Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Love in all the wrong places

Last night, I went on yet another first-and-last date. This one actually scared the crap out of me, and I'm pretty lucky to be sitting here writing about it, and not recouperating from injuries on the hospital, or worse, adding to the nitrogen content of a cemetery's soil.

I'm going to abridge this as, judging by my mom's reaction to the entire story, it's not something that should be posted for public digestion. So why am I posting at all. I can't believe that I am the only person stupid enough to find myself in situations such as this, and if another girl (or guy, for that matter) can learn something from me, then this awful experience was worthwhile.

Long story short, a dinner date gets extended into a date to go see a movie, and I allow near-stranger into my car. My car. Oh well, I figure, we're going to the mall to see a movie, right? No, he wants to go to his cousin's house to watch movies that the cousin rented. I made sure the cousin and cousin's girlfriend would be there. Okay, can't be too bad, right? Only later did I remember that the murdered girl in the "Foxy Knoxy" murder had another girl present, too, and that didn't turn out too well for her.

We get to the cousin's house, and let's just say I should have turned around on my heels and left. I didn't. Why not? What the hell was I thinking?

I know exactly what I was thinking. I got stuck in between two societal norms: Be unfailingly polite, and be true to yourself. Sometimes, like last night, those two go head-to-head. Why was I so quick to sacrifice myself in the name of politeness, then?

My upbringing actually played a role in my wrong decisions. (When I say "wrong decisions", please don't let your mind go there, because that's not the case. The "wrong decisions" are all about hanging out with and spending time with people that are just absolute scum of the earth and were very, very disrespectful toward me.)

I in no way, shape, or form am blaming this on my parents or my brother. But my brother, being who he is, has sort of desensitized me to things that would normally be red flags to other people. There's a big, serious difference, however: for all the outside accoutrements that made my brother and his posse appear dangerous and menacing, there were always good souls in these people. Probably better souls than my own, as if I had a dollar left, I would keep it for myself, and my brother and the people he associates with would rush to give it to someone who needed it more than they did. I think I stuck around so long and allowed myself to be pulled into increasingly dangerous situations with this date because I was waiting for the revelation of the good, true soul that I've been taught to assume is in every human being.

As I pulled into my driveway at the end of the night, I almost started to cry. I've come too far. Too, too far. Society tells us we are nothing if we have no one to share life with. Everyone, myself included, assumes that "someone" to share life with is a romantic connection, husband, wife, etc. We put a lot of pressure on ourselves to find the perfect someone, and when that someone is the wrong someone, we feel like failures in the eyes of our friends, family, and society.

I actually did find someone last night to spend the rest of my life with. This person is smart, cute, funny as hell, entertaining, original, and full of hope and optimism for the future.

And I was right here the whole time.

3 comments:

  1. you need a code word.. a friend could call and if you say "pants" or something like that, they would find a way to come rescue you! Seems easier then climbing out of a bathroom or crying in your driveway.

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  2. :( Sorry you had that experience. I too have many I'd like to forget. Hugs to you dear and Happy Birthday

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  3. Glad you are still alive, cuz... sorry about the lame people that are out there... sounds like a pretty crappy experience.

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