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Irony Is So Very Delicious Friday, June 15, 2007

Posted by T-Bomb in Thought, Women.
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It is surprisingly difficult to come up with a post for this page every day. Who would’ve thought? A paragraph or two here, a witty thought there, throw in an exclamation point and, voila! Another marvel of creative writing.

Yeah, right. It probably takes me a good hour to turn out one of the shorter postings and the long ones can take half a day. But this one today is different. This one wrote itself! I am finishing this up at half-past 4, central time, and what I am about to say literally happened in the last 2 hours.

I had a rare day off from work today, but I had to stop by the office to pick up some medical records pertaining to a research project I have been laboring in vain to complete. I was in the car, listening to music on my awesome iPod shuffle Kim bought me during a happier time, listening to, of all things, “The First Cut Is The Deepest” by Cheryl Crow, crossing through an intersection where one of the local highways discharges its burden of daily commuters, when a certain silver car stopped at the light caught my eye. I turned my head to the right to look and, sure enough, the face through the windscreen was one I recognized very well. It is a face that haunts my memories, my dreams, my soul.

Yes. While listening to Kimberly’s iPod playing a love song about still wanting someone by my side I drove right by her.

It gets better. I got home a mere half-hour later and received a call from a woman who I met a few days ago and with whom I had dinner plans with this evening. In her very sweet voice she informed me that she had to break our night’s engagement because, she said, she has been trying to get back together with her last boyfriend and did not feel right about seeing me.

Holy shit. First I see Kim, then I am stood up by a woman who is attempting to patch things up with her ex. I am not making this up; I could never think of something this good!

Kim, you wrote me once and said that you did not know what the future would hold between us and that, if we were meant to be together than it would somehow work out.

How is that for a sign that we are meant to be together?

Breakfast, Anyone? Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Posted by T-Bomb in Observations, Women.
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One of my favorite memories about Kim is one I call “The Flapjack Fiasco.” First of all, the mere fact that she cringes at the word flapjack is good for a chuckle. Like watching her cringe at the word moist. As in, “Man, these are some moist flapjacks!” Kim, if you are out there reading this, than MOIST…MOIST…MOIST!!! That probably engaged the gag reflex, didn’t it?

Anyway, Kim, because she is so sweet, wanted to make pancakes one morning. She got out all the ingredients and prepared the batter. She heated up a skillet on the range top and doled out the first dollop of the mix onto its surface. Now, as we all know, the first pancake is always sacrificial; it never comes out right. It is the mutant that is usually fed to the dog! Yet I could immediately tell that Kimberly was irritated with this lesser specimen, almost as if the pancake was mocking her. Over my protests, she tossed the hapless jack into the sink and doled out mix for another. The aroma at this point, by the way, was heavenly.

The second pancake began to cook and it became instantly clear that it would not meet the exacting standards of the cook so, accompanied by a short string of curses, it was summarily lobbed into the sink, where it sullenly ran down the stainless steel sidewall and came to rest on top of its sacrificial cousin.

Somewhere around this time, extra milk was added to the batter to thin it out somewhat, and a third pancake was attempted. This one immediately began to run, amoeboid, every which way in the pan until it began to quickly brown. This was more than Kimberly could take. “Son of a BITCH!!” she exclaimed, and tossed both the protean pancake and the remaining batter into the sink.

I could not hold it in any longer; I put both my arms around her and began laughing uncontrollably. She was so irritated and looked so forlorn, my pancake perfectionist. I know it only stemmed from her thwarted attempt at doing something nice for me, but I wish she would have known it did not matter a whit; the simple act of her making me pancakes was more than enough. I would have happily eaten the art-deco pancakes; hell, I would have licked the batter out of the bowl!

She calmed down, whipped up another batch of batter, and made me the best pancakes I have ever eaten. They were flawless in every way.

The reason I am bringing this up? Not too long before this, I had a similar meltdown while trying to make deviled eggs for the two of us! Aargh, I couldn’t peel the shells off those fucking eggs to save my life! And of course, she had a tremendous laugh at my consternation.

Kim, the two of us are so very much alike. Thank you again for the pancakes.

The Run For The Sun Monday, May 14, 2007

Posted by T-Bomb in Heartbreak, Women.
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I did it. I just got back from Kimberly’s apartment. I camped out beside her garage and met her at the door when she arrived home. I sat across from her while she read the tortured outpouring of my heart. She smiled a little and cried a little. She is so beautiful when she smiles. Just seeing her again filled me with life and joy. Unfortunately, my joy was fleeting.

