suitcase, she grimaced.  What had her feet ever done to her to deserve those?

When her parents came to pick her up, the ride home was rather silent, except for a few polite questions from her mother. Alyson noticed she was sporting a new hair-dye job and was almost positive it was not a purchase her father had approved. She was somewhat relieved when her parents were content to talk about the progress they had made on fixing the stairs leading up to their trailer home and how exciting the church Christmas program was going to be this year.

“Oh, your friend Abigail from church says hi! She asked about you all the time you were gone,” Alyson’s mother said cheerfully, tossing her new dark brown hair.

Alyson had forgotten about Abigail and was cheered up considerably at the thought of seeing her high school chum again. Snow was covering her driveway and the minute the car pulled into it, a little boy and girl came careening out of the trailer home, door slamming shut behind him.

“Allie!” Ben screamed, running to hug her and take one of her bags from her.

“Aunt Alyson,” cried Faith wish an irresistible laugh.

“Can I help you?” Ben asked excitedly. “Can I take this bag in?”

“There’ll be plenty more of those when you’re done with that one,” his father said, laughing at Ben’s enthusiasm.

“Just wait till you see the tree,” Ben said, grabbing Alyson’s hand boyishly. “It’s huge!!”

Alyson agreed when she climbed the stairs and saw the 5-foot evergreen sitting in corner by the entrance. It’s tip almost reached the top of the window.

“Do you like the new stairs?” her mother asked anxiously as she followed Alyson into the home.

“Yeah, I do. Great job, Dad,” Alyson said, feeling disoriented to be back home. Nothing had changed. Well, not really. Ben seemed a little taller, but that was it.

“You’re probably tired,” her mom said, “Go wash your hands and we’ll eat supper. Oh, I’m so glad to see you home safe and sound where I can keep a good eye on you! I think I’ll sleep tonight!”

Supper that night was fancier than usual. The potatoes were peeled and Alyson’s mom had tried a new recipe with corn. Her father had grilled some chicken on their neighbor’s grill and smothered it in barbeque sauce. It wasn’t a feast, but Alyson was touched because she knew her family had gone to extra lengths to welcome her back home. She felt happier than she had before she went to college. Now she had the best of both worlds. She felt fairly confident when she was at college and felt loved when she went home. What could go wrong?

Alyson cherished that night and thought back on it often during Christmas break as her time at home bothered her more and more. She didn’t know why, but she was growing increasingly discontent with being home. As eager as she had been to be done with school, she was eager to be out of the house again. There was nothing big that made her want to leave home; just little things.

She was uncomfortable with how her parents seemed obviously happy that she hadn’t changed at all. And when she wanted companionship to discuss her frustrations, Alyson now found her high school friend Abigail to be annoying. Abigail was 17 and too meek to try to change or go away to college.      She walked around with a defeatist attitude, her shoulders constantly slumped, and her clothes unkempt and dirty-looking. Abigail hinted that she wanted to change, but she insisted it probably wasn’t what God wanted. How did she know what God wanted? She was exactly what Alyson’s parents would want her to be, and that made Alyson dislike her even more.

Ben clung to Alyson over the break, and as much as Alyson loved her little brother, she wanted a little space from him to breathe. There was so much she couldn’t tell him. She wished she could make his future college-experience better than hers, but she wisely knew he would not care to hear what was coming. He’d have to just discover life for himself, she guessed.

Another thing that bothered her was that it was amazing how poor Alyson’s family seemed to her now. Before they seemed to be just average, but after living with Becky who threw away shirts when the buttons popped off, Alyson knew her family was very poor.

“Have you grown out of this skirt? I could hem it and give it to Julia’s girl. She’d fit into it by now. Her oldest girl might have some clothes for you in return,” her mother said, going through Alyson’s closet one afternoon. Alyson didn’t want Julia’s oldest sister’s cast-off clothes, but she simply said, “Okay.”

Despite the bad times at home, there were some good memories that she would look back on later. She loved the nights her family played Monopoly when Ben’s lame attempts at cheating made her laugh so hard she could barely stop. And church wasn’t that bad. Little old Mrs. Westbrenner at church would press a $20 in her hands from time to time and take the time to ask her how college was really going. She was a woman that Alyson respected deeply, mainly because Alyson believed she had finally found a Christian who lived out what she believed. Or it could have been the $20 cash that made her like her—she wasn’t sure.

