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I woke up Saturday morning in a frigid hotel room to a bright clock that blinked 6:30 am, too early to wake the warm body next to me. His loose arms wrapped me up when I inched closer. Completely ignoring the calamity I resurrected the night before, I rolled over to his open eyes and warm smile. This was real. This time things would be different.
Rewind the clock five hours earlier. Same hotel room, Bombay Sapphire flowing freely through my veins, my head slowly processing the words ex-boyfriend cried to me: He still loved me, he missed me, he hated that I wasn’t part of his life, he wanted to be with me. He loved me. I loved him and I didn’t need to hear another word.
Are you getting a bad feeling from this story already? Because I am, all over again. I won’t blame inebriation for the impressive rap sheet of poor decisions I tallied up in a quick forty-eight hours. Despite what I told my friends, despite those monotonous conversations that circled and circled, I knew if given the opportunity I would sleep with ex-boyfriend. But who didn’t?
The story kicks off with a mundane car ride. I’ll sum it up in a quick paragraph:
We loaded the car with seemingly endless amounts of alcohol and started the two-hour journey to the hotel. I worried the ride would be awkward: two-hours, ex-boyfriend, myself and a friend, no music, no clear exits, all a potent mixture with the potential for disaster. My friend blatantly struggled to find a mutually acceptable topic of conversation. No discussing ex-boyfriend’s new girlfriend, no referencing my new found alcoholic side. My mind raced as I lost interest in the conversation. Their voices droned childish jokes at the groom’s expense, but I idly focused on the bumps in the road and the weekend ahead. How on earth would I behave myself?
Pinpointing signs of trouble that should have sounded off the loudest, shrieking sirens in my head is simple. Why I ignored them all, however, is not.
The first unmistakable sign of trouble came immediately after we checked into the hotel room. Some part of me (that I want to hunt down and destroy) snapped back into domesticated-girlfriend mode when I offered to iron his shirt for him. So much for the strong-independent-woman-themed weekend. Ex-boyfriend has always been oblivious and lackadaisical, the two qualities I strangely loved and thought set him apart from others. Turns out those two qualities keep him trapped in adolescence when he was going to wear a wrinkled maroon shirt and ugly khakis to a rehearsal dinner. I still felt, for some odd and unknown reason, that he was a reflection of me. I couldn’t let him leave the hotel looking like a disgusting slob.
The bridal party headed to dinner at a run-down country club that would make Tiger Woods weep. I took to the bathroom and packed seventy beers and four bottles of liquor in a tub of ice while mentally preparing for the marathon of drinking that would soon ensue. Shortly there after another group of friends arrived and thus began the drinking. Most of the attendees viewed the wedding as a friendly reunion rather than the union of two people in love. It’s not that we didn’t support our friend’s decision to marry a woman who could be the spawn of Anne Coulter and Keanu Reeves, we just needed alcohol to get through it.
Six beers, four rounds of beer pong, five cigarettes and one pint of gin with a dash of tonic later, the drama began to unfold. The second unmistakable sign of trouble came when ex-boyfriend followed me outside for a cigarette. He took a drag and with his exhale came a plume of smoke and emotion. In the span of five minutes, he filled me in on the previous year of his life in which sparse communication had kept me safely at bay. His mouth, moving at auctioneer speeds, rattled stories of family problems and girlfriend stories. Yeah, I know. Girlfriend stories. My effort of feigning interest clearly failed when I heard myself spewing out supportive comments with genuine interest. I should have walked away right then. No, I should have ran. Telling me about possibly moving in with his girlfriend served as a huge sign I missed or ignored: either he’s enough of an asshole to tell me something like that in an effort to hurt me or prove a point, or he’s one hundred percent foolish. An elaborated version of our mini-heart-to-heart was on the way. I passed time with gin.
Writing about the specifics he said to me that night would be pointless. At the time, I believed every word. Looking back though, he didn’t mean any of the speech he effortlessly delivered. How foolish I was to believe it all. I embraced each ounce of attention he paid me. Until that moment, it felt like I hadn’t been whole, like pieces of me had been missing. But each overzealous compliment filled those holes. I felt safe, like I could finally break down the walls I spent so much time meticulously building. But the little voice in the back of my head (often taking the combined tone of my mother and best friends) reminded me of the feeling’s transience. I ignored it. That voice issued caution and warning: be cordial without being inviting; drink but not in excess; sleep in a separate hotel room; and most importantly, at all cost, remember the girlfriend waiting for him at home. So when he asked if I wanted another drink as his hand brushed across my back, I replied with a smile “Of course I do.” Each sip of gin lulled that annoying you’re-better-than-this voice. I certainly knew better, but clung to each moment of fleeting intimacy.
As if it wasn’t painfully obvious, we slept together later that night, sans condom and acted as if we hadn’t missed a beat in our relationship. We spent Saturday morning in bed, nursing hangovers while reaffirming the sincerity of our drunk words, ad nauseum. When we left the room for stale bagels and coffee, surprisingly none of our mutual friends questioned what transpired the night before. I imagine they just assumed the worst, which happened to be correct. Early in the afternoon, he tended to groomsmen tasks (most notably getting the groom drunk and telling him a gassed car waited should he choose to run) and I met up with my best friend who drove in from South Carolina to commence the disaster relief effort.
Remember how I wrote that we sexed without a condom? What a great decision! The scene of the wedding happened to be in your average small town, USA. Not only is the Morning After Pill a complete bitch to get in small, conservative America, but I spent a sweet three weeks paranoid about STDs. That, my friends, will teach you to use a condom every. single. time. Luckily, my best friend had a few hours to spare before the wedding. As we drove to the first pharmacy, I made a mental list of extra items I could purchase in order to make the transaction as nonchalant as possible. A magazine, diet coke, morning after pill, vitamin C, double-sided tape, just your average Saturday afternoon grocery list, I’d say. Truth be told, there’s really no good way to buy the morning after pill without feeling like a little bit of a whore. Lesson learned.