My fairy-tale did not come true. I am not suprised, but I am bitterly disappointed. God, I can still smell her hair on my skin! Her embrace was the song of my heart – it was the song of everything that is right and beautiful and lovely with the world. Sadly, it may be all I ever have to remember of her.

I fear that I am too late. Kim told me that she is no longer in love with me, that she is a different person now. She tearfully waited for weeks by the phone after we broke up, praying I would call her. I have hurt her worse than even I had feared.

I tried to make her believe that I will never hurt her again. I tried to make her believe that I am ready to give to her everything she had wanted and more, unhesitatingly. I tried to convince her that if she would only allow me a second chance that I would spend months and months doing everything right.

I told Kimberly that I could see us moving in together, that I would happily pay for her violin lessons that she is discontinuing to save money. I even told her that if she could envision a future with me and wait for me to finish up my training program that I would happily put her through her degree program, the program she has dreamed about attending.

It was to no avail. I do not know what to do. My entreaties have fallen on deaf ears. My Kimberly is steadfast. She has been dating some for over 2 months who is exactly the opposite of the way I was when she and I were together. She told me she would remain loyal to him and needed to see where it would lead.

I asked her if she loved him.

I begged her not to let him steal her heart away from me forever.

I have no idea what I should do now. I know there is something real here, but I do not think I can convince her of this and I am quite certain she will now try to keep me at a distance.

So now I will continue to breathe and hope that my love has gotten under her skin. It is a long shot, but it is all that I have now.

I love you, Kimberly

-Joshua

This Is Going To Be A Little Tricky… Monday, May 14, 2007

Posted by T-Bomb in Heartbreak, Thought, Women.
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When I was a junior in college I met a women named Jennifer. It was late summer of 1995, sometime in September, and the weather in Gainesville, Florida was just perfect. The late-morning sun was strong and clear; it filtered through the trees in front of the lecture hall while I stood, waiting for my friend’s Physics lecture to conclude. I can scarcely believe that that moment, as I peered into the sun-dappled entrance-way, would be the last untroubled, peaceable moment of my life up to this point. Heartbeats later, my friend emerged and introduced me to a woman who accompanied him; a woman whom he only knew in passing; a woman who would soon become the love of my life. I will not completely tell the story of Jennifer – It would take far too long and is beyond the point of what I am attempting to achieve today. I only mention her peripherally because what would come to pass between us would serve to shape the course of my life over the next decade far more powerfully than literally any other event, including my own graduation, acceptance into Medical school, selection of my career path, even the loss of my Grandfather.

Suffice it to say, we are not talking about small peanuts here. The story can be distilled to this: boy meets girl; boy falls madly in love with girl and vows to win her heart; boy writes tortured, heartfelt lines of poetry to girl; boy finally, in a moment of inspiration, shows poetry to girl and confesses undying love to girl the day before Valentine’s day knowing full well that girl would be receiving 4 dozen roses, each dozen delivered every 2 hours, that next day; boy wins girl in fairy-tale ending (oh, joy); boy, out of sheer, Brobdingnagian idiocy breaks up with girl; boy falls into overwhelming, interminable well of despair which lasts over 5 years; boy vows never to love again.

I am somewhat insouciant in my manner now, but this was an emotional supernova. I broke up with Jennifer, quite badly I might add, only to realize a short time later, when she called to tell me she would not be attending the same Medical school as I, that I may actually never see her again. That was a conversation that I will likely never forget and, in retrospect, am astonished that I even survived; astonished that my heart did not simply explode out of despair and unmitigated terror. My need became so great that it prompted me to, in the dead of winter, hop into my 2-seat roadster and drive straight through, 19 hours, from Philadelphia to Gainesville, in the middle of an ice storm to win her back. I am not exaggerating one iota.

The depression I suffered was so total that it took on proper noun status. Depression. Much in the fashion of a marionette, I was merely going through the motions of life. Imagine trying to cope with the daily pressures that accompany one’s first year of Medical school in this state of mind. Imagine endless days of pain and sadness, sleepless nights, and a total disconnect from the world around me. Imagine having no support system, withdrawing from family and friends, and finding pleasure in absolutely nothing. I was in a hot dryer on spin cycle. It is a wonder I even survived, much less graduated.

