Category Archives: love

The first time I fell in love

Falling in love for the first time at the age of 27 after years of proclaiming every relationship “the real thing” makes you a lot like the little boy who cried wolf. Remember him? Kept insisting there was a wolf until nobody listened, then freaked out when a real wolf rocked up. In my version of the story, the wolf eats the boy, although I’m sure the real ending was something less grisly. Love, you see, is the wolf curled up at the end of your bed in the early hours of the morning: you jerk awake from a nightmare or because you’ve heard a strange noise, and there’s a wolf, just lying atop your duvet. It opens its eyes – yellow, if you like, or maybe icy blue, something that’ll glint a little in the moonlight – and there’s a long moment where the two of you just stare at each other. You know how this ends. You’re going to get eaten, no matter how hard you fight or how loudly you yell for help. And you know what? Sitting there, your heart pounding and your hands shaking and the wolf slowly unfurling its long dangerous body, you feel a little thrill – because it’s a beautiful animal, and who doesn’t, secretly, want their death to be beautiful?

I was the girl who cried wolf for the longest time, declaring every relationship, dalliance and flirtation something special. My friends were patient, and through the fog of desire I couldn’t see them rolling their eyes.

But then came 27, and then came S. It’s a long story (aren’t they always?), but I’m cutting it short: I fell in love. For real. The wolf had finally arrived, and she was more beautiful than I could express to you here. She was also, in no particular order, only in the country for ten weeks and in a serious, committed relationship. Funny how those details stop mattering when the wolf’s at your door. Funny how I let her in anyway. This isn’t a story about cheating, though. We didn’t. We wanted each other, and we said so, and our connection was so breathtakingly intense that I sometimes caught myself trembling with awe.

Then she was gone. That’s a long story, too, but more editing: I begged her to come back, to love me back, to give “us” a chance. She couldn’t, and I loved her anyway and I hated her, too. A year passed. She came back. But not to me, just to visit. We were both involved with other people – her serious, committed relationship was working really well and I was in a new relationship. Well, hey, I wasn’t going to wait around forever and someone amazing walked into my life. She didn’t look much like a wolf, but I loved her fiercely. It was different, you know? I guess once you’ve fallen in love for real the first time, the next time is a little easier. There was a corner of my heart kept on ice, but most of that pesky muscle was willing and able to move on.

Someone told me once that you never forget your first. That’s true. I remember my first lover, and I’m lucky – I smile when I do. I remember the first time I ever fell in love, too. It’s been four years since S walked into my life at the weirdest, stupidest, most perfect time and turned everything I’d ever believed about love and myself into a big lie. We’re still friends. She’s getting married soon – yes, same serious, committed relationship, stronger than ever nearly five years down the line. If I tell you I’m happy for her, would you believe me? I am. I’m just shattered for myself, and for the “us” that never was and never will be.

My darling, my wolf. I will always love you in a small, closely-guarded corner of my heart. And I will always hope that when I jerk awake from a terrible nightmare or hear a strange noise in the night, I will find you curled up on the end of my bed. You will open your eyes, and we will look at each other for a long, long moment – and it will be beautiful, and I will be happy to throw myself headlong into my fate.

About these ads

Leave a Comment

Filed under love, Relationships

My First Crush

Telling and listening to “coming out” stories are always fun.  Lesbian 101 tells me it’s one of the most important stories I own. Yet there is one story that beats my out-of-closet experience hands down. My first proper “straight-girl” crush. It, or rather the thought of her, still move my lips into a self-indulgent side smirk.

She was well… beautiful. I laid eyes on her dark short hair, her tiny but bigger-than-mine frame.  Her confidence and arrogance killing any SMS (short man syndrome) she was hiding. I’ll call her “Mine”, for the purpose of my fantasy and her anonymity.

“Mine” was a more senior colleague. I’m not sure where I first set eyes on her, but I remember I required a double breath to get air back into my lungs so as to continue breathing. There may have been an involuntary sigh that escaped. I was introduced, and the yearning was born…

From that moment I noticed everything about “Mine”.  Her skin, her frame, her curves.  How her lips were filled with organic lip liner and shine.  How she was strong without the testosterone feel. How her walk reminded me of figure-skating, Olympic style.

“Mine” had to figure-skate passed my office to get to hers. Each time she did, I lost all sense of reality.  As a usually talkative and high energy level individual, I was accustomed to being friendly with all colleagues, but when she entered, I turned into a fumbling fool waiting for someone to put a gun to the side of my head and relieve me of this high school crush state.  I specifically recall a day she walked into the office; the first time we were alone… she had come to ask a question.  All I could do was stand, gawk like I was seeing aliens for the first time, and feel the colour creep up my face.  In my mind, I ran, like a scared bokkie across the green veld of the Kruger trying to save itself from the hungry lioness.  In reality I stood there, big eyes staring and transfixed, mumbling an “I don’t know” because I had not really heard the question.  In her usual “I-rule-the-world-swag” she turned and left.  Mortified, I asked the earth to swallow me whole.

