What the?
July, 1998
Leaving Leo behind in Monterey was torture. I barely made it to my car before the tears started pouring down my face, and when I looked at the room that he and I had shared for the last forty-eight hours, I saw him staring down at me with tears of his own. He mouthed the words “Come back to me,” and even though it was another lie, I said, “I will. I promise.”
On the drive home from Monterey, I had grand visions of contacting a divorce attorney, of telling Kurt I want to sell the house, and getting on with my life…alone. But instead, I drove straight to Slutty Co-workers apartment, collapsed on her couch and cried myself silly. And I’ve been crying for two weeks straight. Whenever she asks me why I can’t just end it with Kurt, I tell her that I need more time to prepare him for it, that I don’t have the heart to hurt him quite yet. She just shakes her head and says, “Yeah…right…I guess it makes more sense that you and Leo should be the ones to suffer and not him.” I know her sarcastic heart is in the right place.
I thought I was a wreck before I put my foot down in Napa and ripped my heart out in Monterey but nothing compares to the f*cking mess I am now. Without my drug, I definitely look like I’m coming off of something. My clothes don’t match, and I don’t care to put on makeup most mornings. I haven’t laughed or seemed interested in anything going on around me for weeks. My door is always closed at work, and my window coverings are always down at my parent’s house and at Slutty Co-workers apartment, wherever I decide to spend the night. Hiding from the world has become my new obsession. Well, that and calling into Leo’s messages. Yes, to make everything a zillion times worse than it already is, I can’t stop frolicking with masochism! Fortunately for me, there are no girls calling yet, just one really supportive best friend.
“Dude! F*ck her anyway. You’ll find someone better.”
And then…
“Dude! She has too much baggage, and she’s not the only 5’6, blond girl out there you know.”
And my favorite…
“Dude! She’ll be like forty when you’re only thirty-four. Who wants that?”
With messages like that from Taddeo, it’s only a matter of time before Leo moves on. The thought makes me want to gain seventy-five pounds and become a librarian, but there’s no time, as I too have my own abundance of messages to contend with these days. My friends have been calling me off the hook and their messages have gone from worry to full on rage that I haven’t called them back.
“Chrissy, this is Nic. I’m so f*cking pissed that you’re ignoring us. I went out on a limb to protect your ass at that bowling alley and this is how you repay me? I swear I’m gonna call Kurt and tell him about you and your little--BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP”
“It’s me again. Your freaking voicemail cut me off. Okay, so I was kidding about telling Kurt, but call me TODAY! I want to know what the hell is going on with you.”
“Hey, it’s Court. We missed you at dinner last week and the week before that. You know I don’t get mad at much, but I’m frustrated that you dumped all of that Kurt dirt on us and won’t give us a chance to help you. I keep calling the house, but it seems like Kurt’s making up reasons why you can’t come to the phone. Please call me. I won’t let you hide forever.”
“Hey Chrissy, It’s Kel. Courtney and Nicole are making me call you to tell you to get off your skinny little ass and meet us Thursday night. We’ll be at Chili’s at 7pm.”
I just love how Kelly said she called because Courtney and Nicole made her, not because she wanted to. But not as much as I’m lovin’ Kelly’s restaurant choice. What self-respecting, almost twenty-nine year old with a decent disposable income wants to get caught dead at a Chili’s? It’s like the aquarium to me, why go if you don’t have kids with you? There’s no cool scene there, just fat people who want to eat cheap food and get fatter. Regardless of hating the thought of driving all the way to Freakmont to eat at Chili’s, it’s been weeks since I’ve seen my friends, and I should tell them I semi-moved out of my house in Danville. So I go.
“Well, well, well, look who decided to show her disgraceful face…and disgraceful outfit!”
“Yeah, what’s this look all about Chrissy? You look like homeless Barbie!”
“Hey, back off, Nic! We all look disgraceful here!”
“C’mon, what’s wrong with Chili’s?!”
“Ahhhh gee, nothing, Kelly if you’re celebrating a five-year-old’s birthday party or have a hankering for an awesome blossom.”
“Nice to see that the attitude matches the outfit, doesn’t it girls?” Kelly looks annoyed, so I do what I know will annoy her even more and give her a big ol’ hug and kiss on the cheek.
“I love Chili’s because you love Chili’s, Kel.”
“I don’t loooooooove Chili’s. It’s just close to my house! I’m sick of driving to all those fancy shmancy places in Danville. It’s my pick tonight and I pick economical!”
“Fine with me. The med school payments, the house payment, the car payment…it’s all killing Kyle and me these days. What about you, Courtney, making a dent in your student loans?”