But graduate I did. I even began to see a way out of my prison. Time slowly, inexorably healed me. Yet the scars would last forever, and were often surprisingly fresh. Her eventual marriage was my closure. She exists only as a memory to me; a few perfect moments never to be forgotten. After several years (read: years) I began dating again, but my heart was never completely in it. I always remained distant. I became a master at distance-keeping, a relationship prestidigitator. Any woman in question who thought she had discovered something substantial would quickly realize it to be ephemeral, gossamer, ersatz. Before Jennifer I was an unabashed, unapologetic, hopeless romantic. All that I ever dreamed of was love, a family, and a future. The jagged fallout from my previous attempt at obtaining my dreams lacerated my ventricles, crushed my soul, and disabused me of such future notions forever, or so I thought.

Then I met Kimberly, the star who shone so brightly.

Kimberly is so full of life it is impossible not to smile when she is around. The first time she saw me, I learned much later, she was interested in me but thought I was married. What I never told her, because I never mentioned a word about Jennifer to her (remember: prestidigitator), was that the ring she saw was not a wedding ring but a birthday gift from Jennifer that I still frequently wore. To avoid the topic altogether I told her the ring was my Grandfather’s, by the way.

I stopped wearing that ring a few months into my relationship with Kim. This is a point worth remembering: Kimberly does not even know this but she broke the ring’s hold over me.

Needless to say, I was not married, and quickly took an interest in Kim from the first time I saw her. It was immediately obvious to me that she was different than the other women I had taken to dating. Kimberly had a vibrance and a spirit that made even the most mundane activities all the more enjoyable. She got excited every Wednesday because it was Shred-Pro day. Shred-pro day! I have never been so overjoyed at the sight of a huge, mobile document shredder-on-wheels, nor would I ever have thought to be before Kim.

Our initial relationship was wonderful. Our first date was magical. I have already written about it, but kissing her for the first time was the perfect, pregnant stillness before the storm, the early morning sheets of warm, perfumed spring rain. It did not take long for her to become tremendously special to me.

I brought Kimberly to my Mother’s wedding one year ago today. This is another point worth remembering: Kimberly was becoming so important a person in my life that, scarcely knowing her for 6 weeks, I brought her to a momentous family occasion.

My family thought the angels had wept and created Kim in their image! She was so elegant in demeanor, so vibrant in personality that she had them all eating out of her palm. I swear that my mother became more excited over Kimberly than over the prospect of her own marriage.

Not long after this, our relationship progressed to the point of my terror threshold. Kim had penetrated farther beneath my armor than any woman since Jennifer; the irony was she was beginning to complain that she scarcely knew me. The more primitive, more survival-oriented parts of my being began a chorus of protest, haphazardly flinging disordered bundles of painful memories to the forefront of my consciousness as a child tosses about a pile of colored blocks. “We have been through this before,” they intoned. “We have tottered on the precipice. We have peered into the endless depths of the chasm through eyes blurred with hot, saline tears and we cannot, we must not venture further.”

I became increasingly panicked from her proximity to my life, yet at the same time I enjoyed virtually every moment I spent with her. Going to dinner with her. Baking cookies with her. Listening to her play the violin. Did I mention she plays the violin? The instrument that sounds most like a beautiful female voice? Going to the symphony with her and being moved to tears by a virtuoso while holding her hand. Forcing her to watch my favorite movies with me. Watching “Seinfeld” reruns with her. Attempting to learn from her how to properly iron a shirt.

My first measured act was to create an imperceptible emotional space for myself by simply limiting the time we spent together. I made sure we did not see much of each other during the week; work was an easy excuse. Yet even as I continued to look forward to spending time with her, even though she never pushed me for more time or more attention, my fractured ego clamored for more space.

My solution was startling in its pure, genius-level idiocy. Sometimes, after I would have a cocktail or two, I would let some pearl of wisdom slip, like a chunk of ice, from my lips. “You are too intrusive” was one particularly brilliant turn of phrase. Can you imagine how Kimberly must have felt on her drive home after I let that one slip when she was dropping me off? The standards, “I don’t believe in marriage”, and “I’d never let some woman ruin my life”, were uttered at one time or another. These became my defense mechanism, my potential escape hatch, my subtle brand of sabotage. My intent was not to be cruel. Quite the opposite. I was trying to protect myself, for even the remote potential of a hurt like I had (barely) survived the first go-around was more risk than I could tolerate.

