May, 1987 Lynn, Massachusetts
Shortly after I moved to the apartment on Tudor Street I decided I needed to try and meet someone outside of Lynn. I had friends in the Boston Guatemala Solidarity Committee but most of them were married or gay. I answered an ad in the Boston Phoenix Personals & started dating a woman named Hilary. She lived in Cambridge & was a manager for a special needs transportation company. Initially things went well but over time unusual issues cropped up. She was in therapy and felt like I should be too. I had briefly seen a therapist Herb Lovett in 1984 but my agency hired him as a consultant to the group home I was working at. He said it would be a conflict of interest to continue & that I had made a lot of progress. While my life often seemed crazy I didn’t feel like I needed to be in therapy and doubted I would find someone as good as Herb. After some initial pressure I agreed to see a primal therapist in Saugus. Some of her ideas annoyed me but their was a physical chemistry that tended to leave me content and willing to overlook at what I perceived as her flaws. I was drunk on intimacy I guess. After we had been dating for a couple of months she felt we should go on a vacation together. I had gone to Venezuela 3 months before & was apprehensive about paying for another trip so soon but I wanted her to be happy so I agreed and we booked a September flight to Montego Bay. The first day of our trip our luggage didn’t arrive with our plane. Hilary was a nervous wreck. I was like, “We’re in Jamaica lets buy some toothpaste & a swimsuit and relax…we’ll have our stuff tomorrow.” She couldn’t relax & while things got better after her stuff arrived she was still kind of uptight for much of the trip…except the day we went snorkeling & the trip to Negril. That one day was so much fun and energizing; it was great to see her smile and stop being so judgemental about people we met. The guys who ran the snorkeling trip were the essence of “Irie” I am sure they had fun, loved their work and loved taking people out on their boat. We had never snorkeled before and these guys were the most laid back, pleasant, excellent teachers. You couldn’t help but relax and have fun. The afternoon was magical and when we returned to the Holiday Inn that night things were pretty magical too. It left me hopeful she would finally see that we were in a beautiful place having a unique experience and that everything was alright. I heard Bob Marley singing “Three Little Birds” and if I wasn’t such a terrible singer I would have sung that “Don’t worry about a thing cuz every little thing gonna be alright” to her for the rest of our trip. I couldn’t though, my singing would scare birds.
We returned home & the following week she said I was homophobic because I didn’t take the day off from work to go to an LBGT event in Boston. I had just used 9 vacation days for the Jamaica trip and didn’t have a lot of earned time to take. I told her it was easy for her she made more money & owed less money than me. It hurt to be called “homophobic” but I felt better when I told my lesbian & gay friends from work & they said “We’ll vouch for ya Paul you’re okay in our book”. Well Hilary & I continued seeing each other she took me to meet her parents in Newton. They seemed nice although their liquor consumption made us both nervous. At first I thought they were drinking a lot because their daughter had brought home a longhaired commie from Lynn but Hilary assured me that was just how they were. A couple of weeks before Christmas she dumped me saying “We never talk about feelings…I don’t see this going anywhere.” I was initially bummed out about it but decided with a new year I’d move on with faith that things would get better.
in Lifestyle
Another one bites the dust, right Paul! 🙂
You are really a formidable warrior Paul; both in operations of the field and also in feelings and always survive!
Very kind of you to say Albert, there is a lot to the old proverb “What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger”…
Always a bummer when folks insist their way is the only way…
At the time it struck me as weird how someone who said she was all about liberation could be so tightly wound. I was of the mindset “Live the revolution” believing “joie de vivre” would project and affirm the world we were fighting for. Hilary had a tough time letting go of things to just be part of the moment. We had some good times but often there was a cloud of negativity I would strive to brighten i8
Right? She had her own curiously oppressive brand of liberation…
At the time it struck me as weird how someone who said she was all about liberation could be so tightly wound. I was of the mindset “Live the revolution” believing “joie de vivre” would project and affirm the world we were fighting for. Hilary had a tough time letting go of things to just be part of the moment. We had some good times but often there was a cloud of negativity I would strive to brighten…
It would appear, dear Hilary was a bit high strung. Not meant to be. Water off a ducks butt, keep swimming, SpLaShInG! n’ grinning…>-=^;>
She might have benefited from some chamomile tea or another calming herb…
This one post is so interesting I would think it could become a novel. I enjoyed it!
Well with sunny Montego Bay for a setting the novel could be a motion picture… I wonder if they could get Robert Pattinson to play me ?
You deserve so much better than all of that negativity in your life, Paul! I say, “Good Riddance, Hilary!”
A lot of water has passed under that bridge and now that I’m older if not wiser I can look back sometimes even laughing at some of the things I’ve been through. I meant to tag this one #datinghorrorstories but I have a few others in the vault that might work with that tag 🙂
I can definitely relate, Paul! Many Blessings, my friend! As always, I look forward to reading more! You are an amazing writer.
Thank you so much Windy. There’s two more waiting for administrative approval & more on the way…