“Not even a spec. They’ll always be there!”
Then it gets quiet. So quiet, you can actually hear the people at the table next to us getting fatter. I can tell my friends have a million questions for me but no one wants to be the first to dive in for fear of getting their ass handed to them. Watching them squirm is the most fun I’ve had in weeks.
“So, do they have hard alcohol here or just the wimpy stuff like beer and wine?”
“Yeah, they have all the gross stuff you like, Chrissy. Just remember you have a long drive home, so take it easy.”
“Not that long, Kel. I’m staying in Pleasanton.” There! It’s out. Have at it girls.
All three of them tilt their heads and do the, “I feel so sorry for you” pouty face. As usual, Courtney takes the lead in all serious conversations. She gives Nicole and Kelly the “I’ve got this” look.
“Staying with your folks?”
“Yep, it was only a matter of time.”
“Is there any hope for you guys?”
“I don’t think so…but then again, maybe. But not maybe because we’re gonna magically turn into super happy married couple; it’s because I don’t have the guts to do anything other than spend the night at my parent’s house or my co-workers house in the city. It’s weird, guys. Every week I go home to pick up more clothes and it’s like Kurt’s totally oblivious to what’s happening right in front of his face.”
“Hasn’t that always been your problem with him, though?”
“Among other things.”
“Has he gone to therapy like you asked him to?”
“Nope.”
“Do you want me to talk to him?”
“Would anyone have to convince your husband to go to marriage-saving therapy?”
Courtney sympathetically shakes her head.
“I didn’t think so. Please, I’d rather die than have my friend convince my husband to love me.”
“Do you still love him?”
“I do. But I’m not in love with him anymore. I think I feel for him how he’s always felt for me, except for me, it’s not enough. I want truly, madly, deeply love, something he could never comprehend.”
“Well, you seem okay.”
“Maybe you just want me to be okay, Kelly.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I dunno, it just seems like all of this is just a little too much for you.”
“Jesus, calm down. I didn’t mean to…”
“I can’t calm down! I’M NOT OKAY! If I leave, everyone’s gonna think I rejected him, but I feel like I’m the one who got rejected. If I leave, no one’s gonna feel sorry for me. No one’s gonna think I need support. I’ll be alone, Kelly. Do you know how bad all of this makes me feel? If I stay, I’ll feel bad. If I leave, I’ll feel bad! Everything makes me feel so bad that I wonder if I’ll ever be okay. I need a drink! Where’s the f*cking waiter!?”
Kelly knows better than to say another word, so she retreats back into the red pleather booth and keeps her mouth shut. Courtney though, she can’t help herself.
“It’s like a death. Studies show it takes six months for every year you were together to get on with your life after the death of a loved one. I imagine the same will be true with your breakup with Kurt.”
“So you’re talking six years before I can get on with my life?”
“Yeah, but the pain fades over time, Chrissy. At first you might think about Kurt every minute of every day but soon it’ll turn into every other day, and then every other week and then one day you’ll realize it’s been months since you’ve thought about him.”
“So eventually he’ll be dead to me? Lovely, Courtney, that’s just what I wanted to hear.”
“Hey, I don’t want you guys to break up, but this isn’t about me, it’s about you, and from what I can tell, YOU don’t want to be with HIM. I’m just trying to be a friend and sometimes friends have to deliver bad news.”
Courtney’s always right. She bugs me.
“For f*ck sake, where’s my drink?!”
“We didn’t order any yet.”
“See! This is why I don’t like this place!”
“You’re stressing her out, Courtney, let me in on this. Have you seen Leo?”
I want to beat Nicole over the head with the stale bread sticks for asking me that question.
“What!? Look, we can either talk about boring stuff like our kids or we can talk about your boyfriend. Pick.”
“Ex-boyfriend. I haven’t seen him in months.”
That was a lie, but since it’s really over this time, they don’t need to know how far things went, and I certainly don’t need Kelly’s infamous eye roll to further degrade my time with him.
“I wonder if he ever ended up with that Megan girl.”
“Jesus, Nicole, you might as well punch me in the stomach or better yet, why don’t you throw the drink THAT I STILL DON’T HAVE in my face!”
“Geez, I’m sorry, Chrissy. I didn’t know he was that special to you.”
“It’s nothing vodka can’t fix.”
The girls’ eyes are darting back and forth at each other. They’re too afraid to talk. They’re smart to keep their mouths shut until I have some alcohol in me. Oh! Finally the waiter!
“Hey, dude, I’m not talking to these women until you get me a double shot of vodka on the rocks with a lime twist.”
“Uh, like, what kind of vodka?”