It never once occurred to me to share these fears with Kimberly. Sometimes we are so blinded by an obstacle in our path the alternative way completely escapes notice. Or, more to the point, sometimes we live within a paradigm for such a lengthy time, sometimes we become so inured to a course of action, we lack the capacity to see what is, in retrospect, so very clear.

The first time Kimberly told me she loved me was a pivotal moment. She did not mean to do it, and clearly she was terrified that it would drive me away instantly and completely. She exhibited more courage in that moment than I had demonstrated in the previous 6 months. I would expect nothing different from Kimberly.

It was wonderful to hear, even though I had long sensed such a powerful sentiment existed in her. A part of me resonated with joy. My stomach did several lazy flip-flops and my heart pounded! A much greater part of me nearly fainted from sheer fright. Women are not supposed to fall in love with me. I have long believed that I am ordinary, unremarkable. I have lived my life in quiet obscurity.

Kimberly had an indefatigable ability to believe in me more than I have dared believe in myself. Imagine that. I could not convince her otherwise. Not ever. Kimberly knows me better than I know even myself. There have been times when she has actually made me believe in myself. Wow.

In the end, even that could not loosen the grip of fear immobilizing my heart. So on an ordinary evening, 2 days after Christmas, I found myself sitting on Kimberly’s sofa with her dog, Misha, wondering why she had shuttered herself in the bathroom. When she emerged, when this lovely, caring, wonderful woman steeled herself to face me, her beautiful face was hidden behind a mask of sheer, naked despair and hopelessness. Kimberly walked out to face me and suddenly I was looking into a mirror, looking at my own face as it appeared 10 years ago, as I was approaching the absolute depths of my unending emotional agony.

I had caused this. Every day I could not reassure Kimberly there was the hope for a future she died a little more inside until she could bear it no more. I had subjected her to a progressively worsening string of sleepless nights and anxiety. I knew I could do this no more. I could not continue to selfishly bask in the warmth of her love while offering her little in return. I could no longer make her feel, as she put it, “as if I were dating her until I found something better”.

I tried to explain to her. I tried to apologize to her for the hurt I was causing. In the end, there was nothing left for me to do except get up, softly walk through the door, and close it on her crumbling world. I could still hear her fading sobs as my footfalls echoed down the corridor. Each one squeezed my heart further into a small, hard stone.

I had arranged to take care of Misha the next day so Kimberly would not have to drive her to her parents’ home in her precarious state. I also knew I would have to remove my belongings and do the ultimate act of finality: return my set of keys. I awoke the next morning and entered her home, a home that was so familiar and special to me while at the same time suddenly so cold and lifeless. Kim had neatly stacked my belongings on the kitchen table. My toothbrush had been unceremoniously deposited in the bathroom wastebasket the prior evening. She also left me 2 notes, one handwritten, the other typed and crumpled up in a ball, as if she initially had decided to discard it but hastily, reflexively left it out anyway.

The notes are hauntingly beautiful. I could instantly picture the tears and the sadness on her face as she wrote them. I read and re-read each note. Then I briefly lay down on her side of her bed with my face on her pillow and cried. Misha jumped up next to me and began to lick my cheek. I collected her and my belongings and exited. After spending the day with Kimberly’s dog, whom I love very much, I returned her to her momma’s apartment, carefully made the bed, and sat down to write a note of my own. In it I reiterated how deeply sorry I was for the hurt she was experiencing and told her I was not worthy of the gift of her love. I left my keys on the key-hook, looked around one last time, and slowly closed the door. It sealed with the finality of a stone sarcophagus. It was Thursday evening, December 28th.

What Kimberly does not know is this: I read the notes she wrote me almost every day. I keep them in a very special box in my home and take them out virtually every morning. I have done so for one very important reason – I knew that if I was going to throw away such a perfect love, I must remind myself every day precisely of what I was losing.

Several weeks later, on January 18th, Kimberly emailed me another letter. It was so full of hurt, loneliness, and longing that it stilled my heart. It was terrifying in its sheer force of will, as if Kimberly was attempting to reach through my computer screen and shake me until she got through to me. I have a copy of this letter in every single email inbox I have. I read it often, and it both hurts and shames me every single time.

