Falling in Love for the First Time (an Anne Lamott writing prompt story)

WRITING PROMPT: “Write about the first time you fell in love.”

– Anne Lamott, (A Writing Room)

By: JANA GREENE

I have a tendency to fall in love instantly. I fell head over heels in love with my husband nearly 18 years ago, but I’ve made lifelong friends that I’ve loved since day one. Dogs, cats, people I mentor – doesn’t matter. If my soul recognizes you, I can love you genuinely right away. I’ve hated that about myself most of my life (it’s illogical, according to this cold, hard world,) but I’m at such peace with it now. If people can hate without even getting to know a person, I can certainly love right out of the gate.

The fist time it happened was in 1983.

His name was Trace, and I met him at the skating rink. I still cannot hear Loverboy’s “Take me to the Top” without recalling the scent of Giorgio for Men and the whisp-whisp-whisp of his parachute pants as he whooshed by me in an eternally moving loop on his “peanut butters.”

Peanut butters – for those not in the know – are what we called those iconic brown rental skates at the rink – the ones that you tried not to think about the foot that was there before yours. Only the very popular, rich kids brought their own skates.

I was born with a painful and injurious connective tissue condition. When I was a kid, my family called it “clumsiness,” but it was actually many of my joints subluxing and dislocating constantly. I remember my ankles were janky that day, so I skated in a slow, steady loop, acting casual. Each time he’d pass me, he would wink at me over his shoulder. I guess because it was the early-eighties and we flirted like we were in a John Hughes film (what other template could we have used? Mr. Hughes defined our generation!)

It turned out, Trace was in the grade about me at the middle school. I was in seventh, he in eighth, and going to high school the following year. An almost-high-school boy liked me! That’s better than having custom roller skates!

And so began my first foray into “love.” And it was love, to some degree. I thought of nothing else but him. That evening, he asked me if I wanted to skate to the couples only skate. Actually, I think I was sitting on a bench festooned with neon colored patterns that glowed in the dark. When they cut the lights down, Journey’s “Open Arms” called us to the floor. I skated backwards and he forwards, but I saw nothing but his eyes. They were yellow-green, like a cat’s – but maybe those of a friendly cat. His hair was long, curly, and very blonde, like Sebastian Bach of the band “Skid Row.” And I was there for it. We became girlfriend/boyfriend that day and would be together off-and-on for the next couple of years – which is an eternity when you’re a teenager.

“I want to marry you,” he’d say, “and have lots of babies.” And I believed that’s what he wanted because his home was so unstable. We both wanted an opportunity to do better. Looking back, it’s a gigantic red flag, but my passionate 14 year old heart would not hear of anything less that marriage and babies. Oh the naivety!

Trace was wounded, in a way. And I worried about him constantly, which is another good indicator that this was different. He was sadness masquerading as a cowboy, in his hat and a pair of shit-kickers. I was sad too, but his love made me warm, and warm sadness is better than the regular kind, because any teenage couple worth their salt is plodding through angst. Me and you against the WORLD, right?

So I fell in love for the first time, with a boy from a broken home who called me his “angel,” and broke up with me because I was so afraid that he was going to expect me to do things after Prom that I canceled it altogether. I was terrified of intimacy; I simply was not ready. And he – being 17 – had “needs” that my Bible-toting, scripture-quoting, uber “good girl” self was not willing to facilitate. (Ugh. Could she not loosen up just a little?)

We had all the wonderful “firsts.” First couple’s skate. First hickey (“I burned my neck with the curling iron, Mom!”) First cheap but thoughtful necklace that turned my skin green. First experience with obsessing over a boy. First concept that I was adored by someone, and I was happy to adore in return. Of course, Trace was my first break-up too. I think break-ups teach us just as much about ourselves as relationships do. Maybe more.

Eventually it fell apart because – like every good John Hughes movie – there was drama. He had a rough childhood, and things were bad at my home too. Trauma-bonding does not make for the best relationship foundation. I moved away from Texas, and I have no idea what became of him. But I hope he is okay, and thriving somewhere with some special lady who is his “angel.”