“Kettle one.”
“Uh, I don’t think we have that.”
“THEN WHY DID YOU ASK?! Just give me whatever.”
“Great Chrissy, now he’s gonna spit in our food.”
“Puleez! Look where we are. Like it wasn’t gonna happen already!”
Silence again. I’ve scared the begeezees out of all of them and now no one has the guts to speak. I want to feel bad about it, but I don’t care about anything anymore. After a few minutes of pretending to look at the laminated seventeen-page food-splattered menu, I roll my head up in disgust and see Courtney staring at me.
“Something you want to say?”
“Were you in love with him?”
It was so much bigger than love. It was belonging, it was sanity, it was bottomless and reciprocal. One by one, my tears fall on the dirty menu. Nicole reaches her hand across the table to take mine, while Kelly and Courtney exchange concerned glances. I’ve always been the crier of the group, but these tears were different from all the others they’ve seen me shed over the years. They weren’t like the ones I splattered all over the place when I didn’t get voted homecoming queen. They weren’t like the ones I spewed out when someone else wore almost the exact same dress to my senior prom as me. They weren’t phony like the ones I squeezed out when I held their newborn babies. These tears were coming out of makeup-less eyes, they were unrehearsed, and they didn’t care who saw them.
“Yeah, I was. I am.”
“Do you think you’ll ever see him again?”
“Not if I can help it, because I NEVER want him to know I was married…I mean am married.”
“Why? I mean, it’s a part of who you are, and if he feels the same way about you that you feel about him, he’ll understand.”
“How could he possibly understand, Courtney? What I’ve done to him is sick. I lied to him and manipulated him for six months.”
“But you love him. How do you ignore that?”
“Not easily. Christ, sometimes it even feels like I’m interfering with destiny by breaking it off with him.”
“Only time will tell.”
I look up at Courtney with hopeful eyes.
“What do you mean?”
“When things are meant to be, there’s nothing you can do to prevent it from being so.”
“She’s right. If you’re so crazy about him, why don’t you get on with the divorce? Free yourself up to see what the possibilities are with him?”
“Because I’m a chickenshit Nicole, and I want Kurt to be the one to end it.”
“That’s never gonna happen…unless he finds out about Leo.”
“Right, and according to my therapist, that makes me a pretty pathetic person”
Our drinks finally arrive, and Nicole makes a toast.
“Here’s to Chrissy, who’s not only wasting precious time and energy but also her good looks that she naively thinks will last forever. You’re gonna need those to find yourself a new husband, hunny! Get the f*ck on with it.”
After what some people might call dinner, I excuse myself to go to the bathroom to throw it all up. Kidding! I wish I possessed that skill; it would’ve saved me many, many hours in the gym. I pee, wash my hands and out of habit, search for my favorite Mac lip-gloss. By the time I find it, I remember I don’t care how I look anymore and throw it back in my bag. I get back to the table just as Kelly’s getting up to leave.
“You outta here?”
“Yeah, I promised Craig I’d be home in time to tuck everyone in.”
Good Lord, she only has one kid. Does that mean she tucks Craig in, too?
“Well, I didn’t drive all the way out here for that crappy drink. You two wanna find somewhere to get a real drink?”
After making Kelly promise me she’ll never make me eat at a place where half of our high school graduating class works, I spank her on the butt and receive my final eye roll of the evening. She sets off to her blessed home, getting there just in time to snuggle in next to Craig and catch the last twenty minutes of Dateline, making it the perfect ending to her day.
After driving around for thirty minutes, Court, Nic, and I realize there is no place to get a real drink in Freakmont, so we buy a bottle of vodka, a bag of ice, plastic cups, and a lime and drive to our old stomping ground, the house in the Mission Hills that MC Hammer used to live in.
Sitting on the grassy hillside bordering the compound, we roll around in laughter as we exchange stupid stories from our past. As it turns out, I’m the only one of the four of us who didn’t lose her virginity here.
“God, look at this place! How do you go from all this to declaring bankruptcy in like five years?”
“I know, Chrissy! Wasn’t he supposed to be too legit to quit?” I abruptly sit up.
“Omigod you guys, I’m like MC Hammer! I was supposed to be too legit to quit! But now I’m a fraud just like him. I’m a big, baggy-pant wearing, washed-up black-rapper fraud!”
“Okay Nic, time to cut her off.”
“I’m serious, guys. Did you see how Kelly looked at me tonight?!
WAIT, how she wouldn’t look at me.”
“It wasn’t that bad, Chrissy.”