I dealt with so many assholes in my quest to avoid having a bastard-affair baby that I could have created a rating system. It would attempt to describe the pharmacists’ better-than-thou response on that Saturday when asked of the morning after pill. I’d imagine it would use a scale of zero (meaning the manner in which the most liberal doctor on earth, having been in a similar predicament, would empathize with and handle the situation) to ten (meaning the manner in which Jerry Falwell’s reanimated-bloated corpse would respond when asked of premarital sex).
The first pharmacist received a five out of ten. She informed me, with a slightly raised eyebrow, that I could find the pill at the nearest Wal Mart. Wal Mart, really? Skeptical but desperate, I had no better option. To Wal Mart we went. This is where Marge came into my life. Big Marge. Wal Mart employee number 65,000. Before she even opened her fat lips, I knew asking for her assistance would be like pulling fucking teeth. Marge get’s a perfect ten out of ten on my imaginary scale. In fact, I’m going to go so far as to give Marge a big fuck you for blatantly judging me. Like I didn’t feel shitty enough about the situation. No, certainly not. My hungover eyes and alcohol-dripping pores clearly begged for her to take thirty seconds to answer each question with bonus dagger eyes the whole time. It’s absolutely comical to go from New York City, where even Bloomberg seemed excited about Babeland’s vote-and-get-a free-dildo promotion, to a small, conservative town where everything sex related is an abomination. Call me naive for thinking buying Plan B would be easier than storming the beaches of Normandy.
The third and final attempt, we hit up the CVS across town (twenty minutes before the wedding, mind you) with success. The pharmacist at CVS received a gold-medal earning three out of ten. Slightly judgmental in tone but no clear facial expressions that made me believe he would remember me once I exited the store.
$50 dollars and a body full of hormones later, I sat in the church as the bride walked sternly down the aisle. The groom looked like he was about to shit his pants and barely cracked a smile, my friend wept tears of great, great sadness and ex-boyfriend’s eyes were locked on mine for the majority of the service. I thought about giving him the ol‘ we-aint-having-a-baby- thumbs up, but felt it wasn’t the most appropriate church mannerism.
The reception was to be expected: the food so-so, friends and family members danced stupid group dances, I quadruple fisted gin and tonics and mentally prepared for the rest of the night. For those of you out there who are morning after pill virgins, two pills are taken twelve hours apart. I needed to stay up til 3:30am to take the second pill. After the reception, we settled in the same frigid hotel room, the clock blinked 11:30 as our friends retired to their own suites. Four hours to kill before I could take the second dose of the morning after pill, ensuring my poor decision the night before would be nothing more than a distant memory. We killed time with tickle fights, spooning, massages, and various other nauseating activities.
I have thought about 3:35 am on June 14th hundreds of times. I’ve talked about, over analyzed and replayed that moment over and over. I can’t figure out how I didn’t see it coming. How naive was I? There is no acceptable reason why I thought he wouldn’t disappoint me, again. Ex-boyfriend is the only person on earth who constantly lets me down. He did it when we were together and continued the tradition long after we broke up. Shame on me for allowing it, for expecting more of him solely because he told me he loved me. As we laid tangled together, I asked him what he was going to do about the situation. Surprise shouldn’t have been my first reaction when he said “I’m going home to Toronto to be with the girl I love.”
One more time: I’m going home to Toronto to be with the girl I love.
A fatal blow, effortlessly delivered as he held me.
Speechless is one word to describe how I felt after hearing those words. Angry is another. Hurt is a third. But what really drove the nail in the coffin is when he yelled at me for ten minutes and told me that I “just didn’t understand” and had “no concept of how special she was.” She must be special, you know, if he was willing to cheat on her with his ex.
The endless talk about loving me and wanting to be part of my life, the crying, the cuddling, and love-of-my-life speech, all emotional warfare to get me to sleep with him? Seems that way. The sad thing that I hate admitting is he could have treated me like shit and I still would have done it.
There’s this Bob Marley song called “Waiting in Vain,” replace all the female pronouns with their masculine counterparts and you have an excellent summation of my relationship with ex-boyfriend over the last two years. It hit me that Sunday morning, hours after he lectured me for judging him and his girlfriend unfairly based on his previous night’s actions.
Picture this: I’m sitting on the curb of the hotel with my hood covering most of my face. Ash waits at the tip of a smoldering cigarette for the breeze to dispose. The iPod in my hand blares Marley’s beat from my headphones for any passerby to hear. If you had passed me at that very moment, you probably wouldn’t have noticed the tears in my eyes as they collected faster than I care to admit. Completely engulfed in Marley’s tune, I didn’t notice the blue sedan that rolled to a stop two feet in front of me. The windows slowly rolled down, but I couldn’t hear my friend’s voice as he called my name. He exited the car and sat next to me. I tried to hide the heartsick expression that graced my face.
“We’re going to go pick up the tuxedos and cuff links. You wanna come?” he said.
“No thanks” I replied.
He moved towards the car and asked if I was okay.
Clearly, I was not okay. I felt used, like a section of the newspaper you read and throw away without giving a second thought. I couldn’t tell if my stomach cramped and churned from the assault of hormones or a result of the sheer terror I felt when thinking about how many diseases I potentially exposed myself to. He said he had been safe since we broke up, but also said it as easily as when he told me he loved me and didn’t want to hurt me.
After three cigarettes, I peeled my jello legs off the curb, made myself presentable in my best friend’s suite as she coached me for a the conversation I was about to have with ex-boyfriend. I didn’t hear a word she said. Whatever I was going to say would come from pure heat-of-the-moment-anger sprinkled with overemphasis on pretentious words.