Today is Mother’s Day, May 13th. For the past several weeks, for just about a month, something both curious and disconcerting has been gathering force. I have been thinking about Kimberly with increasing frequency. I have thought about her quite a bit since late December, especially when looking at her letters, but this is somehow different. I have been seeing her face constantly on blonde passers-by on every street corner in my neighborhood. I catch the scent of her perfume in the spring breezes as I am outside having coffee. Most of all, I see her car everywhere. Oh, how I have come to hate that particular model of vehicle with fervent, almost religious, passion because every time I see one my pulse shoots through the roof.

I have begun to wake up in the mornings frequently disoriented, shaking off the fading haze of a dream of her soft embrace. I have grown increasingly more uneasy and distracted by these events that operate wholly outside my control. It has become obvious to me that there has been an insidious, inexorable loosening of the moorings, snaps, and buckles I have used to hold both my life and my sanity together.

I cannot stop thinking about Kim. Her name flashes with an angry urgency inside my head that, despite my best efforts to quell it, is increasing in intensity. For the past 2 weeks I have had to actually engage this new voice of my subconscious in rational debate over why my course of action these last 4 months has been the correct one. It fades into the background for a while only to later return. The urgent voice keeps returning over and over again.

Sometimes a course of action is so clear, so insistent in logic and marvelous in perfection, one must wonder how it could have remained hidden for so long. How many more people have to tell me, no matter how brief their interaction with her, that Kimberly is so special and so unique that the dissolution of our relationship borders on tragic? Could they have been correct all along? Could my family, friends, and colleagues be seeing the obvious with such perfect clarity that they can merely lower their heads at my obtuseness? Is this single, clear, insistent voice the voice of my heart? I think I may be in trouble.

Sometimes a course of action is so clear, so perfect, so right that to not take it would cause irreparable harm to the soul. I have realized, just yesterday morning, this very fact. I cannot keep this at bay any longer. Something so huge, so fundamentally different has happened within me that it has taken me several weeks to even realize what it is.

Kimberly, I only lied to you once – I lied about the origin of the ring I wore. I never lied to you about the most important thing because you never directly posed the question, sparing me the need to decide how to answer. My dual sins were of omission and of leading you to false assumption. Kimberly, I know that you likely are confused and somewhat taken aback by my words. I do not mean to cause you further hurt. It is 1 am on Monday, May 14th and I have been composing these words I could say for over 12 hours. Now close your eyes, Kim, and take a very deep breath.

Kimberly, I am in love with you. These are the most important words I have ever written. I am trying to change the course of 2 lives forever. Until I met you I thought that Jennifer was the love of my life, that I could never love again. Until I met you I thought mine was destined to be a life devoid of long, loving relationships with the possibility of a future. I thought that fear of future devastation would preclude even the consideration of love and happiness.

It took me 10 years to realize this: a life without someone to share all the moments that make life worth living is like locking Monet’s canvasses in a steel box or destroying Stradivarius’ violins. Every moment that has been wonderful, special, and memorable since I have moved here I have shared with you, Kim. The moments were that way because of you. This is why I walk around our neighborhood and see you reflected everywhere; each encounter reminds me of a moment made special by you.

I love you so much that it has made me realize the pitiful, self-destructive idiocy of my behavior. You were right about me every single day. You know me better than I know myself. You knew that I must have loved you and tried daily to gently, patiently coax it out of me. Now it pours forth like a raging river.

I want to cook for you. To hold you. To bury my face in your hair and smell your soft skin. I want to laugh with you. To take walks with you. To sleep in late with you. To help you pick out what you are going to wear. I want to buy you flowers. Jewelry. Stupid little trinkets that only you and I would laugh at. I love you so much that you have made me imagine a future with you in it and it does not seem nearly as frightening to me as a future without you.

I have all your letters out, surrounding me, and I keep reading them over and over again as I write. I am sorry I never was honest with you about my precarious emotional state. I am sorry to have made you pay for my mistakes with another. I want to spend weeks and months making amends, if you will only let me. Kimberly, I have finally realized that you have given me the most valuable, precious gift I have ever received: you have taught me how to love again. You have single-handedly done something that 10 years of time and my entire family and all my friends could not do. I am sorry it took me 9 + 4 months to come to terms with that. Please forgive me for my weakness. Please know that now I am as vulnerable and as scared as you have been.

