Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Capturing Moments

Because we were young, because we were basically children, we were earnest.

"What would you do?" I asked.

"I guess I'd take you somewhere, top of the Empire State Building, maybe, or the World Trade Center. And then I'd say," and here you got down on one knee, "'Here we are at the tallest point in the city, maybe even the world, but I want you to take me higher.'"

I laughed, but not because it was cheesy. This was before I understood what corny meant, a few years before I even realized how cliched this moment potentially was. A couple of heartbreaks before I realized that words like these were carelessly uttered, hypothetical musings about the future often posed but never followed. I didn't know then exactly how easily forgotten vows could be, how every promise came with stipulations and fine print. My ears weren't tuned to the asterisks at the end of each declaration that lead to escape clauses. This was back when I thought the fate of my parents was the anomaly, not the norm.

Because we were young, because we were basically children, you gave me a ring pop, an edible promise ring.

It was only after a few years passed that I would realize how fitting it was. How after the sweet adoration have gone, devoured by our hungry mouths and hearts, what is left is just a cheap reminder of what was no longer there.

You were kneeling on the carpeted floor of the bedroom belonging to the teenage girl before you, a girl who taped a picture of Kevin Garnett above her bed and had newspaper clippings of Mike York and Tsuyoshi Shinj(y)o spread across her desk. It was so long ago that I was passing for a 12-year-old and getting Martin Brodeur bobble-head dolls. It was so long ago that the Devils still played in Continental Airlines Arena. It was so long ago that I couldn't think of anything better than spending the day with you at Shea, catching a $5 game against the Expos.

Because we were young, because we were basically children, I am amazed you lasted as long as you did.

You held me often, ran away often, laughed often, cried often. You tolerated my madness and sadness and sickness and craziness. You promised to major in psychology so you could help me, promised to take care of me, promised me I'd get better.

This was when you weren't yet mature, or realistic, or cynical. It was when you weren't yet aware of your personal limitations, when you weren't fully aware of the frustrations of my personal shortcomings. When I hadn't yet found better hiding places for my vices, before I had grown up, and calmed down. This was when I'd still call every night, panicking, thinking the world was going to end, thinking my life was going to end. Before attempts and psychiatrists and hospitals and institutions. Before I even knew what borderline personality disorder or schizophrenia was.

Because we were young, because we were basically children, we were earnest.

I didn't know yet that this would happen again and again. In the basements of boys who would play "Question" by the Old '97s, or in front of fancy restaurants in Saratoga, or on the beaches of southern California watching the sun set over the Pacific, or in Subaru Forresters in front of the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Sometimes with rings, sometimes without. Sometimes by people who are still in love with me, sometimes by people I'd rather never see again.

But it comes back to that corny line, to that ring pop, to the innocence of teenage love. I don't mind that I'll never feel it again--I have places to go, things to do, worlds to save. But I felt it once. And it was enough.