Still, when the spring semester was finally ready to begin, Alyson could not say goodbye to her parents fast enough.

“Wait, don’t you want us to come in with you and help you get settled?” her mother asked.

“No, thanks, Mom,” Alyson said, feeling a small shoot of terror snake down her spine at the thought of bringing her mother into her college dorm. She pictured her mother trying to pull off that French coat on top of her conservative drab dress, and the thought was too embarrassing for words. She didn’t want to put her mother through the humiliation, she thought selflessly.

“Have a great trip!” Alyson said encouragingly, thumping the hood of the car in goodbye.

When her parents’ economy car finally pulled out of the parking lot at U of W, Alyson breathed a great sigh of relief. Now her life could begin again.

Little did she know that her life was going to change completely in just 3 short weeks.

Before and After Love

I look at pictures of myself when I was single and I remember. I remember what it was like to feel like making the most of every night on the town because it might be the opportunity where I would meet him. And if I didn't meet him, oh well, I was making a ton of friends who were in the same boat. I also remember being happy "just as I was" and not "needing" a man. Still, a huge part of me was always searching. I felt like I was missing something...or someone. And yet, there was something beautiful in that hopefulness, that peace in trusting God's plan, that wild adventure because I had nothing to lose. Being single was just what I needed.

It was a beautiful phase. But I am so thankful it is a phase that is now in my past.

I can't believe I've already been dating Andrew for six months. He has made that time fly. We have become one of the sappiest couple clichés that I always swore I would never become. It's great.

And I can't help but see a different person when I look at pictures of the before and after "me": before and after I started dating Andrew.
Before

 
                                                                          After

Single, I was free to love whomever, but dating, I can love and be loved.
Single, I could have alone time whenever I pleased, but dating, I never have to feel like I'm alone.
Single, I was everywhere for everyone, but dating, I am content to be everything to one.

He adds a new depth to my life. A new perspective. A sense of belonging and wholeness.
Whole is the perfect word for it. With him, I feel whole. He mentioned the same thing about me tonight and it got me thinking about how different I am since he has come into my life. It's more like he shook my life upside down. And then flooded it. And let it dry up. And then burned it all.

My life, my person has changed so much because of his life, his person. I marvel at how crazy perfect man is for woman, how natural the bodies fit together, how his needs complement hers, how attraction works between the sexes, and how sacrifice is almost nothing when you love someone.

So for 22 years I lived not quite whole. I had a great life. I did a lot. But it feels like I was just born six months ago and I have just begun experiencing life. In giving up a little of myself, I gained my other half. I went from living in part to gaining a whole. In sacrificing my desires, I gained his desires. And the more I've given up myself for God's version of love (1 Cor. 13), the more I've learned and received selfless love.

Selfless love. That really has been my theme for the year. And God really has been teaching me, beyond what I ever imagined when I asked him to help me learn it back in January. It's amazing how he answered my prayer before I even knew to ask it. Amazing how God loved me forever before I knew what forever love was.

After our last disagreement, I truly don't feel any barriers anymore. I could spend forever with one man.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

And then he says I'm sorry....

There I was - the emotional ice queen. So stressed from the first week back at classes and unable to fully process my need for space from him. So boiled up from months of holding small things in.

And then he says I'm sorry like no other guy in the world knows how. And it was actually super sexy to see him owning up to stuff  and calling his own actions stupid. It's not like I'm always right - I know that; he knows that. But there is something downright sexy about a guy looking at you and saying, "I know what you're trying to say. And I thought about it. And you're right. There are some thoughtless things I'm going to try to change because I see your perspective and I want to prove to you that you are the only woman that I want."

Bam. Everything I wanted to hear - and then some. And I'm not going to be an old bitter woman, clawing at the injustices of the past. I'm going to take him at his word and forgive him and move on. Because that's what you do in a relationship. You forgive. And that's no charity act on my part. There are plenty of times when he has had to forgive my thoughtlessness and he often does it without a thought. So I know it's a two-way street. And sides, God forgave me a whole crapload of horribleness, so it's only right.

The long conversations, 6-month anniversary card/book, beautiful jewelry and nice dinner with a fudgy dessert were also a nice touch. But I didn't expect them. What I needed to hear was that he gets it, he's going to act like he wants only me, and that he loves me for me.