If any of your tremendous capacity to love me remains within you, please allow me just one chance to come back into your life. You are everything to me, Kimberly. You are my family. I have set you apart from every other person in my life. Please fill my heart with light and life and happiness again. Kimberly, whose eyes are the color of storm clouds reflected off the surface of the Pacific. Allow me to prove to you that I believe in you the way that you have believed in me.

I am mentally and emotionally exhausted. It is almost 2 am. I am going to get some sleep, and when I wake up I will ensure that after you get home from work you will read these words. I only hope that in your eyes it is not too late.

Come up to meet you, tell you I’m sorry, you don’t know how lovely you are

I had to find you, tell you I need you, tell you I’ve set you apart.

Tell me your secrets, and ask me your questions, Ah let’s go back to the start.

Running in circles, comin’ in tales, heads only science apart.

Nobody said it was easy; It’s such a shame for us to part. Nobody said it was easy; No one ever said it would be this hard… oh take me back to the start.

I was just guessing at numbers and figures, pulling the puzzle apart.

Questions of science, science and progress could not speak as loud as my heart.

But tell me you love me, come back and haunt me, oh and we’ll rush to the start.

Running in circles, chasing our tails, coming back as we are.

-The Scientist; Coldplay

My love always,

Joshua

Remember Me? Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Posted by T-Bomb in Thought, Women.
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Wow. It has been roughly forever since I have posted on this page! It came down to poor timing; it is difficult to write about funny dating experiences when you are, in point of fact, DATING the same woman for an extended period. Like 9 months. The woman I wrote wonderous lines of prose about ended up my girlfriend for that period of time. We broke up December 27th, right after Christmas. Oh, and the kicker? She gave me an iPod shuffle. Wow. So I suppose I should dust off my keyboard and begin posting again. After all, I have become somewhat known – I got my first comments on a post not too long ago! Many thanks to the 2 people who realized there were things on the World Wide Web better than porn.

Here is an excellent thought for the evening: how do you figure out if ending things with someone special was an excellent move or, indeed, the biggest mistake of your life?

First Dates, First Kisses, Twisters… Sunday, April 2, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in St. Louis, Women.
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It has been an absolute whirlwind of a week. There is a bit of a romance blossoming between Kim and me, and it is both wonderful and trememdously fun. For all you first-daters, I highly recommend dinner at Moxy on Laclede in the CWE. I reserved a window table for our first official date and the evening could not have been better!

We started off with the baked herbed goat cheese appetizer. Garlic-infused oil and wonderful, chunky whole-grain bread accompanied by soft, delicious chevre complimented our conversation nicely. I drank Penfolds and stared into those beautiful eyes as she laughed and flashed that sparkling smile.

Dinner for me was this phenomenal roast duck entree with herbed wild rice and steamed spinach. The duck was cooked to perfection, flavorful and not at all fatty or greasy. Kim had a delicious salmon glazed with a kind of honey maple reduction that was truly excellent.

After dinner we walked, hand in hand, to Brennan's, my favorite haunt in the West End. We sat in the cozy loveseat-for-two tucked back in the wine cellar. You could not imagine a more romantic backdrop: cozy booth, candlelight, the wonderful, earthy aroma of cigars and old wood. Our first kiss was electric, momentous. I felt the world spin beneath my feet in the ineluctable press of her soft, moist, slightly parted lips.

Later that evening, after we said goodnight, we made plans for Sunday brunch. Wildflower is my chosen spot in my neighborhood – I love their Eggs Benedict. Be both tried one of the specials: Maryland Benedict, consisting of poached egg and hollandaise sauce on top of their signature crab cake. Wow. Good stuff indeed.

Afterwards, we stopped by my place, right around the corner. We had planned on heading to the Museum of Art but never made it. Quit your naughty thinking! Nothing like that happened – it was only our second date.

So of course, later that afternoon, as we are talking, all hell breaks loose outside because some monster storm cell decides to blow through the area!

Now Kim has some training in Meteorology, and briefly considered it as a career. She looks out my window and up at the sky above Parc Frontenac and turns pale. "Wow", she exclaimed to me. "Look at that sky. Those are updrafts! Things are being sucked off of the ground!"