I entered our room. Ex-boyfriend has never been good at hiding his feelings. He threw clothes across the room and smashed chargers and toiletries into a bag while exhaling loudly, unmistakeably signifying his anger. Why, exactly, he was mad I have yet to figure out. Guilt has an interesting way of transforming to anger in cowardly men who refuse to own up to their mistakes.
I pass my luggage to my best friend. The adrenaline kicked in as I locked the door behind her. I don’t remember exactly what I said. But at the very least I made the following points:
- We weren’t going to have a two-way discussion.
- He was going to listen to everything I had to say.
- He used me.
- He treated me unfairly.
- He had no right to yell at me like he did previously when I question how “special” his girlfriend must have been if he was so quick to cheat.
Being the big fucking punching bag that he is, he agreed with everything I said. I wanted a fight. I wanted to lunge across the room and rip the fake RayBans off his twisted little face. I wanted to call his girlfriend and tell her every detail of what happened, so he’s never be able to hide from it. Instead, he absorbed every criticism and kept his mouth shut. It was the least satisfying fight I’ve ever had with him and I still had a two-hour ride home to look forward to.
On the ride home, I kept my mouth shut with the exception of one or two sarcastic comments, all of which he over zealously laughed at. We stopped for drinks halfway home. My friend gassed the car and he followed me into the gas station like a weak puppy. He didn’t need to say anything: it was all in his eyes. He looked sad and distraught, like he was the one who had been used. He wanted to talk, but I was perfectly fine never having a conversation with him ever again.
Finally, after the longest car ride of my life, we dropped him off at his home. My friend got out of the car and hugged him. I stayed safely seated in the front of her car. He looked at me and clearly was wishing I would get out of the car for a few last words, maybe even a hug. I put my sunglasses on and turned away. It might have been the most dramatic moment of my life. Writing about it really doesn’t do much justice.
An hour later, he called me repeatedly. I ignored each call. He texted me, telling me that if I didn’t want to talk that I should just tell him and not ignore his calls. I responded with the last words I have ever said to him.
“Really not interested in hearing anything you have to say.“
Five months later, I still hope those are the last words I ever say to him.
What I did was wrong. Plain and simple. If the situation had been reversed, if he had cheated on me with her, I would have been furious. That said, I’ve always believed that people cheat for a reason.
So this is where I stand: despite this blaring summation of forty-eight hours of my life I don’t regret a single hour. I made bad choices, clearly, but regret is for those who refuse to learn from mistakes.
It’s not all bad. In the end, no matter how brutal the ride was, I finally found the closure I desperately needed. If we’re being honest, I spent the summer performing a self-inflicted emotional coup. Populated by binge drinking and bonding with friends, I overthrew that paralyzing, tired mentality I once loved. The one that kept me from erasing ex-boyfriend from my life. I broke down that mother fucking cage and set it on fire. I’ll never let another person use me again.
The best part about this whole disaster is how my friends responded. I came home to a group of people who are more or less family now. They listened to me endlessly, got me drunk when I needed it, helped me burn everything he ever gave me. I shut that box in my brain that kept every memory of my relationship with ex-boyfriend, locked it and threw away the key. Now that I’m almost finished writing this, I don’t ever need to open it again. And, luckily, I am still STD free.
Bless my friends, really. I never hit rock bottom because they wouldn’t let me. And for that, well I’m not sure I’ll ever be able to repay them.
-Anastasia
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Yes, this is the text I just sent Alexis at 4:00am east coast time, mind you.
“God damn you and bali. god dammi you to hell. i need your ass right now”
Seriously. Glad I’m sober enough to blog this (truth be told, sober is in no way what I am right now but I need Alexis rul bad and I’m going to hear hell about this post when she’s back in the U S OF A!)
So, I hope everyone had a nice Friday. I think a sabbatical from drinking and smoking is in order soon, no?
Filed under: alcohol | Tags: alcohol, anastasia, boyfriends, ex-boyfriend, wedding
The last five months have been interesting. The good and bad, highs and lows, sober and…well, okay rarely sober. I did it all. But I haven’t been a good friend to those who don’t live within a mile radius of my apartment. So, to them, and to you all-because we’re all friends now- I apologize.
Ask Alexis, I rarely picked up the phone when she called. When I called her back our conversations usually began with her asking “How many boxes of wine tonight?”
What? How many boxes of wine tonight? I’m not exaggerating, it was an appropriate question.
I cut back on sleeping entirely. My solid eight-hours-of-sleep winter quickly transformed into an eight-hours-of-sleep every three days, if I was lucky. My lungs hate me because I’m now officially a smoker, a fact I make no apologies for. My liver has always hated me, but it’s still kickin’.
But why did I disappear? Well, let’s talk about the ex-boyfriend ship. So, it’s like this: I’m standing at the dock talking to the captain. He tells me if I get on the ship, it could take me to an amazing place. I’m talking tropically warm with no humidity and everything I’d ever need would be right there (because that’s what it felt like when I was wrapped up in ex-boyfriend’s arms). So, I ask of the captain what the deal is with the “could” and “might” and otherwise ambiguous phrases he’s using. But he can’t tell me until I the ship leaves port. It all sounds great until I remember my tendency for seasickness (like the time ex-boyfriend “almost” cheated on me, or when he would get angry when I offered help in any given situation, or how rehearsal was always top priority even if I was visiting him from out of the country: all felt exactly like being seasick).
“Don’t get on board,” I tell myself. There are plenty of modes of transportation to get to the warmth at your disposal.
But what if. It’s the what ifs that always get me. What if this is my one moment for greatness with another human being? What if I’m giving up if I don’t seize the moment and get on the ship. What’s a little seasickness if ultimately I get to that place I dreamed of for so long?
So, at a friend’s wedding this summer, I got on board the ex-boyfriend ship. And let me tell you that ship had sailed but I forced my way on and it sank to the bottom of the fucking ocean. No, it didn’t just sink, it combusted and burned all the way down.