Then as we ate cheesy-bacon fries tonight, he said, "We can get fat together, babe." And I felt pretty sure that we were going to make it.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Neverland

I'm pretty hard on my boyfriend for wanting to stay in college Neverland, where he never has to grow up. But I was thinking about it tonight, and I guess I have my Neverland moments, too. There's something about macaroni and cheese and a good cartoon that reminds me of the days I would stay home "sick" with my mom.  There's something soothing about listening to old Adventures in Odyssey episodes and remembering the many trips we made as a family while listening to them. I used to listen to those over and over - it was an escape for me. I still love escaping to a good cup of coffee - it takes me back to the times I longed to drink coffee with my sisters and mom when I was too young for coffee.

I'm still not ready to talk to him, though. I don't know - I'm tired of apologizing for things that bother me. I'm tired of trying to come back from feeling like such a monster. I'm stressed and I just seek escape from thinking right now. I wish I could stay in Neverland.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

On Break

Sometimes you need a break. In my case, I need a break from hearing the following things for the last eight months.

"I wonder if she's going to let me hug her." Why do you care? It doesn't mean my sister likes you any less if she shakes your hand. Why does that matter to you?

"I'm sure she wouldn't even give me her number." Why do you care? I gave you my number.


"What's wrong? I just like a lot of pictures of other girls on Facebook and Instagram. Is that a problem?" Yes. It's a problem. It makes me feel like crap.

"Maybe I could go with you to meet the girl you're giving your book to." Do you not realize how weird that is for me?

"I friended your friend on Facebook that I met by walking behind you while you were Skyping her." Thank goodness she wasn't wierded out by that. I would have been!

"You don't mind if I bring along this old friend of mine who Matt likes but really likes me, do you?" You know why they like you more than Matt? Because you act so stupid around Matt they can't possibly take you seriously. Matt's too serious. They're not interested in either of you, but it's easier to hang out with you because they know it's going nowhere. It's not because you're a better guy than Matt or better looking.

"Hey, come meet these two high school girls who are coming to campus to check out the school. I knew one of their sisters. We're hanging out all afternoon, wanna join? It was weird, they asked me if you were okay with it. You don't mind, do you?" I don't want to mind. I don't even want to know. But when a girl asks you if your girlfriend is okay with something, guess what she's really trying to say? She's saying, "Hey, you're dating. Shouldn't you not want to hang out with other girls? Wouldn't this make your girlfriend feel bad? I'm a normal girl who doesn't want  to feel like she's intruding on a guy's relationship and you are crossing a normal relationship line."

"I text girls regularly to see how they're doing and to keep up our friendship. I can't help it that I'm their shoulder to cry on. It doesn't mean anything. But for you....I'll stop." Don't do it for me. How about doing it for yourself - because you want to be in a relationship with one woman.

"I hear what you're saying, but my mom talked with her platonic guy-friends for hours on the phone even after she was married. It would be no big deal for me to do that, too." No big deal for who? Because I love how you're already okay with having hours in the day to talk to your girlfriends after you marry me. It's not like I'm not a big talker. Really gets me excited about committing forever to you.
 
I need a break from not being enough.

I need a break from letting a man make me feel insecure and making me feel like I'm an overly jealous girlfriend for having a problem with him talking like he just wants other women to like him/befriend him/want him all the time. It's not my job to make him feel less insecure about how women view him. In the meantime, he makes me feel insecure - am I not enough woman?

I need a break from loving the responsible, caring guy off-campus who turns into an excited freshman who is just the funny guy on campus who wants everyone's attention. It's like being in a relationship with someone who is bi-polar. It's time to grow up everywhere - not just when you're out of your comfort zone and meeting my family. It's time to leave that school you've clung to for years behind, spread your wings, and get a new, responsible identity. Be a man.

I need a break from cringing every time I introduce him to another girl, because I realize he would probably want to get to know her or wish she would be willing to get to know him. I should fully expect him to friend her and message her after meeting her once. The worst part is? If she's a normal girl, she is wierded out by guys like this or she thinks he's coming on to her and she feels bad for me.