No sooner do these words tumble from her lips then, as if on cue, the severe weather siren sounds. Kim looks out the window, looks at the swirling winds and a sky turning the ugly grey-green of an ageing bruise, and through numbed lips tells me that she has never been this scared!

Whoa. Here is someone who has spent her entire life in the St. Louis metro area, has actually been in a tornado when she was 16, and is telling me she has never been so terrified by the weather conditions. That did it for me. I grabbed her in one arm, a flashlight in my other, and we retreated into the bathroom. 

Fortunately, this fast-moving beast blew by in about 10 minutes. It did bring down trees in Forest Park and even damaged the Boat House, a place which I have been longing to go for brunch. Needless to say, I was spitting four-letter epithets and lamenting my migration from California! Stupid Midwest. I did know we would be fine though, because we were not in a trailer park! Why are those things magnets for twisters? It is amazing – it's like some maniacal hoosier-hating fuck is at the controls of the storm and maliciously steers it RIGHT FOR the shiny white boxes! Bye-bye, mullets!

Soon after, she said good-night and we parted. There is definitely potential here. Thanks, AEG, for a wonderful weekend!  

The Power, The Glory, The Delicious Possibilities… Friday, March 24, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in Thought, Women.
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Something magic happened today. An entire new chapter in my life, one full of potential firsts, is unfurling before my incredulous eyes. Someone who just days ago I scarcely knew has inserted herself in an obital path around my world. She did this with one simple word – “yes”.

This is the best part. The very beginning, my very favorite. This is when everything is as new and as perfect as a new baby’s skin. Like pushing a pebble down a slope, I have passed into her stream. I have created an undeniable eddy current in the flow of her life. Everything that transpires between us, even the seemingly small and insignificant, takes on a light and a weight and a gravitas because of the promise, that oh so delicate, inchoate promise, that this may lead someplace wonderful.

Like that tiny pebble rolling down the slope, aspiring only to become a great landslide, a great many things must play out in perfect sequence for this diaphanous, fragile spark to morph into a steady, powerful flame. Even the tiniest whisper could consign it to darkness; the eddy smooths itself out; the pebble, kinetic energy spent, peters out to stillness…

Where will this lead? I haven’t an idea in the slightest. But each perfectly formed word, each flash of smile, each glint of her blue-grey eyes will further push me over the precipice.

I love this most of all, the very beginning, the perfect stillness, the storm clouds silently gathering. All because Kim met my gaze with her gaze and said, “yes”.

Womanly Perfection Thursday, March 23, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in Women.
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My favorite spot on a woman’s body:

The tender hollow where the base of her neck flows down to her soulder. I like to nuzzle that magical place, my cheek buried in the wonderful, scented cave of her hair, and gently kiss, tasting her perfect, smooth, creamy skin while listening to the soft reverberation of her heartbeat.

It is one of those beautiful moments I would choose to have last forever.

Those Things In Life Which Scare Us The Most… Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in Women.
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Women generally scare the shit out of me. Especially beautiful, blue-eyed ones. I have been trying to figure out why. I think I have finally come up with a theory. This is sort of like working on the Grand Unified Theory of fucking Physics!

I have alot to offer a person. I am reasonably intelligent and well-read, have a career, put the toilet seat down after going to the bathroom (thanks, mom), am a passable cook in the kitchen and am an above-average dresser. Here is the thing, though: meeting women is usually an intense, pressure-filled, all-or-nothing crucible, at least for me.

My trepidation stems from this: I meet a woman. She looks into my eyes with her chilly, precise, calculating gaze, sizing me up, thinking god-knows-what. In that moment, none of am, what I feel or what I think matters a whit. None of it. In relationships, all that comes later. At this moment, this initial moment, it does not exist.

So she sizes me up and, despite all those things which hold dear, those things which matter most to me and make me who I am, she still may find me wanting.

No wonder women scare the shit out of me! To knowingly face such a powerful, ego-crushing scenario is crazy! It has got to be against nature or something. No wonder people take Valium!

Anyway, I spoke to Kim today. I actually held it together for an entire conversation. My ears didn’t even turn red! I don’t know how I managed this, because I scarcely remember a word of what transpired. all I remember are her eyes. Blue-grey eyes the color of the Pacific on a misty day. Unexpected, chilly, precise marvels of calibration, sizing me up.

Perhaps I should take a Valium in the morning before going to work, because I HAVE TO ASK HER OUT!!! AARRRGGHHHH!!!!