What a metaphor! If only I recognized this earlier. But even armored with this knowledge, when your best friend cries to you, when he weeps in your arms, when the man you would have married tells you he loves you and wants to be part of your life- well, how do you combat that?
The last story I posted is how I hoped the wedding would go down. I wanted everything to be perfect and to avoid all awkward situations with ex-boyfriend. The more I told my friends that ex-boyfriend was a figure of the past who I had moved on from, the more I realized I was only trying to convince myself. But when my planned date couldn’t make it to the wedding, I started to worry. I knew, instantly, things would not go as planned.
Ready for the story?
-Anastasia Beam
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It was all planned out: the dress, accessories, cocktails to drink, appropriate conversation, facial expressions and gestures. Every minute of the weekend had been previously thought out, dissected and plotted with precision that would have shamed NASA. This two-fold operation was going would protect me from drunkenly making a fool of myself in front of ex-boyfriend at our mutual friend’s wedding while simultaneously driving home the point that I had moved on to more important things: a better city, funnier friends, more alcohol and money. He was in the past. A minor blip on the radar. A mere time killer. A simple fuck that lasted two and a half years. Someone of no importance to me whatsoever, completely incapable of hurting me.
I am a rock. He is a blasé piece of dust that blows away faster than the time it would have taken to even notice it existed.
I hadn’t seen him in close to two years. Those two years undoubtedly went by swiftly for him. He had school, a large group of friends and rehearsals for his improv group. For me, however, those two years felt like a dozen. I spent my time consuming an insane amount of alcohol, mostly alone and in the privacy of my apartment, wasted hours at a dead end job that paid an insultingly low “salary,” and cared not of my appearance or attitude. How could I? I lost my best friend as a result of a helpless long-distance relationship. And, to make the entire experience that much better, when I felt I had finally crawled out of the dingy cave I dug myself into, he always managed to time his I-love-and-miss-you drunken phone calls so perfectly they packaged me up and sent me right back.
That cave, that depression, that weakly pathetic mentality that made me barely recognize my own face in the morning, those feelings would never be an option ever again. Thus, a plan was in order for our sour reunion.
Knowing he would be attending Friday’s rehearsal dinner, I RSVPed only to the Saturday wedding. The rehearsal dinner would have been lovely, I’m certain. But the air of mystery I created by giving no reason why I couldn’t make the dinner was more important than casual conversation with friends and listening to lofty best-man speeches.
Flying solo for weekend wasn’t an option either. In my time of need, my very lovely friend stepped up to the challenge. I couldn’t have brought a more perfect date to the wedding. He’s devastatingly handsome and devastatingly gay, with impeccable wit capable of charming the pants of even the most stone-cold faced stranger. Could I have brought one of the guys I had picked up in two years of single in the city? Easily. However, I didn’t want the possibility of a drunken revenge fuck as a result of poor conversation with ex-boyfriend to happen. Thus, I turned to one of the most sexually non threatening and lovely individuals in my life.
We checked into our hotel the morning of the wedding and began the makeover process. My dress was pressed perfectly and laid out on the bed next to a pair of brand new matching lingerie. The flat iron heated up in the bathroom as my date went over one of the most important parts of the plan: the code word.
“Brooklyn” he said
“Really? Brooklyn? You don’t think that’s obviously a cry for help?” I responded, slightly perplexed.
“In what way is that at all obvious to you? We live in New York, right?” my date responded confidently.
In reality, the word “Brooklyn” was a completely suitable code word that could be used anytime I needed to politely exit a conversation. Any discussion with ex-boyfriend had the potential of going from zero to sixty in a second: “Oh, you graduated from college? Lovely. You’re girlfriend’s a whore? Obviously”
Brooklyn. Brooklyn. Brooklyn. Abort mission. My date would come get me for a phone call, a cigarette, another conversation elsewhere, literally anything he could think of to remove me from the situation as swiftly as possible.
We spent a painstakingly long half hour straightening every strand of my hair prior to the ceremony, in preparation for contact. If the plan was to proceed properly, everything needed to be perfection. No piece could go unnoticed. I fastened the new bra to my chest and noticed a bonus gift from Victoria’s Secret. Hastily, I bought the bra without trying it on. I was pleasantly surprised with the support that upgraded my C cups to Ds. As I slipped on the black v-cut dress with ample cleave, I looked at my body and thought about the months I spent dedicating myself to green beans and a five-time a week gym regiment. I looked good. The plan was coming together. Besides, when you set the bar so low as to wear nothing but baseball t-shirts and jeans for years, it’s pretty easy to make a simple black dress look sexy.
“Ready?” My date said to me, handing me the last of my pre-wedding gin and tonic.
I tipped back the drink and finished it quickly before taking one last look at my creation in the mirror. I nervously ran my hands over the dress’ smooth black fabric. Each piece of the plan had been executed flawlessly thus far, yet those archaic promises you make to lovers took over my thoughts. At the time you believe them, but they slowly fade. Because when you spend two years with the “love of your life” it could never end poorly, right? That belief goes from factual to hopeful to non existent once the relationship ends.
I should not be thinking about this, I reminded myself. I am a rock. I am a rock.
After a short ride in the car in which I nervously (and obnoxiously, I was told) tapped the beat to whatever played-out rap song was on the radio and pulled a Britney spears when I oh-so-gracefully exited the car exposing the lower half of new lingerie, we were finally at the chapel. Comfortable is a sub-par description of how I felt in the chapel. The place was basically home. The bride and groom had met at my college and decided to marry on campus. Home field advantage was mine. Every exit had been ingrained in my memory like little red flags. Not to be blasphemous but I had vomited outside the chapel on depressingly frequent basis. I owned the place.
As I entered the chapel, I was greeted by a thrown of friends who felt like family.
