The trouble with having a soulmate at sixteen years old is that it’s trouble to keep one. It’s trouble to sit there with someone and stay there, because no matter how right it feels you can’t help but wonder if something else would feel different. Not better, but different. And you’ve always been one to try new things.
I wondered what a woman would taste like. Well, I already knew what a woman might taste like but I wondered what it would taste like to enjoy a woman the way I enjoyed him. That is, I wanted to know how it would feel to taste a girl I really liked. Because, of course, there were many girls I had really liked, just none I was brave enough to taste. And there were a couple girls I tasted but I wasn’t brave enough to really like.
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But I maybe loved him and he maybe loved me and we were sixteen so all was pretty much forgiven. I went on to get very good at that, no thanks to him at all.
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The blond didn’t love me either, because he didn’t really know me. He saw me sort of like a forest nymph, a fairy, or a pornstar. Basically, something that is not real. I was good at sucking his dick and there were stars in his eyes when I finished. One time, he came in my mouth without telling me and I didn’t like that. We were in the forest and something smelled vaguely like shit and I couldn’t tell if it was the forest or him.
Now, the tragedy in that situation lay not in the shit smell, but in the impending doom of our relationship which was about to go up in flames. I was a learning experience for him, a reflection of the person he would’ve liked to become, but certainly not a person of my own. Just a thought provoking fleshlight, really.
Even in the thralls of this blond, I still thought about the boy. The boy that told me I wasn’t very good at sucking dick, but who loved me, I suppose. My soulmate, soul tie, soul prison.
Another trouble with meeting a soulmate at fourteen years old (yes, we met at fourteen years old) is that you never really get the opportunity to figure out who you are without them. Because yes, I spent fourteen long years without him. But I am most definitely not the girl I was at fourteen years old. And now, at nineteen, where am I supposed to be? Surely not defining myself with an “other half”. There should be no other half. There should be one whole.
But, then, what’s the other option? Be without him? Be without a soul that has been tied to yours for, it seems, centuries? Lose the self that you are in favor of a mysterious self that you could potentially become?
They say opposites attract, and opposites definitely did. A vegetarian and a vigorous meat eater. A girl who loves the whole world and a boy who could care less if the world was burning as long as his family is safe. University and trade school. A girl with a moral compass and a boy who wouldn’t have one if she wasn’t with him.
It’s interesting, really, because the fear of leaving a soulmate that you are so resolutely tied to includes more than just what would happen to you if you left. What would happen to him? The desire to care for his soul like you care for your own. Because your souls are holding hands.
But why would you be scared of leaving someone unless you want to? Why would you feel guilt if you’re not planning to? If, deep down, you aren’t longing for some semblance of freedom you think only loneliness can give you?
Sometimes, loving someone else also means losing someone that you could’ve been without them. And then, standing alone in a field of the seasons, solely you must make the choice of where to walk. Winter, Summer, Spring and Fall surround you and the choice is weighing on you like bricks because you have to walk towards one and you will never walk back.
This conundrum reminds me of when I was young and people would ask What’s Your Favorite Season. And they were referring to nature, not TV. And I had no idea what to say. Generally, it was whatever season I wasn’t in at the time, but in the grand scheme of things it was a difficult question. Summer, with its pool parties and lake days and relentless heat and sunburns? Fall, with its fresh smelling rain and crunchy leaves and responsibility and chill? Winter with its beautiful holidays and snowball fights and shattering chill and pale cracking skin? Or Spring, with its aromatic roses and fresh berries and perfect weather and sneezing and puffy eyes?
I have a vivid memory of being in elementary/middle school and sitting in my classroom. I could hear the rain outside and I felt something stir inside of me, an excitement and joy that came from fallen rain. Then, I grew up, and rain was something that got in my shoes on the way to class.
So, you’re back in that field and you’re wondering which version of you is the one choosing where to walk. The version that feels a thrill when it rains or the version that slipped and fell on her ass in a puddle and then had to go the whole day like that? Or the version with seasonal depression turned year round? And the worst part is that whatever version of you is making the choice, she’s not making it for herself. She’s making it for a version of herself that doesn’t exist yet, that might as well be a stranger.
But she made the choice anyway, whichever version it was.
And I did a long speech that went something like this:
I don’t regret loving you, I’m probably going to love you in some way forever. The time we spent together was worth it. I don’t think we have to be strangers for the rest of our lives.
And he said almost exactly this:
It’s just, you know. It’s gonna really suck not calling you goodnight anymore.
. - . .
- - -
. . . -
.
Then, I started crying and he said why are you crying I didn’t even say anything.
And I told him he said a lot. And then I told him I could probably give a literary analysis of why it hit so hard but that would be stupid. But he told me to do it so I explained in words sort of like this:
I told you something big. I talked about our relationship as a concept and our future as a concept. Sad, sure, but not very concrete. You told me something small, something mundane. There’s a writing tactic to use something small to describe something very big. It’s daily and tangible so it hits very hard.
And he said something like
I love that you’re nerdy about this stuff.
Which sucked to hear. Because I loved him and he loved me and this was about to be our very last phone call for a very long time. And we facetimed and for some reason, for the first time ever, I let him stay on facetime with me while I peed. It was a strange moment of finalized vulnerability and trust. I love you, but I am leaving.
Was that the right move? Who's really to say.
Love,
Secret