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Broken
Hearted Vs. Broken Lusted
This may be familiar.
There's just you, him and the slight chill
of the rain, falling softly, gently. There's
the heavy feeling of dread, knowing that
this will be the last. There's the bittersweet
pain of ending a supposed love to last a
lifetime.
Then, he walks away, in the rain, behind
the shadows of the night, and you remain
rooted from where you stand and you wonder:
how are you supposed to pick up the shattered
pieces of your heart strewn all over the
pavement.
For people in love, being brokenhearted
is a lot like being Wily Coyote, waiting
for the anvil to fall on his head or the
dynamite to blow on his butt, and Road Runner
(your partner) sweeps by, beep-beeping his
way.
When one ends a romance (whether budding
or wilting), the after effects are always
the same.
Numbness: Moving in slow motion or auto
pilot comes naturally and reaching the point
where you don't and cant care anymore
whether you stink to high heaven because
you haven't bathed in three days But for
awhile there, you take comfort in the numbness
because its safe and harmless and anything
more than safe and harmless is too much
to feel. Slowly, like trickles of sand,
the numbness wears off, only to be replaced
by anger.
Resentment: How dare
he walk away from this? From you? What utter
nerve and unmitigated gall! And then you
curse in five dialects and throw him the
one-finger salute just to let him know just
how bitchy you can be. But it gets too strenuous
and taxing to be angry all the time to everybody.
You're angry at your boss for letting you
redo the sloppy work you did three days
ago (which, to your thinking, was not sloppy
at all). You're angry with your co-workers
who are dizzy in love with their latest
amore (brokenhearted folks tend to get antsy
and crazy to those who are in the throes
of love). You're angry with the passenger
across from you who doesn't have the fashion
sense because she's wearing turtleneck in
the middle of summer).
The little and the big things will drive
you crazy until you begin to feel resigned
acceptance.
See, when you begin to accept that it didn't
work out, you conduct a post performance
evaluation and assessment plan. In other
words, you begin to wonder; just where in
the hell did you screw up? And it is in
this phase that you realize either of the
following:
1) It's your fault. You didn't trust him
enough. You didn't love him enough. You
didn't
(supply the missing words).
2) It's not your fault. He couldn't commit.
It's not in his nature to do so. He found
someone else. He didn't stick up for you
from the wrath of his parents (wimp!).
3) It's nobody's fault. Clichéd as
it may sound, "you were just not meant
to be". "You were like two ships
passing in the night and never shall meet"
(for to do so, would mean one big explosion)
or (this is my favorite) "you're two
parallel lines set out on different courses
in one Cartesian plane.
To my thinking, casting blame is moot and
academic. It's the healing that counts.
And where we can intellectualize the causes
and effects of a broken heart, nobody has
the cure.
On an interesting note, when one ends a
relationship based on carnal lust, hot wicked
sex or red scorching talons of eroticism,
it's a slightly different case.
For people who don't want commitment, and
all the hassles of this gigantic, overwhelming
and costly feeling called "love",
one usually resorts to commitment-less,
casual, carefree relationship, commonly
referred to as a "THING". As in,
"hey, we had a THING going". As
if it is compared to golf balls and cat
food or something equally trivial.
When a "thing" ends, no matter
who ends it, its always taboo to:
1) Cry. You can't
grieve out in the open. Many may agree that
when one can't grieve, there's no full sense
of closure. You can't cry because that would
mean you made a big deal out of it. You
got attached. (That's the number one rule
in a casual relationship: NEVER get attached.
Once you do, you lose). Easier said than
done.
2) Carry a grudge. You have to try to remain
friends or at least be civil even if it
kills you. There should be no drama's, no
throwing of knives or pot, pans or for that
matter, bread.
3) Dwell on it. Move on man. I wasn't a
big deal anyway. A few laughs, some rough
tumble in the hay or car or wherever. It
was an incredible joyride. Its over.
You wonder, why indulge in this abnormally
normal situation? For a variety of reasons:
1) It's cheaper. You don't have to go out,
watch a movie or dine in restaurants, buy
gifts because you'd just as soon as spend
it on drive-in motels at Php 333 for ten
hours.
2) It's less draining emotionally. There
are fewer demands. Fewer demands mean fewer
expectations.
3) Too afraid to love again. For those who
have been burned several times, they tend
to be a bit gun shy. They tend to wade in
the water not take the plunge.
4) Too busy to be in love. Who has
the time and the energy?
I wonder though, when it ends, who hurts
more? The ones who loved and lost, or the
ones who lust and lost?
For those who fell in love and lost,
they could openly cry, hurl insults and
invectives and be comforted by friends with
cheap wine and cases of beer. For those
who fell in lust and lost, they are denied
this privilege because after all: it wasn't
a big deal and you have to keep silent and
bear it all in.
Losing someone is always painful. That's
the universal truth. Whether it was a 9-year-old
dog or 9-year-old child or 9-month-old love
affair or 9-day-old "thing". The
awful misery and bittersweet pain will throb,
especially at night, when everybody's asleep.
And its just a stone cold sober you, the
bright moon and the soft whir of the ceiling
fan. In this rite of passage to adulthood,
you realize, it doesn't matter whether you
loved and lost or lusted and lost. Because
in your head, and in your heart, you've
grown up a little.
And you smile. After all, you didn't entirely
lose everything... You still have yourself,
the moon and the ceiling fan.
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Shanidar Cabaraban is freelance journalist
and monthly relationship columnist for whymenare.com,
an online magazine for women, and your one
stop shop for lingerie, leather, adult novelties,
clubwear, pvc lingerie and more!
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