Today, she left.
Since October 13th, I've spent all my waking, non-office hours (for the most part) with my other half. She ostensibly came in for the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, but the truth is we've found a way to dot the calendar with time spent together, and it just worked out that she was here during the holiday.
For the most part, there's nothing better than seeing her for the first time after we've gone awhile without being together. And consequently, there's nothing more difficult than putting her in a cab and watching as the taillights vanish into the traffic as she makes her way back to JFK for a flight away from here.
Today was a strange day. We both had a load of stuff to do -- me in my office and at the NYC Department of Buildings, she on her laptop and around the City. For my part, I got a bunch of stuff done in the office before I headed downtown to get a couple of key matters resolved; I was successful in one but not in another. She got everything on her end done, including all her work and a picking up a couple of little things to bring back to her nephews from NYC. So once I wrapped my business up at the DoB around 5 -- I immediately grabbed a train and headed back uptown to spend an hour or so with her before she left.
What I've discovered, aside from the obvious, is that long-distance relationships are obscenely unfair. Essentially, life is hard enough in general without having to say goodbye to the one you love after only a week or two or three together; and since both of our schedules are hectic and far from flexible -- deadlines (both statutory and suddenly-appearing), birthdays and events, family situations, etc. -- it's even more difficult to say goodbye to one another without having planned the next visit. We have a few ideas as to when we'll next see each other -- mid-November looks promising -- but it could also be as far away as December. We haven't made much in the way of New Year's plans, which is fine -- as long as we're together, we'll have fun -- but whereas most people are thinking about where they'll be on New Year's Eve, we're trying to figure out in which City we'll celebrate it. It's a little daunting in its scope, and if it wasn't worth it we'd have found that out by now.
So why do we? Well, we're trying to iron out the details of when she'll eventually move here, what that will mean vis-a-vis her company and her job with same, and whether we'll move in together right away, or whether she'll rent a place for herself before we finally pick a place and a time to make it all official.
But I think what we realized over the past ten days is all of those things are just items on a checklist. They'll all happen -- it's just a question of when and how soon. We work too well together and are too happy around and within each other's lives to even acknowledge any other solution to this geographic problem. It amazes me that we'll spend days together and yet neither of us wants to spend time away from the other. And what amazes me even more is that it's so comfortable, no matter what we're doing, where we're headed or where we're at. And whether or not it makes any sense, I'm not only not expecting the other shoe to drop, I don't even think there's another shoe in this mix.
Still doesn't change the fact that I am dreading sleeping in an empty, cold bed without her tonight. And it doesn't change the fact that it won't feel right until I see her again.
Today when we were walking, our hands instinctively found one another's on our way back from the store. Trying to avoid the topic of her imminent departure, we laughed about the fact that the weather was awful when she arrived and awful yet again as she was leaving.
I don't quite remember the day she arrived, but I remember how cold it felt watching her cab pull away.
I'm hoping for a warm winter.
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5 comments:
Oh, Boogie; that was a lovely post.
I'm not alone in wishing the best for you and Kaia, and in recognizing the deep and lasting love between you. When you're together you have a little perma-grin problem, my friend. Both of you smile with your whole heads. :)
Nuts to the whole long-distance thing, I say. Granted, I had more freedom than either of you have, but trying to see the road through my tears became too much to bear. What I'm saying is, I feel ya.
Hang in there, you'll spend the rest of your lives together--what's a couple of years of long-distance romance? Clearly, you're making the most of your time.
xoxoxo
Thank you for so perfectly and so eloquently hitting the nail right smack-dab in the middle of the head... I think that, despite my cloudy, post-visit mood notwithstanding, I was just admitting that while the long-distance thing sucks, for us, it's the only choice, as we never considered ending things in favor of convenience or any other external factors. In other words, even when it's simple, light as a feather and easy, it's still not easy.
Either way, thank you again for saying it better than me :)
I'm glad it was fun! And I know all too well how much the long distance thing sucks. Keep the faith Cookie.
It was definitely fun, but it's sort of like going on a vacation to a place you love -- be it London, Paris, or your hometown -- and having a blast while keeping an eye on the clock. In other words, it's great and it's perfect and it works and it's the best thing ever, but at the same time -- even though we're both working and dealing with life as we spend time with one another -- it's not real life until it's actually real life. That's the frustrating part.
Again, it's not a question of if, but when -- but I guess we're both getting tired of even having to ask or wonder when "when" really is.
Either way, thanks for the encouragement...slowly but surely 8-)
Trouble - what a sweet comment - truly from the heart - MWAH.
Lisa - thanks!
Baby - i adore you.
K
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