First loves are practice; an art, not a science. We had all the standard-issue problems that teen couples do. But we also had stolen kisses behind the bleachers, sweet, corny love letters, and phone calls that ended with, “No, YOU hang up first…” “NO, you hang up first.’ “No, YOU” ad-nauseum so we could hear each other fall asleep.

He was such a sweet, troubled soul, and in truth – so was I. But all first loves should be equal parts magic and tragic, I think. It’s our first foray into accepting another human being for who they are, parachute pants, Peanut Butters, and all.

Blessed be, lovely friends.

The Crying Canons

By: JANA GREENE

When I was a child, my parents sent me to catechism classes for a few months, before they decided Catholicism wasn’t for them, and I have a few spotty memories.

I have always loved big words, and I remember learning the concept of “canonization,” which is when someone who lived a really stellar life could be declared a saint. According to Wikipedia, it is also declaring a person worthy of public veneration and entering their name in the canon catalogue of saints.

The extent of my experience with “catalogues” was that Sears put out a “Big Book” and that thing was the epitome of childhood joy! The be-all-end-all; about three solid inches of dog-eared, magic-marker-circled laminated possibility. The funny thing is that when it came in the mail each year, I cried. I sobbed with overwhelming emotion. It was TOO. MUCH. If I had had the language, I would have said, “I CANNOT EVEN WITH THIS.”

There were tears later for excerpts from the Alcoholics Anonymous Big Book, but that’s a story for another time.)

How odd that despair and all-encompassing joy make us cry.

I still cry, but not in as much despair. At lease not most days.

Despair, when taken to liberally, only buys me more of itself. It confirms what every trauma of my life told you was truth. It makes me conduct life as if in mourning clothes – black and somber (but also a little bit enveloping and cozy.) Comforting because it’s familiar, and destructive for the same reason.

Here’s the thing: As far as I can tell, life is a tearful experience. No getting around it.

Tears are salty, either way. Whether they are generated by grief or extreme joy, there they are! Manifestations of our Big Feels, rolling down our cheeks for all the world to witness. No two spurred by identical emotion, each unique to the life experience that prescribed it.

I suspect that God is forever traipsing along behind us, collecting every single one; and not minding a bit to get his hands wet (or even snotty.) I don’t know why the image of the Almighty Cosmic Creator collecting our tears is so comforting to me. It’s validating, I guess.

So many of us were sprinkled by “holy water” to be baptized in the church tradition. How odd then that the sprinklings that we offer God so often roll down our cheeks. I like the thought that none of it goes to waste; that all tears are valid. (Are tears holy water too? Maybe they’re the holiest.)

I laugh more than I used to, too. Sometimes at the absolute absurdity of life. I mean, you can’t be serious, right? This place is crazy, man! Humanity is writhing right now. Each facet of our existences seems upended and spent. We are divided, swamped with information, fed a diet of doom, and all of this can make a very “connected” world feel very lonely.

Our instinct is to make our woe a solitary endeavor, but we’re all connected. Joy to joy, woe to woe. As best as I can figure, there are a trillion filaments of light woven between and through us all. That’s what vanquishes the darkness.

So yes, I cry. Some days, quite a bit. There are many times I “cannot even,” when my physical pain and mental/emotional pain are trying to outdo each other in a footrace, a good, cleansing cry is where it’s at. Not as a concession to the pain, but to spite it.

Being Earthside is wretched, brilliant, brutal, beautiful, and exquisite. It is a predetermined number of dog-eared possibilities.

But I’ve made it through 100 percent of the mess thrown at me so far, and so have YOU. That’s a pretty good track record. All we can do is try not to let our tears make us salty toward an open-wound world.

We become venerated by our tears. Canonized. Made whole and sainted, I think. All the really cool saints weep on the regular. I believe Jesus did, and why would he not? He rejoiced with weeping and wept with deep, abiding sorrow. He himself is the (Big?) Book of Life, not constrained by the two-thousand years of dog-eared, magic-marker-circled laminated possibility we have assigned him and called “Truth.”

Teardrop by teardrop. Emotional outburst by emotional outburst. Primal screaming session by primal screaming session. Whatever it takes to get through this stellar experience of life together.

Blessed be, friends.

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