It's like I've just tried to ignore these things. Over. and Over. and Over. It's actually something I picked up on when he first asked me to date him and it's why I said no to dating him. And suddenly it's a pattern that I can't look beyond because he hasn't changed. He's tried to limit what he does with girls. But he still wants other women. And it's pretty obvious to me now.

Okay. Single guy? This pattern is okay. Dating-almost-engaged guy? This pattern is so not okay. It's like he wants me on his arm and he wants a whole bunch of other girls on his arm, too. I want a break from it.

Weirdly enough, I didn't miss him today. Good thing? Bad thing? More permanent thing? I don't know.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Single habits die hard

Alyssa watches him lead the way into the school building and she loves him. She wishes she was holding his hand as they walk through those old familiar school halls. They walk together, on the verge of marriage, on the verge of forever. She feels safe there. And then he asks her, "So, that girl you met selling your book - did she look nice?"

Huh? You're dating me. Why would you care how a random girl looks?

He back tracks a little. "I mean, does she look like a nice person? After all, I noticed her name on my class roster and I'm going to be in lab with her. Who knows, I could be lab partners with her."

Again, huh? Why have you already memorized her name from a class roster and you are looking forward to meeting her? Why have you already thought through the scenario that you could be lab partners and you want her to be friendly?

Alyssa struggles with her boyfriend sometimes. She can't control her boyfriend - doesn't want to. She loves who he is - all on his own. He's agreed not to have close girlfriends in addition to her, since it bothers her. And she so appreciated that he was willing to do that. But - she can't make him want to be a one-woman kind of guy. Sure, he wants Alyssa. He wants her in pictures with him. He wants sex. He wants to have her. But he also pays really close attention to other women. He makes a point to not only catch their name, but to try to get their phone number, to follow up with texting, and to hope they will be his friend. With Alyssa's girlfriends he has Facebooked them just to get to know them, with good intentions. It's a habit he picked up when he was single for 22 years. And somehow he still doesn't get it.

Girls don't have platonic life-long guy friends. Every guy Alyssa tried to be "friends" with throughout the years has over-exaggerated her fondness for him as attraction. Each guy always thought that she liked hanging out with him because he was attractive. But in fact, she just liked the attention. It was all about her, not about him being a great friend. She only kept guy friends around so that she could feel better about the fact that she wasn't dating. She wanted male attention - wanted to feel wanted. She used these "platonic" guy friends to make herself feel better about being single. She only made guy friends to see where it went - maybe they would date down the road, or maybe she would date his friends. For Alyssa, guy friends always equaled a desire to date.

And then she started dating Mark (who was initially a "platonic" guy friend). And she no longer had a need for guy friends to keep "potential future relationships" around. The only guy friends she has now are ones she has a purpose for talking to. She isn't rude - she has fun with them in groups. But she doesn't single them out. She doesn't try to hang on to those guys who naturally fall out of her life. She doesn't text them regularly. In fact she never texts them - she only responds to texts. She doesn't seek them out. Her relationships with guys have a purpose.

But Alyssa's boyfriend thinks that he can have platonic girl friends. He wants them to like him. He wants to get to know them. He says he's just being nice. But what is the purpose behind trying to get to know someone of the opposite sex? Either you're sharing the gospel or you're looking to fill an intimacy or an ego boost that you're not getting at home.

So this makes Alyssa take a step back and think. Maybe she hasn't done enough to make him feel good about himself. Maybe she hasn't physically given enough of herself to keep him from needing other women's approval.

And she feels bad. He puts so much time and energy into her. He often says he loves her with all his heart. He wants to marry her.

But why does he want girl friends?? Wake up!! They don't view you as a platonic guy friend! They view you as someone who is sexually interested in them! They view you as someone who makes them feel better and more attractive! Call me crazy, but this is how girl's think.

And while he is sincerely believing he means nothing wrong or sexual by forming these bonds, he doesn't get how women think.

And they look at Alyssa and they pity her. Doesn't she know that he's into so many other girls? Doesn't she know how he is with women? How he seeks after them and wants their approval and pays special attention to them and is their shoulder if they ever need it and has texted them about nothing?

Guess old habits die hard. And as Alyssa sits there, pondering whether she wants a future of feeling like the nagging, jealous wife, she wonders if those habits will ever die.

Virgin Diaries


A lot happens on couches. Movie night. Good book. Morning coffee. Making out. Making out. Making out.

Pull up a couch if you want to read about it.