This one-side unrequited yearning became the reason I woke up, the reason I hated weekends when I couldn’t see her, my soul purpose, and a realisation that liking girls was about more than just me having an open mind.  I was never really able to overcome the stupidity and foolishness “Mine” had led me to.  In her presence I barely uttered a word, her energy filled the room and I was reduced to 16 again.  I could imagine white doves carrying “Ode-to-Mine” scrolls to her window sill whilst I stood below, strumming away on my instrument.

I could never really step to “Mine”.  In my eyes, she was a beautiful Egyptian queen.  All I wanted to do was wave palm tree leaves over her light bronzed clear skin, and fetch milk to bathe her in. Dark pools of brown eyes pierced me every time she turned in my direction, and I was acutely aware of African drums beating in my nether regions. My legs (fortunately) would automatically lead me in an opposite direction.  She was to be revered, idolised, but never embraced.

At the time, I was new in the conscious lesbian emotion department, my only reference was fondling with my high school crush.  “Mine’s” effect on my heart was so consuming that I swore I heard church bells ring.  Albeit this love affair only ever saw the light in my dreams, the feelings she let loose in me changed the way I saw the world.  She was and still is, straight.  I didn’t believe it then, how could the universe be so unkind? I had always hoped that via tortured passion and yearning, she would fall into my arms * blame corny movies*. “Mine” was too much for a young fresh lesbian heart.

12 years later and Facebook returns the fantasy via a “poke”. “Mine” is escorted from past, to right here.  My heart still skips a beat when I see her name pop up on my screen.  Like any tortured wish-I-was-her-lover, I wonder whether there was ever even a slight possibility. I wonder whether she ever knew she turned my life upside down. And now, when she inbox’s me on how sweet she thought I was, I wonder whether she realises that once upon a time she was the object of my unrequited affections? I wonder if she knows that through her presence I discovered a different me?

And as I “come out” to my longest standing friends.  As I try and make them understand how these feelings are the same as theirs for their husbands, “Mine” is my most favourite story to tell.  How I found awakening in her eyes, how I knew the story of me would not see me following the hetero norm. That first time you know in your gut that this story was the beginning.  My first same-sex, lovesick, heartfelt, want.  My most beautiful and silent crush.

4 Comments

Filed under love, Sexuality

The first time I told my dad I’d just had an abortion

It was last Christmas Eve. I arrived at my dad’s house in the afternoon having found out I was pregnant four days earlier, gone to a doctor, had an ultrasound and started the course for a medical abortion three days earlier and gone through the actual purging the day before. You can find that story here.

Image from pinterest.com

Now, I walked into a home just concluding lunch: my step-mum clearing up, my brother and my sister-in-law lounging in the sun, my four-year-old-nephew, shirtless, undertaking the very important task of holding nails in his pockets while my dad, equally shirtless, was up a ladder nailing some shade cloth over several beams for more coolth around the outside eating table.

I felt empty in my abdomen. I felt like I should feel different, not really sure how though. I was grateful for my snug denim shorts muffling the big old sanitary pad in my underwear which stuck to my inner thigh, made a plasticky sound and felt like it stuck out behind me like a surfboard.

I had a chat with the family, not quite feeling like the same person I was last time I saw them. Then I hopped up the ladder and helped my dad nail the shade cloth, each of us pulling the fabric taut at opposite ends. By the time we were done my nephew and his parents were fading and retreated from the afternoon sun for a nap. My step-mum was off in the kitchen. I decided that this was my moment; I didn’t want to go through Christmas with this though on my heart.

“Dad, can I talk to you. Alone?”
“Sure love, shall we go sit under the tree?”
“Ja, okay.”

We strolled across the little lawn to the white, cast-iron table and four chairs. As we were sitting down I said:

“Okay there are some rules to this conversation. 1: You can’t interrupt me, I just want you to listen. 2: You’re not allowed to shout, but you can hug me afterwards if you want.”

Grinning, my dad responded, “Okay.”

Image from pinterest.com

To which I replied “Oooh, you’re not going to like this.”

I don’t remember the moment before I said the words but I can see the moment afterwards clearly, even now.

“Four days ago, I found out I was pregnant. I’m not anymore.”

The words bore straight to his centre and his face went lax. Suddenly he looked like an old man, not my dad. His eyes seemed to collapse with concern and the want to protect, letting the tears rise. I started babbling:

“I did it the best way, I promise, it was safe and I did all the tests and I’m healthy and it’s finished now and I found out really early. I’m so sorry. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you earlier, I didn’t want to seem like a knocked up teenager wanting money or anything. I’m sorry dad, I’m so sorry…”

I don’t remember the movement but I was standing hugging him tightly, and he was saying:

“You brave, brave girl.”

1 Comment

Filed under Loss, love, Relationships