Who’s the hottie now? Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in Women.
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Ever been at work, in the midst of an ordinary morning, when suddenly you get some news anything but ordinary? Well read about this.

I work with a guy named Brad. Good guy. Always looking out for me. He motions me over about midmorning to tell me some news. Kimber, a young lady who works in our department, was mentioning to Brad how cute she finds me and how she always wishes she could have a better chance to sit and talk with me. Brad, good man that he is, tells me this.

Kimber is tall, thin and not unattractive. Needless to say, one with an ego humble as my own is rather flattered by this unexpected attention. So, ego sufficiently bolstered, what do I then proceed to do? That’s right. Ask Brad about a completely different woman.

Look, I am a guy after all. Believe me, I’d like to do stuff to Kimber. But since a subject was broached that I did not have the courage to bring up myself, namely, a woman at work I am interested in, I decided to go for the brass ring.

“Brad”, I say, “since you mentioned this, what can you tell me about that unbeliveabely cute, tall blonde that works back around here?” The blonde in question’s name is Kim.

Now this blonde is no ordinary blonde. Kim. 3 letters. One syllable. Perfect. I have only seen her a couple times and have not had a chance to meet or speak with her but it nonetheless has taken me no longer than 35 seconds to realize that I MUST. HAVE. HER. Seriously, she is tall, elegant (even at work), has a beautiful smile and walks everywhere in a bubble of baited stillness. She is so lovely tulips and hyacinths bloom in the wake of her footsteps.

So Brad, voice dropping to a conspirational tone, informs me that Kim is rather newly single, ladies and gentlemen. It seems her boyfriend of some time moved back to his South American country of origin with no plans to return to his wonderful, lovely girlfriend.

IDIOT!

“Huh, boy”, I say. “I sure would like to get to know her better.” Thinking all the while – yeah, right, like you would ever have the minerals to even say “Hi” to Kim, much less ask for her number.

Well, about 2 hours later, shit got interesting. Apparently Brad, under no instruction whatsoever from me, briefly brought up my name to Kim, who he knows rather well. So he comes back to me and basically says, “Dude, she would be completely wild about you asking her out.”

FUCKING WAY TO BE, BRAD!!

I know this is sounding slightly ridiculous and High School-ish, but seriously, imagine how undeniably awesome it is finding out that a beautiful woman with whom you have become somewhat smitten shows some interest in you as well. That all the while you were looking at her, pulse throbbing in your brain like a Porsche’s tires flying over the expansion joints of the Golden Gate bridge, she was looking right back at you and thinking to herself you were a bit of a hottie. Or in my case, maybe just mildly cute. Whatever. I will take it.

Things were about to get a little better because another Kim was about to get involved. So many Kims! Can’t keep them straight.

Apparently a bunch of the people I work with are really pulling for me because Kim, who got wind of this whole thing, walks into the room chatting happily about tonight’s “American Idol” with beautiful, perfect, elegant Kim! Wow. So I get to briefly meet her and the two of them leave. 5 minutes later Kim, my friend, my dear, dear, kick-ass friend, saunters back in with a huge shit-eating grin and says to me, “dude, she thinks you are a total hottie.”

And there you have it. I am a hottie. Needless to say, I had some difficulty concentrating on what I was doing the rest of the day. Now I just have to figure out how to actually approach her and tell her I want to see her.

You would think that would be easy after the background info I now have. You’d think that. But you don’t know me at all, do you?

What good things a breeze may bring Monday, March 20, 2006

Posted by T-Bomb in Observations, Women.
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One of the more enjoyable things I have found which suffuses an otherwise ordinary day, ever so briefly, with pure vibrancy, is a perfume-laden breeze. Let me explain:

I will be walking outside when a woman will catch my eye. Our paths will cross and I will usually smile or say a quick hello but the part I wait for is when she passes by. Bare moments after she has passed forever out of the envelope in which I live my life I will briefly catch her scent. It is a complex, diaphanous amalgam of freshly washed hair, perfume, skin lotion, even the leather of purse or shoes. I will close my eyes, sometimes pause for a moment, sometimes even look back as she departs, shoes clicking smartly on concrete and hair trailing behind her. I will enjoy this fleeting moment of intimacy with a complete stranger I likely will never come to know and it always brings me, however briefly, a trememdous moment of pure joy.

Who knew?