“My ass it wasn’t. It’s like she forgot about the sister pact the four of us made at high school graduation. You know…to always be there for each other no matter how stupid the reason. But where’s Kelly now? Not here! And you know what? We’re all close, but she and I should be even closer. Oops, sorry. I spit a little when I said that. Hey! Are you guys even listening to me?!”
“Yeah, yeah, we’re lis--”
“I mean, didn’t those years that Kelly and I lived together in college mean anything to her!?”
“Sure, they--”
“God, those were good times. We were so excited when we moved into that apartment…decorated the whole place in turquoise and peach. It looked like Miami Vice vomited all over it. We felt so grown up cooking dinner for our boyfriends and paying bills. Did you know we had the exact same class schedule and worked part time at the same bank? We were always together…”
“Chrissy, I’m not saying you guys aren’t close anymore, but all that stuff was like ten years ago. Life gets busy after college.”
“No duh, Nicole, I GOT BUSY TOO! But busy doesn’t mean you grow apart. For Christ sake, we were each other’s maid of honor at our weddings! I picked out her wedding dress and she picked out mine. Okay, shhhhhh don’t tell her, but I hated mine! You know…I kinda feel like she convinced me to get an ugly one so she would look better!”
“Jesus, how drunk are you?”
“I’m not drunk… I’m pissed!”
“Well, did you guys ever talk?”
“What do you mean?”
“You and Kelly. All those years you were together…did you talk?”
“Of course we f*cking talked Courtney. Hard to do all that stuff I just told you about without talking.”
“One more sarcastic outburst and we’re leaving you here. Got that?”
“Fine.”
“What I mean is, did you two ever talk about serious stuff? You lived with her and did some fun stuff, but think about it, who were you on the phone with night after night when you and Kurt broke up for that one week?”
“You and Nic.”
“And when your dad had the heart attack, who drove home from college and spent five days with you at the hospital?”
“You and Nic.”
“And who did you call when you were crying your eyes out after Kurt’s parents bailed on his college graduation?”
“You and Nic.”
“Right, because Kelly can’t talk about the bad stuff, Chrissy. You knew it back then, so why don’t you know it now?”
“I guess I don’t feel like I can make all these really hard choices without everyone’s support.”
“Well, you’re gonna have to because not everyone’s gonna agree with your choices. Chrissy, you can’t let everyone else’s opinion dictate your life.”
“You sound like Dr. Maria, and I know you’re both right, but I can’t help but be offended that Kelly’s treating me like a loser. Soon that’s how everyone’s gonna treat me. I’m the big letdown, the big cheater quitter! That’s all everyone will be thinking!”
“God, you’re so full of yourself to think everyone’s thinking about you all the time.”
I’m usually good at being defensive, but Nic’s comment left me speechless.
“People do have their own shit going on, you know. Besides, did you ever think that maybe people will think you’re the strong one?”
“What are you talking about?”
“Realizing your marriage isn’t good for you and taking a stand about it takes courage. You shouldn’t confuse people’s reactions with thinking poorly of you.”
“Nicole’s right. People might act weird, but maybe it’s because your divorce will cause them to feel vulnerable in their own marriage. People might think if it can happen to Kurt and Chrissy, it could happen to me. I know I’ve thought that.”
“It has? But you and Guss seem fine.”
“We’re all right, but it’s not glamorous by any stretch of the imagination. I mean, there’s no sex on the coffee table or blow jobs anymore, that’s for sure. And since Baby Jack came along, Guss certainly doesn’t want to go down… “
“WHOA! STOP THERE! I GET IT ALREADY!”
“What I mean is, when things get routine in a relationship, and they always do, there’s got to be something in it to fall back on. Something special that makes all the boring bullshit not so boring. You made me double-check my relationship with Guss to make sure something special is there and you know what? It is. And because I feel secure in my marriage, I can tell you that I think you’re smart for realizing that certain something special isn’t there for you and Kurt and that you’re incredibly courageous to do something about it. All those less secure people might think differently, but you shouldn’t let them guide your choices.”
“She’s right, Chrissy. Look, I love Kurt, Court loves Kurt, the whole friggin’ world loves Kurt. He’s a great guy, but we’re not married to him, you are.”
“I really wish Kelly would talk to me like you guys are.”
“She can’t.”
“But this is a big deal. She can’t crawl out of her shell for me?”
“Nope. But she’ll always stand by your side in it.”
“Court, do you think what’s going on with me is making Kelly reevaluate her relationship with Craig?”
“No, not at all. Kelly thinks her life is perfect, and she loves Craig. But maybe she’s afraid it’ll make Craig reevaluate the one he has with her.”
“I never thought of that.”
