I guess it’s time for a eulogy after all.
When I cut the final ties with Aaron, I spent the next several days reassuring other people that I was fine. That yes, I was sad, ending a relationship is always sad, but that this had been coming. And that was true.
Our relationship had been dying a slow death for months. We were slipping farther and farther away from each other with every day. I took a big step when PF was here by taking down his photos and hiding or tucking away other personal belongings. That had more to do with PF than with Aaron.
But after PF left, the only thing I put back was Aaron’s photo that had always sat on my piano. I left the other snapshots and silly things hidden away. I wasn’t ready to cut things off yet, but I knew that those things needed to stay hidden. It took several weeks for me to finally take down the photo on my desk at work.
It was time. It had been coming. I’d cried my tears and I’d grieved and I’d gotten angry. It was a fit of anger and sadness that prompted me to fire off the fatal text. The one that said, “let’s just call a spade a spade and just be friends.” That entire weekend was about ripping off band aids.
After he and I had cleared the air, I took down his photo from my piano. I went through my bathroom cabinets and threw away his toothbrush and his razors and his hair products. I took his cologne and his t-shirt and the keys to the apartment we shared and packed them in a box and placed it underneath my bed. My ex-box. The one that contains a handful of mementos from relationships past.
I deleted text messages and emails. I made the break up facebook official so I wouldn’t have to keep having the same conversation over and over. I was done. And it was easier than I ever thought it would be.
I didn’t expect to hear from him again. And then I did. We’ve had a handful of conversations, via text, since the break-up. Mostly about industry related things or about mutual friends. They were non-events, those conversations. Simply things that happened.
Tonight, I had a conversation with PF. About a number of random things. And in that conversation Aaron’s name came up. And suddenly it hit me that he is gone. After PF signed off and headed to bed, I drew a hot bath. I like to cry in the bath. Tonight, I cried my goodbye tears. The ones I thought had already been cried.
Because I loved Aaron. Because a part of me always will. And I will miss him. I will miss his smile and his laugh and the way he would sing to me. I’ll miss the way he pushed me intellectually. I’ll miss sharing the New York Times over breakfast. I’ll miss the way he would never let me go to sleep upset. The way he would grab me and pull me to him when I was crying. I’ll miss the way he would get excited about things, like a little kid.
When our relationship was very new, I remember talking to one of my friends. She was saying how wonderful it was to see me so happy. She could tell that my heart was opening up again. I remember so clearly standing in her office, playing with the necklace I was wearing and saying, “All I know is that he’s either the one or he’s going to be the one that got away.”
It’s not like any big egregious thing happened. We just had too much working against us. A baby that he was trapped into having. Distance. Incompatible schedules. And true, some different priorities. But even in the end, it was clear that neither of us really wanted to let go. Even in that final conversation, transitioning from lovers to friends, we ended by saying “I love you.”
He told me once he would love me until the end of time. And maybe that will always be a little bit true. But the greater truth is that he’s the one that got away.