Sole Mates (No, it’s not about shoes.)


It’s been said that there is a lid for every pot. I’m convinced, though, that some of us are better suited to being lidless.

When I was younger — much younger — I thought that finding that one person on the planet that fills the void of your other half was simple. You go out. You meet a lot of people. You pick one. Or, one picks you. In my twenties, I went out, I met a lot of people, and some picked me. Four to be exact.

The first was a friend from college who, after a car wreck, moved back home to recuperate. I was the designated letter writer who kept him up-to-date on all the happenings within our group. He read more into those letters, though, than I intended and came back to town about a year later with a diamond solitaire and “plans.” I was clueless. So, what did I do? I ran like hell.

The second was a coworker who, though at the time married to someone else, proposed every few months. I thought we were just friends — not so much as a hug between us – but he seemed to think we were “meant” for each other or some such nonsense. My first instinct, again, was to run, but that’s hard to do when you work in the same place. Fortunately for me, my family decided to move to another state and, yep, I packed fast. A couple of years later we moved back to my hometown. By then, he was divorced and just kept on proposing. I finally started taking him seriously. He disappeared shortly thereafter, started dating someone else and was married eight months later. Some soul mate!

The third one, also from my college days, was and still is an enigma to me. We had a sort of off-and-on love-hate relationship. He proposed when I least expected it — he was in one room and I was in another. His proposal came across like a rhetorical question so I gave him a rhetorical answer. He stormed out and the next day, gave me a piece of his mind — for about twenty minutes. Never saw anyone so mad in my life. Still not sure what all happened there but still one of the few regrets I have.

The fourth one, I married. Shouldn’t have but no regrets with this one. I have a wonderful daughter who is the light of my life.

So why am I rambling on about all this? Well, lately I’ve felt like something is missing. I’ve had 24 years of post-divorce peace and contentment and, for the most part, happiness. And yet, I feel sort of empty sometimes. My child is off on her own now so maybe it’s just empty nest syndrome. I don’t know. I just know that sometimes, something really neat happens that I’d like to share and there’s no one here to share it with. No one that really gets me. I guess that’s the price I pay for once upon a time being young and stupid and fickle.

Maybe it’s for the best. Not all of us are destined to find the lid to their pot. Some of us are probably better suited to being their own sole mate. (Aren’t puns grand!)

I think for me, though, it boils down to not being able to give or be what the fellas I’ve known seem to want — a terminally sweet, utterly speechless, mammary-blessed*, sex-starved, totally subservient, house maid who likes to cook.

Was that me just being pissy? Hmmm.

*Thanks for the reminder, Kate!

 

Game of Crones


Remember when you were in high school and there was at least one group of mean girls?

A clique, a tribe, whatever you want to call them, they were mean to everyone who wasn’t in their own little group. They were the same little girls that made your life miserable in grammar school too but, as they got older, they got more skilled at being mean, and more clever about pretending they weren’t.

Jump forward a few decades. You’ll find they’re still there but, instead of being the “Queens of Mean” at school, they’re now the “Crafty Crones” of the women’s club, or the garden club, or the book club, or the congregation, or the workplace — especially the work place.

They never say anything mean to your face. (Remember, they learned better than to do that in grammar school.) It’s all very civilized. No one gets in your face. No one gives you a hard time. They just make innocent comments to other people when you’re not around — little jibes about the quality or quantity of your work — nothing major, just little barbs that sting. And they speak to you in an “oh so sweet” yet subtly condescending manner during meetings. At best, they forget to invite you to lunch, though, they remember to invite every other woman in the department. At worst, they destroy careers.

My first encounter with the mean girls came about when I was ten. We’d moved from a city to a rural area a couple of years earlier — I was still the new kid. Our school had eight grades in four rooms and only about 8-10 kids in each grade. Recess was in two periods with grades 1-3 going first and then grades 4-8 all at once. The boys played sports and the girls mostly just walked around — watching the boys.

On this particular day, I had worn a new outfit — a matching skirt and shirt. The skirt was a reversible wrap-around with khaki on one side and a calico print on the other. The shirt was the same print. I usually played softball with the boys (probably my first mistake) but, on that day, didn’t want to muss up my new clothes so had been wandering around by myself. I was a bit of a loner even then so remember being flabbergasted when a few of the “girls” asked me if I wanted to walk with them.

We meandered all around the playground, finally winding our way near the road in front of the school. Before I knew what was happening, I’d been pushed into the ditch and my skirt wrestled off me. I looked up to see the backs of those girls running toward the building waving my new skirt like a banner. I still had the shirt and, fortunately for me, always wore a slip so was decently covered as I walked back to the building.

To make this long story short, I found my skirt wadded up in a corner of the girls restroom, I ended up in the principal’s office, and the girls had to apologize. Afterwards, they left me alone most of the time and I had great fun playing softball and touch football with the boys but there was always a bit of “whispering” and “looks” and “giggles” every time I came near the girls.

It’s gotten better over the years but it’s been a slow process. Still somewhat of a loner, I’d rather interact with people one-on-one than in groups. I can do meetings and group activities with the best of them but, if I have my druthers, I prefer being around other people in small doses. I’m not sure if I’m really an introvert or just conditioned to it. I know it takes me a long time to become comfortable with even small groups and I usually hang back to get the lay of the land before I join in.

I used to think that, once I got older, all the silly girl-rivalry would stop and all the women I’d encounter would become friends. Very unrealistic. Life just doesn’t work that way. Friends come and go depending on what’s happening and where we are in our lives. And, if we’re lucky, some remain friends for a lifetime. That’s as it should be. I am blessed to still be, if not close friends, at least friendly with some of the girls I went to high school with. My closest friends, though, are my two sisters.

So what about the naughty little girls that played naughty little games and the mean teenagers that played mean tricks? Well, they grew up to play the game of crones.

Webster’s defines a crone as “a withered, witch-like old woman.”

Sort of fits, doesn’t it?

Nothing but one-pointers!


I like to play Scrabble.

Some games, though, I just can’t seem to get a break.  You know what I mean? It’s those games when all you get are one-point letters.

It seems to happen the most when I play on-line with an old friend from high school — she beats my socks off regularly.

I’m convinced she plays with a Scrabble dictionary at her fingertips. If she doesn’t, I’m in deeper %^&@Q$% than I thought. She also gets all — I mean ALL — the letters with higher points. She’s the luckiest Scrabble player I’ve ever come across and I’ve played a lot of Scrabble.

She’s pretty smart too, so there’s that.

I beat her every now and then, but it ain’t easy.

Sad. Very sad.

I did catch a break a few days ago, while playing at my sister’s house. Somehow, I managed to get a 7-letter word with an X on a double letter and the last letter of the word on a triple word for a total of 125 points.

It will never happen again — promise.

When I was younger, and much more innocent, I thought Scrabble was all about making neat words and having fun.

Un-uh. It’s all about the points, baby!