The Week With Heather

I get off the airplane and wait about 15 minutes, a bit panicked, realizing just how screwed I am if for some reason she doesn’t come, but then she walks in and I recognize her immediately, even though seeing her is a completely different experience. They say a picture is worth a thousand words, but seeing someone in person must be worth a thousand pictures. She’s actually prettier than I expected, more on par with her best pictures than her less-flattering ones, whereas I was expecting the opposite – you don’t really picture a girl as attractive as Heather when you’re imagining ones that meet boys from the internet. Anyway, after she infamously goes to the bathroom upon seeing me, she comes back and I pick up my baggage and we head out and the whole thing feels more like I’m being picked up at the airport by Uncle Fred than my online girlfriend of a year, but that’s good because it means it’s more relaxed than awkward.
 
We don’t really talk that much for a relationship that’s been based 90% on talking non-stop for a year, probably because I’m too distracted wondering if she’s disappointed by my looks or personality – normally I wouldn’t really worry over it, but there’s something bothersome about someone being disappointed in you that makes it worse. I pitifully search for reassurance the whole trip, asking how she thinks things are going constantly and begging for return compliments as I truthfully tell her she’s prettier in person. She doesn’t reassure me for the most part.
 
The week passes by and we get a little more comfortable with each other, though then things seem to regress a little, and I perceive that she’s becoming more anxious and distant. We’re lying in bed and I notice that she’s starting to bite her fingernails non-stop, which she hasn’t been doing, and I ignorantly pull her arms down and command her to tell me what’s bothering her and she fights the urge to say you and tells me no, that nothing is. This continues for a few nights, as I unknowingly try to comfort her from the anxieties I gave her, while she’s empowered and humored by my stupidity. I tell her I love her and she says she loves me too, and I tell her this is the best week of my life and she lies and says hers too, and suddenly it’s the last night before I have to go.
 
We go to the airport the next day, as she sleeps by me while I run my fingers through her hair on the way there, and I can’t shake the feeling that this is the last time I’m ever going to see her. A few minutes later we’re there, standing in front of the security check-in, and she hugs me spontaneously – I think it’s the first time she’s actually initiated contact with me since I’ve been there, so it surprises me. The feeling that this is an ending and not a beginning just gets stronger for me, but I try to ignore it and tell her that I’ll talk to her online tonight and she sorta nods unconvincingly. She then meanders to the bathroom, and I’m standing there wondering if that was supposed to be my goodbye hug and assuming it was I stumble towards security and start to go through check-in. I’m finishing up when I look back and see her waving goodbye and I’m suddenly very aware that when I turn my head I’m not going to see her again, at least not for a long time, and I think about how dramatic I’m making the whole situation, like it’s a cheesy Lifetime movie. So, unaware of just how accurate my premonitions of this being the end are, and just how much my own actions have assured that they are, I take one final look, and turn my head and walk to my terminal.
 
What I didn’t realize was that that moment wasn’t the last time I would ever see her – that time had already passed. The last time I saw her was the Wednesday prior and from every moment after that everything was forever changed. I’d carelessly lost a part of her that I could never get back and that I would never see again. That I won’t see again. And, now, these vague ramblings, this, this is the end of the story of Heather and Matt.

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November 21, 2006

with every end. there comes a new beginning. a better beginning. and even though it takes a while to forget that feeling of love or whatever you felt … it passes. and the next one comes along … and it will be reciprocated and it will be so, so great.

November 21, 2006

And I know this is honest, but these vague rambling,this, is just one perspective. Let me tell you another. http://www.opendiary.com/entryview.asp?authorcode=D339222&entry=10305&mode=date

November 21, 2006

I think it is a story of Matt and Heather, rather than Heather and Matt. I’m sure she has her own story to tell.

November 21, 2006

Haha, oh gosh, sure enough, there it is. Wow, I feel like a bit of a dork. I am so fantastically awkward..

i had no idea that it was like that. wow. i was under the impression that it was pure bliss while you were there. i did not know that she had acted like that. you know how i think (i think you do, at least), and i believe this is just one of those romances that prepare you for that one big one. the way that i think is that you have a few relationships that seem perfect and then they crashand burn, but then there’s that one, after you’re all cynical and angry. it’ll be alright. i know everyone says that. you know it will, matty. you’re not stupid. this will pass. and you’ll be all the better to take something from it.

November 21, 2006

Entries like this make me wonder about how vague I am in mine own. I don’t mean that rudely at all. Just like, how much I try to share yet how much I keep to myself… or something. <3 regardless, yo.

November 21, 2006

I love the infamous bathroom story.

Jesus, Matt, this made me cry. Very candid for you. It’s kind of nice getting to see that side of you.

November 21, 2006

Aaaand that was me up there. Accidentally clicked “unsigned note”.

*hug* You know how to contact me. Take care and have a happy Thanksgiving.

Love can be so many things, come in so many shapes and forms. How she reacted towards you… does not mean she did/don’t love you. What is love, then? I think when you feel loved you feel accepted. In a lot of ways, loving someone is accepting them. I think to experience love you have to first drop your barriers and let another person honestly see you for who you are and that the other person has to do the same, at least somewhat. Two people that love each other have accepted each other, essentially unconditionally. I donÂ’t really differentiate between “romantic love” and “familial love” and all that nonsense – I think you can love anyone. It is knowing someone so well that you accept them as a whole and recognize that nothing that they ever do will make you turn away from them. ItÂ’s developing a bond with someone to the extent that they become a part of you, their hardships become yours and their successes become yours. ItÂ’s incorporating someone into your idea of self. It is knowing that that person will always be a part of who you are.