On my
second night in Dewey Beach, I didn’t have much faith in having a good time.
The night had begun early, and things seemed bleak because our first trip to
the bar infamous for its support of Loyola students showed only people from my
high school, there for senior weeks for other schools, along with an eclectic
mix of middle-aged people there to enjoy some weird cover band. But on a second
trip to the bar, wet from the rain and confused about whether I was really
willing to let myself call it the end, I walked back into the bar and
discovered with glee just how crowded it was. It wasn’t even a question that I
would go back there, and so I let the rest of my friends go back to our house,
and I marched happily in with other friends, there and set to begin a search
for someone I only halfway knew I was looking for.
The
night before, I had been with this guy, Conor, from my sociology class. I
hadn’t really been attracted to him, but his laugh was nice, and I was pleased
with the spell he seemed to have fallen under very quickly. I took him home,
and he was very nice to my roommates. He wasn’t nearly voracious enough, like I
was used to, so I felt a bit bored by the whole occurrence. We didn’t have sex.
It wasn’t hard to let him go. But I still remembered you, a boy I had seen
looking at me the night before, and who I was intrigued enough by to search
for, if only to get you to talk to and be interested in me.
I think
I knew that I would find you, or at least, I knew that I would search until I
found someone. And lo and behold, you were talking to someone I knew, at least
by association. I was walking alone, so who cares who it was, I was determined
to get my chance at you. As soon as I saw you look at me, I knew with a weird
sense of glee that I would get, for the second night in a row, exactly what I
wanted.
Things
felt too good to be true, actually. I was at the perfect level of drunk where I
didn’t feel weird sharing aspects of my life that I know to be particularly
interesting, but also could feel actual intrigue as I heard what you had to
say. I won’t lie, your reputation preceded you, but each word you said only
brought you further into the spotlight of my mind. You spilled your beer on me,
and I was more embarrassed for all the people watching than for you, because at
that point, I wouldn’t have walked away if you had spilled a thousand beers on
me. I was hooked, at least in a way that I was determined to spend a night
finding out what chemistry we could find together. You at one point said you
were going to try something, and I knew immediately that you meant you were
going to try and kiss me. I felt the immediate rush of semi-repulsion that I
always feel when I understand the shift in a boy’s interest from my mind to my
body, but I have to say, if I could go back and have a first kiss with you
again, I would do it ten thousand times. It’s something about how glad I was to
be there with you. For some reason, you had me at hello (although you
remembered my name, and I was too afraid to guess at yours).
We did
go home together. It was really nice, you had your own room, and you put some
music on this speaker you had behind the blinds on your windowsill, and even
though it wasn’t any kind of music I’d hoped for, I found it so cute you had it
on at all. And the fact that you apologized for the existence of some pretty
weird songs. We spent an inordinate amount of time in your bed together the
next day, for people who had just met and who were in a place meant for
goodbyes. I didn’t want things to end, I felt so lucky you wanted me there, and
so afraid with my blurry contacts that an old tissue on the floor was an old
condom, and that this happiness was only meant for a night. I kissed you
goodbye, went to hang out with my friends, and promised to return later for a
party you were having at your house.
After
the positive feedback from my friends, you wouldn’t believe how afraid I was
that we wouldn’t get the chance to repeat the first night we met. All I wanted
was to sleep in your bed with you again, and when you didn’t respond when I was
at your house, and your door was locked, I waited in line for the bathroom in
front of your door, pretending I had an actual reason to be there, and waiting
for another pretty girl to come out of your room and prove every feeling I was
having about you to be wrong. You finally told me you had fallen asleep and had
missed most of the party. My heart soared. It was never a question that I
wouldn’t be going back to my house that night. I don’t even remember if we
tried to go out. I was too focused on being in your bed again. I’ve been known
to fall into things pretty fast.
I’m not
used to having someone tell me with confidence that they are happy to be with
me, or that they think I am worth knowing. At least not in my romantic
relationships. I’m also not used to being with someone whose friends approve of
me, and who pleases the people who are most important in my life. I’m used to
having to sneak around, to a boyfriend whose mom has never once said my name
out loud (that I’ve been around to hear) and to being expected to feel worth
less than those around me. Maybe I’m being dramatic, but basically, I’m used to
people putting me down. But you’ve been different. And each day I’ve been
terrified to lose that. Or, more like, I’ve been terrified to have to go
without it. And terrified of the dependency I’m starting to feel. I don’t feel
the way I did with my ex-boyfriend—scared of being single and of a future
alone. But I’m no longer so confident that my future is a place I necessarily
want to enter completely alone. I don’t know. We’re not perfect, and this isn’t
meant to last, but somehow I keep telling myself that there’s future here.
Maybe in a few years, maybe sooner, maybe later. But the point is, I’ve started
to get this overwhelming feeling that I am doing something right. And that, as
far as within my romantic relationships, is not something I have ever felt
before.
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