And there he was: sharply dressed in the pink-accented tuxedo, accompanying someone’s grandma to her seat. He looked good, happy, like someone I used to know who just came back from a rewarding trip to Africa to cure hunger or AIDS. Truth be told, it was probably just the glazed over look in his eyes from smoking his weight in pot. As he walked down the aisle, our eyes met. Months of planning led to this exact moment: he walked towards me, keeping his eyes locked on mine for the longest fifteen seconds of my life.
“Anastasia,” he said as he reached in for a hug, “You look amazing. How are you?”
I glanced above his shoulder and waved at a friend before responding. She probably didn’t even see me.
“I’m doing very well,” I responded, careful not to sound too rehearsed “It’s so good to see you”
With this, he offered me his arm. Either he hadn’t seen my date walking up behind me or chose to ignore him.
“This is my date” I informed him, while grabbing his extended arm.
The warm, good-to-see-you smile melted off his face as he sternly shook my date’s available right arm. He had never met him, a gay man who plays straight better than most of my heterosexual male friends. Perfection. Upperhand: Anastasia.
“My date” two words. One phrase. It packed more of a punch than Muhammad Ali at his best fight. This simple two-syllable concoction alerted ex-boyfriend that there would be absolutely no ex-sex; that I had indeed moved on to bigger and better; that he no longer was an important part of my life and barely could be remembered. He didn’t need to say this, it was spelled out blatantly on his face for the rest of the night.
My date and I danced and drank, avoided ex-boyfriend conversation, and upgraded the wedding from average (at best) to New York Posh. The plan had been executed flawlessly.
I couldn’t have been happier…
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Oh, friends. Shit is about to get real awkward/intense/juicy up in this joint. For reals.
I’m posting the first part of a three part story tomorrow. Then I got another goody all about the hot mess that has become my life. Not to be missed. You’ll see.
Love, Anastasia.
Also, Alexis is doing it up Bali style right now. I didn’t even know Bali was real….but apparently she’s there…
Filed under: alcohol | Tags: alcohol, alexis, anastasia, beer, brooklyn, dress, friendship, martini, new york city, tequila, wine, women
Oh how people change. I moved away from Anastasia for a year and she did a 180 on me. Not that it is a bad thing; it’s just entertaining to reminisce about the old days.
I remember the day that she told me that gin martinis were vile and she had no idea how I could drink two of them. Text from last weekend: “I had two martinis and I could drive a car NASCAR style right now.” My, how people change. And only in a year.
I met this girl (Anastasia) who believed that beer was life’s nectar and a pair of clean jeans was acceptable for all occasions, Brooklyn was Timbuktu and going to Manhattan on a Sunday was like giving birth. Soooo painful. Video games were the only acceptable Saturday activity, exploring the wonderfulness of NYC on a weekend was out of the question.
Asking Anastasia to come into the city on a weekend was like asking for her first born. And trust me, she won’t even let me be in her wedding party, so I guarantee she won’t let me meet her first born. Even worse than asking her to come into Manhattan on a weekend was asking her to come visit me in Brooklyn. Queens to Brooklyn was like Germany to Bangladesh. Who would travel that far to visit someplace that wasn’t as cool as Germany and why? Brooklyn to Anastasia was like another world. Brooklyn didn’t exist. Queens was better than Brooklyn, hands down.
One time I went “all the way” from Brooklyn, middle of nowhere to Anastasia, to the Upper East Side-five minutes from her apartment. I asked her to meet me for happy hour. Her response? “Yeah there is no way in hell you are getting me to go to Manhattan on a Saturday.” Wow.
When we did go out, Friday’s only, Anastasia’s drink of choice? Beer. Beer. Beer. Try suggesting a tequila shot and you might get punched. I, of course, was going through my “dark” period, where tequila and gin martinis were necessary for survival, so we had a hard time seeing eye to eye on drinks.
I am not complaining, I loved down to earth Anastasia: the girl who didn’t know what a dress was (even in the brutal heat of a New York summer), thought that a skirt was the Universe’s punishment for women, museums were a waste of a Saturday and drinking wine and hard liquor was for pansies who couldn’t handle beer. I sure do enjoy drinking beer, sitting on the couch in jeans and a hoodie, but I also enjoy a fancy night out sipping wine. So imagine my surprise when I recently started hearing stories about gin martinis, tequila, dresses and Brooklyn. WHAT? Who is this woman?
Anastasia now: wine and gin has replaced beer, an occasional tequila shot isn’t out of the question and Brooklyn not only exists but is even inhabitable occasionally!
A status update about a month ago mentioned Anastasia buying a dress and I almost fell out of my chair. A dress?! One of those things that show legs and boobs? Anastasia? She has legs? Just plain crazy. Anastasia has sported five dresses this year, I’m in shock. Wonderment, if you will. I cannot wait to go sip martinis at a fancy bar with my “new” friend!
Anastasia has ventured to Brooklyn a few times, goes to museums, hangs out in the city no matter what day it is, doesn’t say: “Alexis, you know what day it is,” when I call her on a Saturday. To be blunt: she’s a martini whore now. Love it! I’m sure I have done just as much changing as Anastasia, seeing how we met each other during “dark” phases in our lives, but now that the sky has cleared, we are getting to know new sides of one another. She met me when I was face down in tequila 24/7 and I met her when Brooklyn, to her, was an abomination.
Times, they be a-changin’.
-Alexis Patron
New York is three hundred and five square miles of land. It’s the birthplace of the Harlem Renaissance, Hip Hop, Punk, Expressionism and millions of unique individuals. Over eight million call it home, thirty six thousand of which are homeless (almost half children). One hundred and seventy languages are spoken in the city and over thirty percent of its residents were born elsewhere and moved here, ideally seeking more from life. Over five thousand skyscraper makeup the city’s skyline-the most in the country and only second to Hong Kong in the world. Twenty eight thousand acres make up the city’s parks. Fourteen miles of public beaches provide an escape during those scorching summer days.