“Yeah, Kyle’s afraid you’re gonna rub off on me! Like I’m gonna go have an affair or something.”
“YOU TOLD KYLE ABOUT MY AFFAIR?!”
“Oh, shit…yeah, sorry about that. That’s what happily married people do though, they tell their spouses everything. I promise he won’t say a word though. Courtney, didn’t you tell Guss?”
“Nope, Chrissy told us not to say anything, so I didn’t. AND THAT DOESN’T MEAN I’M UNHAPPILY MARRIED! It means I can keep my big mouth shut.”
After I kinda sobered up and kissed my two friends goodbye, I set off to spend another night at my parent’s house. When I showed up on their doorstep a few weeks ago and told them about my troubles, I was surprised my mom greeted me with open arms, a glass of wine, and a comfy bed. My whole life, she told me that after I got married, I could only come home if I was bleeding. I guess it was supposed to instill some kind of work ethic in me. Mostly it just made me feel unloved. But the older I get, the more I realize that a lot of my mom’s threats were empty ones and that maybe I wouldn’t be as strong as I am today if it wasn’t for her toughness. She might not have wanted me to quit a good marriage, but I sure as hell know she wouldn’t want me to stay in a bad one, and something about my mom’s reaction when I showed up on her doorstep told me she wants me to leave Kurt.
I give the security guard at the gate of my parents’ golf community my name for the hundredth time and sarcastically remind him that I’ll be coming and going for a while, so he might as well give me my own clicker so that I can let myself in. He keeps both eyes on Jay Leno and grunts. I’ll steal my mom’s in the morning…payback for making me feel unloved. I gaze up at the full moon through my sunroof and wonder if Leo’s looking at it too. God I miss…woopsy, curb! Geez, so much for taking a moment to reflect. With my newly flat tire, I round the corner of my parent’s street and see Kurt leaning against his car. Cautiously, I pull into the driveway. Partly because of the tire, partly because I’m wondering what the hell is going on.
“Where have you been?”
“In Freakmont, with the girls.”
“Wow, you actually went to Fremont?”
“I know, can you believe it?”
“About as much as I can believe you moved out of our house.”
“So you finally get that I moved out, huh?”
“I get it, Chrissy and I want you to come home, tonight.”
“I think we have a lot to talk about--”
“Hold on, I’ve had a lot of time to think about things. I understand you’re upset with me and the way things are, but I’m gonna try really hard to make you happy, Chrissy, I promise. You have to come home and give me a chance to show you.”
“Kurt, I’m not ready to go back.”
Don’t wimp out Chrissy! Tell him you want a divorce right now!
Two-thirds of your best friends support you, just get on with it.
“Then I’ll stay here with you.”
“That kinda defeats the purpose of the whole time away concept, don’t you think?”
“We can’t fix things if you’re away.”
Tell him you’re done trying to fix things! Tell him now.
“Kurt, it’s after midnight. I can’t pack my things up right now, I’ll wake my parents.”
Hey dumbass, that’s giving him hope.
“Just grab what you need, and we’ll come back tomorrow and get the rest of your things. Come on, the dog misses you.”
“The dog misses me?”
“Okay, I miss you.”
Am I at one of those crossroads Dr. Maria talked about? But wasn’t I already at this one? Why am I being asked all this stuff again? Grandpa, you there?
“Why are you staring at the sky?”
“Just looking for answers, I guess.”
“Answers to what? Look, you have to come home eventually.
What’s the difference if it’s tonight or next Tuesday?”
He really has no clue that we’re on the verge of divorce.
GRANDPA!?!?!?!?!
“Kurt, I don’t know if I ever want to come home.”
“What are you talking about?”
Tell him!
“I’m just…I need more time and…things are peaceful for me here and…”
“But, Chrissy, we’re married, and you don’t live here. Come home so we can work on us.”
“Do you want me to come home because you’re afraid of what people are starting to think?”
“There’s nothing to think. Married people have problems, and so what, we’re having some.”
“So you think what we’re experiencing is some kind of bump in the road?”
“Yeah, it’s not always gonna be perfect. Those old people you see walking down the street, you know the cute ones holding hands and looking like it’s been so perfect all those years. They’ve had tons of problems like this but they battled through all of them to earn that look.”
“Or maybe they’re just holding onto each other so they don’t fall over.”
“Chrissy, I’m serious. This is what marriage is.”
I don’t know what’s worse, that he actually believes this is what marriage is or that I packed up my belongings and went back home.
Every dream that had been shattered
Disappears without a trace
Now that I’ve found what really matters…
There’s a world behind these walls
That I just need to see, believe in me
(Believe in Me, ATB)