Love letter # 154

How much I have not wanted to write this letter. How long I have delayed it. Turned it over in my head – in my gut. But alas, I feel that I need to say this: I can no longer continue. Though I trust you, I also feel that you toy with my feelings – enjoy the dumb, supplicant fact of them – and that you do not, never have and never will, reciprocate.

Naturally, you are allowed not to feel. This I have no issue with, much as it cuts me. My issue is with your behaviour – or rather, my reaction to it.

No more will I sit here, my affections being milked by you for whatever gratification this gives you. No longer will I rise in stupid hope to be slapped by the slamming door. It is a torment I am now refusing to bear on behalf of my absurd, hormonal optimism.

When you flash your smile – your eyes, your cleavage – I will no longer go to water. Because I will not be there to see it.

I am certain you will think me ridiculous in this, but I would rather imagine that acerbic snarl of yours than stumble again into the honey trap you so beautifully set for me.

I stand ready to offer you all the love in the world – but if you will not receive it I will neither force it upon you nor suffer your teasing delight at my reflexive adoration.

Maybe you have not set out to beguile and fool me. Perhaps it is I to whom all the folly belongs. Makes no difference in the end. I cannot stand your loveliness – the way it hovers so near, and then withdraws at the merest touch.

If I was made of stronger stuff I would most likely tough it out – but I am made of longing and impossible hunger – and I will not inflict the spectacle of my pathetic starvation on either of us.

Au revoir, my love. You are wonderful. Far too wonderful for me.


Comments

3 responses to “Love letter # 154”

  1. Telling someone you love him/her does not mean you truly love the person. what shows you love your partner is your action and your total commitment towards him/her.

    Like

  2. Indeed, Austine. 🙂

    Oh, and thank you for your response…even if mine took a decade.

    PR

    Like

  3. PS: I reflect upon the episode alluded to in the letter above and, from the distance of 10 years, it is plain that I was in the final throes of a decades-long addiction. I knew it back then too, yet had not developed the mechanisms for halting the drama. It took me a further three or so months to work it out. The woman in question was my unwitting accomplice in this.

    Reading this letter on the 10th anniversary of its posting, I am filled with relief and tenderness. Some lessons are learnt in fire.

    PR.

    Like

Leave a comment