In a city like this – a city so grand- with something for everyone, how can one find animosity within its limits? It’s pretty easy. All that concrete, every mile of land, each person who takes a moment to marvel at the pretty buildings without stepping out of the way of bustling New Yorkers, hastily going from one place to the next, can easily crash into you when you’re in a bad place. It’s suffocating, really.
At the height of the summer, New York enjoyed a nine point six unemployment rate. That’s close to eight hundred thousand people struggling in one of the most expensive cities in the world. They face choices: pay rent or eat. Is scraping together twenty dollars for a beer with friends, a vain effort to lull the problems for a few short hours, a realistic option?
If you sit and think about it, it’s easy to get lost in the numbers. With my current unemployment, I’m getting lost in the numbers. My lungs hurt from the fifteen cigarettes I smoked tonight. The two beers (totaling twelve dollars) didn’t quite work as well as I had hoped. How many nights in a row can I drink myself into a stupor in a juvenile effort to ignore the thousands of thoughts and questions running through my head twenty four hours a day? Eight hours of sleep rarely provides an escape anymore.
I’m feeling beat up by the city lately. My friend calls New York the “abusive boyfriend we’ll never leave.” Because when it’s good, it’s better than any drug’s high. But when it’s bad, it will break you down if you let it. I’m not letting my temporary claustrophobia break me down, but it’s certainly making me rethink decisions I’ve made.
There’s something to be said for self discovery. It’s the most arduously necessary task we all experience eventually. I spent the majority of my adult life denying myself the right to discovery. If the process was always too complicated or if something stewed in me that I consciously sought to ignore, I’m uncertain. But I know my ignorance has caused more problems than good. Bliss only lasts so long. So I question: would I change for the better if it meant uprooting that which defined me thus far and provided years of protection from vulnerability? I hope so, but hope is rarely enough.
I won’t classify myself as self destructive, but I am a reckless little creature. Reckless in the city can be disastrous. I live in the moment, only ever looking forward to the good while disregarding the consequences of my actions. What a pity I only discovered this now.
I have been presented with an unequivocal opportunity for self discovery; to improve; to figure it all out. I don’t intend on wasting it. But to change I need to understand my old, compartmentalizing, numbing habits: recognize a problem, alienate feelings, store all emotion in the unmarked box in the back of your brain, and absolutely-without a doubt- do your best not to shake the box and stir up feelings that ultimately lead to questions. Ignore, ignore, ignore the questions and replace them with whatever clutch can temporarily carry the weight. Alcohol? Certainly. Pour another, please. Cigarettes? If that weak-kneed feeling doesn’t provide temporary absolution, then I’m not sure what will. Lust for comfort? Only if it feels good and it always will.
These distractions I perfected are paralytic. They will suffocate me eventually.
Let me use a tired metaphor. Imagine yourself trapped in a soundproof glass room. Friends, family, whomever you’re trying to communicate with surround the room. You hear their voices and process the information given. You speak but they can’t hear you. You scream but still nothing. A question replaces the screams: how much longer will they put up with this? Now, that glass room occasionally is my head; the screams my thoughts. This city doesn’t sleep for a reason: it’s loud. When your only goal is to communicate thoughts well with those you care about, the cacophony of trucks, strangers and screeching train breaks are deafening.
I don’t want to think about this mess I am in anymore. It’s making me feel trapped in the city that I’m in love with. But ignoring is no longer an option. So I sit and stare. I think and think and think, until my head hurts and my stomach is knotted. A thought forms, but before it hits my lips the words disintegrate into jumbled letters rather than a coherent sentence. I have a thousand things to say but I can’t. Not because I don’t want to but if I’m going to say them then they had better be right. And I just haven’t figured out the right way yet.
The worst part, the part that frustrates me the most, is that with any given situation I face I feel like I’m being far more dramatic than necessary. It’s like a roller coaster: a slow crawl to the top of the track where I feel I’m exploding a minor situation into a melodramatic state. I accelerate down and remind myself at the bottom that in all reality I’m a fairly laid back person. But this only adds to the confusion and makes differentiating between reality and what I’ve distorted quite difficult.
This is a brief and cynical view of where I’m at with New York right now. But it’s only because I’m in a rut. I don’t want to get lost in the numbers anymore and I won’t forever. Because there really is no place like New York. Even if I leave the city, if only for a weekend, I’m always anxious to come home. To embrace the numbers, the museums, each new friend I will make, each street I roam and breathe in, all the while knowing I’m a unique cog in the wheel that is New York. And the city just wouldn’t be the same without me.
-Anastasia Beam
Filed under: douche baggery | Tags: alexis, boyfriends, dating, girlfriend, relationships, sex, sex-ting, tequila, women
I never wanted to become the “other woman.”
It all began very innocently.
Two drunk friends upping the stakes of a regular game of fooseball. If he won, I’d kiss him, if I won… well I don’t think I got anything out of it. Doesn’t matter anyways, I lost and had to kiss him. Innocent turned into PG 13 when one kiss turned into full make-out outside in the freezing Wisconsin winter air.
Ah, but how innocent kissing turned into fucking. At his parent’s house by the way. While his mom was home. It was magical. Especially since she came and watched TV with us later…
The post-sex awkwardness did not exist. I don’t live there, so we remained friends and parted ways. It was one of those post-sex-high-five then peace out situations, very unattached and unemotional. That is my favorite situation. Of course, now every time I go back to visit I have a fuck buddy.
The second time I had a vacation romp with my old friend was during a family wedding that I swung by his work and had a little fun. His work? A funeral home. Enough said.
We didn’t really keep in touch in between our wild sexual encounters, until one day when he out of the blue emailed me. Thus beginning our email/texting long distance sex game.
We were both young, single and bored. Why not send naked pictures and talk dirty?
I had never done the cyber sex thing so I was nervous. The first picture I sent was of my butt. Very PG 13. I kept it this way out of fear that he’d show our mutual friends or he’d send them to my father. All of which would be a bad situation. We continued on the PG 13 track for months, just emailing pictures, nothing too exciting. Plus he would always mention how much “fun” we had during my visits. To be honest, the sex wasn’t great, but I enjoy the concept of having vacation sex.
After a few months of our email affair, the emails ended. I heard through the grapevine he got a girlfriend. I was bored of the cyber sex anyways, so it was good for me. Plus my fear of them ending up on facebook kept me from wanting more.
One night however, after I had stumbled home from the bar at 5am NYC time, I got a text.
“How are you? I miss our fun.”
Huh, maybe he broke up with the chica.
In fact, no he hadn’t. He still wanted to do pictures. Turns out, after two months of dating the girl, he wanted more of my action. Something I wouldn’t have wanted to offer if I was sober. Three shots of tequila and two gin martinis said different. Alcohol = horny. And I was alone.
The filter I had the previous months flew out the window as did my morals. PG 13 turned to R. He could ask me to take a picture of anything and I did it. Of course he reciprocated. Once I sobered up, I freaked out about the girlfriend thing. He said he deleted the pictures and she’d never know. What a classy fella.
In my drunken/depression months of early 2008, this continued often. Sex-ting had become the only relationship that I had. I never wanted to be the other woman and I never actually slept with him again, but I still felt like we were cheating.
Now, more than a year later it hasn’t stopped. And he is now engaged. I’ve gotten him to stop for months by saying I didn’t want to do it anymore, but he is addicted I think. He will ask me if I want a picture, I will say no and he will send one anyways. I have so many penis pictures on my phone, it’s disturbing. I delete them when I remember. He doesn’t even send them at appropriate times, like 3am on a Saturday. Now they come when I’m having dinner with my parents, or eating breakfast on a Tuesday. It’s very strange. He has put me in the category of the “other” woman and I don’t know how to get out of it. And he’s ENGAGED!
He talks about wanting to fuck me when I come visit, I just don’t know how someone can be engaged, yet completely dishonest.
I don’t reciprocate anymore with the pictures or sex conversations, but when I get drunk… well lets just hope I don’t get that drunk again.
I really don’t find looking at penis pictures to be any sort of a turn on, so I am unsure as to why he keeps sending them!
- Alexis Patron
Filed under: this and that | Tags: alexis, boyfriends, dating, men, relationships, sex, sex-ting, women
I admit that I have wondered what it would be like to be the “other woman,” but never have done it, nor do I think I would. Well, I did “accidentally” make-out with my boss who had a girlfriend, but that was just a drunken time. I’ve never dated a married man. I just don’t think I could do that. The problem is, however, I’m pretty damn close to having an affair with a taken man. And I don’t know how I ended up there.
I read the following article yesterday and decided I should write about my “sex-ting” relationship I’ve been in for the last two years. Read this article and look forward to my story about how an innocent boob shot sent to a single man, turned into years of sex-ting with a now engaged man. Oh how does it happen…
- Alexis Patron
CNN – and the lessons they teach…
Thinking about being the ‘other woman?’
Like the David Letterman Debacle wasn’t bad enough, now we have the story of Steve Phillips, the ESPN analyst, who had an affair with a 22-year-old coworker.
Unfortunately for the 46-year-old sports dude and married father of four, his latest dalliance (and apparently there’ve been others before her) turned bunny boiler when he broke it off with her.
Brooke Hundley, the jilted junior, allegedly went ballistic; repeatedly emailing and calling Phillips’ long-suffering wife, tricking their 16-year-old son into an online flirtation, and then finally showing up at the family home, scaring the crap out of everyone.
Lucky for Hundley, the Phillips’s declined to press charges, but her reputation, both professionally and personally, is shot. (His too. He’s since been fired from ESPN and has entered a treatment facility.) Obviously, being some cad’s side action is always a sucker’s game, but if you’re going to do it, do it right.
Choose carefully
It’s bad enough that you’re “dating” a married guy, but when you start sleeping with someone who’s in a position of authority over you, you’re screwing yourself twice. Every good grade will be chalked up to your romance with the professor and every promotion, credited to time served on your back. Don’t kid yourself that nobody in your class or office knows, because people aren’t blind and you’re not that slick.
Don’t go home with him
Maybe he’s too cheap to pay for a hotel room, could be he secretly wants to get caught . . . then again, maybe he’s just a sociopath, but I can’t even tell you how many times I’ve heard about a marriage dude bringing his girlfriend back to the house he shares with his wife and kids — usually when everyone’s out of town, but not always. Letterman even took his mistress on vacation with his family! Whatever his motivation, resist. You’re already hurting this woman by having sex with her husband; at least have the decency to stay out of the bed they share.
Accept that you’re No. 2
Married guys will tell you a lot of things in their quest to bed you. That they haven’t slept with their [insert bitchy descriptor here] wives for [insert insanely long period of time here] and that they’re only staying together for the [kids/finances/etc.].
You need to know going in that you will always come second. (Or third. Or fourth.) Sure, you might get expensive gifts, but you’ll also be spending nearly every holiday by your lonesome, you’ll never meet his friends, and plans will be canceled on a moment’s notice if something more important (i.e., anything) comes up.
You’re not his first . . .
When an acquaintance of mine started an affair with a married coworker, she was furious when I suggested this might not be the first time he’d strayed during his very long marriage. She screamed that I was a cynic and that their love was a special flower they alone shared. (On the conference room floor.) Okay, she didn’t use the term “special flower,” but that was the gist.
A week later I got an embarrassed call back reporting that, contrary to what he’d told her, he’d been straying since his wedding day. A cheat and a liar — who would’ve guessed?!
…And probably won’t be his last
Most guys don’t leave their wives for the women they’re seeing on the side. Yes, I know — your grand passion is “different.” Snort. But what if he actually does splinter the family into bits and make a (semi) honest woman out of you? According to the Web site, “Beyond Affairs,” only 3 percent of men marry their affair partner and out of those, only 3 percent of those marriages last. And why would they? You’re committing to a relationship that was built on lies and deceit.
On second thought, maybe you want to rethink this whole “other woman” thing.
Automatically when you wake up next to someone naked after a night a drinking, your mind races. You think, “what the fuck, what the fuck did I do last night?!” Well, luckily that wasn’t the case when I woke up to a naked Brandy on that Sunday. Don’t get me wrong, I was shocked she was naked, but I had nothing to do with that. She was passed out when I got home and I didn’t realize she was naked until the next morning. Brandy, gotta love her, she’s a good friend and another fellow bridesmaid, and yes I have motorboated her boobs, but I just wasn’t planning on sleeping with her naked.
My head hurt. I don’t think I had been that hung over in forever. And awesome, my mind – complete blank. Could not remember anything from the last two hours of my night. Fantastic. I know when I don’t remember a thing it means I must have done something super stupid.
It was time for the breakfast recap… I wanted to die a little bit.
At the traditional breakfast recap, it was Kaci, Brandy, Katie, two other girlfriends, Kaci’s mom, Kaci’s boyfriend and Kaci’s brother. Kaci’s mom peaced out early because she started throwing up. Which is typical after a traditional Montana wedding.
I was sitting next to Kaci’s brother, Ryan, who I hooked up with in college. Kaci freaked out at the time. Yeah, that didn’t go so well. So I knew better than to try and do that again… well, soberly knew better.
The stories began… which all of them seemed to revolve around me. Every time they told me about another person I mouth fucked at the reception, it was like a bullet to the head. You know, when you realize you did something super stupid? Yep. As I sat next to Ryan a sneaking suspicion came upon me… I think we made out. So of course one of the girls blurts that one out, “Hey Ryan, didn’t you make out with Alexis too?” “Nope!” He answered enthusiastically. I breathed a sigh of relief, Kaci would have killed me. But I still had a sneaking suspicion that we may have…
When Kaci wasn’t around, the other girls informed me that yes, in fact, I did mouth fuck her brother again. Awesome, just awesome. He’s hot though, so I’m not complaining!
So what did happen Saturday night? I’ll tell you this for sure… I am not allowed back in that town again! Well at least not until people forget about the shit show that I starred in on Saturday night.
Saturday
At 9am all of the bridesmaids met at the salon to get ready for four hours. We all complained, because who needs to get ready for four hours?! Turns out we needed that time. Jill allowed us two glasses of champagne each before the wedding. She didn’t want the priest to kick us out. Which was a definite possibility given the veracity of this group.
I do have to take a moment to share what happened with my hairstyle. I had one of the small town hairstylists do my hair, never doing that again. I should have just curled it myself. I asked for medium curls… 45 minutes later she is done, I look in the mirror. Holy fuck I looked like a French poodle on steroids. My hair stuck out past my shoulders in these tiny ringlets that went out of style in 1850. She loaded it with hairspray so there was no getting out of it… Wow, my friends were laughing so hard they had to excuse themselves to the bathroom so as to not offend the hairdresser. Good, I didn’t want to get laid anyways.
Luckily my hair is so thick, it calmed down before the wedding, but still was a disaster.
The wedding was beautiful and went off without a hitch. It really was a beautiful experience. But now for the fun part.
Once the wedding was over… it was time for debauchery!
We showed up at the reception hall after about an hour of pictures. It was time to drink. All of us bridesmaids had these bright yellow dresses that I referred to as my “Golden Ticket.” Meaning – I was going to get what I wanted, when I wanted. With both men and booze. I loved my “Golden Ticket.”
Shoving my way to the bar with my golden ticket, I commenced the inhalation process of alcohol. Drink of choice? Lime vodka and redbull. Nasty. Everyone else was doing it, so I jumped on board. Of course the treasured favorite of tequila came later.
Let’s piece the night together. Here is what I remember: most of the reception, making out with at least two guys, falling on the floor during an exquisite dance move, tequila, more kissing, more tequila, and finally pictures. Ohhhh the pictures. There is a beautiful picture of “snapper delight” in the bathroom. “Snapper delight” was my weekend nickname since I had a freshly waxed vag… I have no idea who had my camera and why they would take a picture over the bathroom stall. I actually don’t remember the actual dance move, but I slide across the floor and I believe I knocked over a child, who immediately started crying. I think I hear his mother say, “Oh honey, it’s just drunk Alexis being herself, she didn’t mean to karate chop you in the face with her heels.”
Here is what I don’t remember: Leaving the reception, going to the bar, the third and fourth guy I made out with getting home. Oh wait, I remember drinking a martini at the bar! Yes, I remember something from the bar!
Pictures put me at the bar after the reception, so I know I went. But the next thing I remember is running away from a guy’s car, freezing and trying to figure out how to get to my friend’s house. Why was I running? I think he was finger banging me and I finally came out of my drunk blackout, realized who I was with, and got the fuck out of there. Fast.
The guys:
1) Aaron – yes I do remember making out with him. Picture to prove it.
2) Oh shit I forgot his name… I swear I knew it before. Ok well he is like three years younger and I made out with his brother also.
3) Josh – brother of “no name” listed above. Also, the same guy who I remember running away from his car. What is my thing with brothers? This is the fourth set of brothers. My god. Plus I have made out with two of my best friend’s brothers. Jesus. That is a weird phenomenon. Gotta love similar DNA.
4) Kaci’s brother – which to this day we will both deny… and I cannot 100% guarantee it, but the girls say I did. And I have a lot of pictures with him, so I’m assuming I did.
The recap breakfast was very informative. I spent most of the time shaking my head. And saying “yep, yep, I did do that.” But that wasn’t the worst part. It was going to Jill’s mom’s house for presents and seeing all the adults from the wedding. I was greeted with laughter and “oh shit, you were tanked last night.” Lets just say, I made an impression.
-Alexis Patron
