Some
trees are already blooming here in Berkeley.
I hadn’t
really planned on celebrating Valentine’s Day this year – or, as I’ve come to
know it for the past few years: Singles’ Awareness Day…
But during
the day I got a cute card from the Indiana Jones of our department and a piece of
heart-shaped chocolate from another co-worker.
The
best thing, however, was waiting for me when I got home: Critical Companion had
left this adorable picture on my computer next to a chocolate bar. I didn’t
even see it until after we had shared our favorite butternut squash pizza from
Addie’s for dinner… I didn’t get her anything but at least I paid for the
pizza!
Yesterday I warned Radoslav that I might have
to somewhat celebrate Valentine’s Day and give him something to which he
replied: “That’s okay but I will wait for March 8th to give you
something.” March 8th is – and I assume every comrade knows this –
International Women’s Day and it is also the day on which to give women flowers
and chocolate in Eastern Europe, not
on February 14th. At first I was upset and thought why on Earth
should I make an effort for him now when he doesn’t want to reciprocate immediately
and especially since I don’t even know who
I will be on March 8th? That’s an eternity of waiting away anyway. Yesterday
I kept thinking who knows where this is going and what’s going to happen when he’s done
with his qualifying exams and we’re supposedly predestined to start actually ‘dating’…
And I realized that I keep looking for something which will put a neat end to
all of this private uncertainty. That’s when it’s good for me that I have a lovely
therapist to see each week and who will listen to all of these messy ideas in
my head and bring clarity and logic and reason into my every effort at
unleashing a self-detonating bomb upon my personal life. As a matter of fact
things are not as bad as I would like them to seem – even if he didn’t give me
flowers and take me out to dinner tonight – because on Sunday he came with me
to Swedish service in the Norwegian church in San Francisco. After having slept
for about four hours… But a promise is a promise, he said, and as I am myself
one I appreciate обязательные люди. I made Radoslav into somewhat of a heretic
when I demanded he go up to the priest – a beautiful blonde Swedish woman who
wears her hair out and heels when serving mass – for a blessing during
communion [as I know he won’t take communion in my protestant church for that
would really make him a heretic]. I
think he appreciated my church just as much as I enjoyed his church two weeks
ago [and I’m thinking about going with him there again this Sunday; thus, my
church-hopping habits are being rekindled: Swedish service one week, Serbian
the next, and Norwegian after that… the only obvious service I don’t go to is
American but I hope that’s простительно given that I am otherwise living an American
life]. After church coffee we went for a walk in San Francisco; it was a
beautiful sunny Sunday and warm enough in the afternoon to remove one’s coat
after only a few minutes of walking. We had lunch together in Little Italy
after which we went shopping – or rather Radoslav went shopping and I helped
him find the proper items because after all men are rather clueless and
sometimes I wonder how he – and also other men of his kind and generation –
made it all the way into his thirties without an intelligent woman by his side to
help him choose the right kind of underwear… It was a wonderful Sunday spent
together concluded with a bit of PDA while waiting for the subway back to
Berkeley. When we were standing embracing each other and I placed my head
against his chest he said with surprise: «Ты такая маленькая!» What is a woman to say to such a thing? «А ты такой большой?» It is sort of like the scene from Lost in Translation when Scarlett Johansson
says: “You’re too tall,” and Bill Murray answers: “Have you ever considered
that you’re too small?” I guess everything is relative also in relationships
between women and men. I like the fact that Radoslav is tall even though I hadn’t
considered how tall he is before I
invited him to some day join me for a bath [as of late I’ve become a big fan of
taking long baths while reading by candle light] because this glorious
invitation Critical Companion commented matter-of-factly: “I don’t think he
will fit in our bath.” Comrades, I guess we’ll see how that grand plan works
out. In my mind our bath is huge –
but then again I don’t often reflect on the size of myself but take the scale
of other things as something given and not at all relative to my own habitual perspective.
To make a long story short: I bought two
packages of chocolate today – one I gave to Radoslav together with an ambiguous
message written over two pink post-its and the other one I opened to hand out
pieces to everyone I saw at work with the words: “Happy Valentine’s Day!”
It’s a silly invented holiday but then again
all human traditions are.
Suddenly I can’t stop thinking about Lost in Translation. It is the movie
that I think of as ‘having shaped my generation’ but maybe I think like that
because it is the movie that shaped me [not
that I am an expert on movies or anything]. When it came out in Sweden in the
spring of 2004 – my last spring in the homecountry – I went to see it in the
movie theater twice. I’ve never seen one movie in the theater twice [except I
saw Mamma Mia! in Russia in Russian
and in English in Sweden]. I went in the company of two different men and both
of them came up – suprising reoccurrence of memories – in conversation during
my therapy session today. Now I don’t remember with whom I went to see it
first, with Leo [a pseudonym] or with Mr. T [not entirely a pseudonym]. I remember
that the movie made a great impression on me – I listened to the soundtrack for
months afterwards – and that I saw so much of myself in Charlotte even though I
was not as old as the character yet but only the age of Scarlett Johansson at
the time when she filmed it. I was eighteen years old. When I saw it I
remembered sitting on the window sill looking out over New York when I was
seventeen years old – much like Charlotte does in the movie – and knowing that
my father who had brought me with him there was somewhere in this big city having
an important meeting. For me at the time it was a movie more about a girl who
was feeling lost than it was a movie about a young woman who meets an older man
and forms an ambivalent relationship with him. I think the two men I went and
saw it with imagined they were somehow this ‘older man’ and that I was their ‘younger
woman’ and that this was a romantic moment in our relationship. But I knew all
along that I had seen it with both of them – even though I now can’t remember
who was first – and that to me this was not what the movie was about. It was to
me a movie about a meeting with a foreign country and at the time I was getting
ready to meet a foreign country for the first time myself. Traveling to various
countries in Europe or going with my father to New York twice was not the same
thing. Everything is different when you’re on your own. The therapist asked me
why nothing happened with these two men, why they somehow slipped out of my life, why I couldn’t see myself having a relationship
with either one? Leo was my friend – perhaps my best friend when I was that age
– and he will always remain that one person in the world with whom I will never
break and to or about whom I will never speak a bad word. But a boyfriend? It
seemed impossible to me at the time. Not only because he was engaged to a girl
in my class [and still is] but also because I was already on my way out; I was
slowly moving away throughout that spring of 2004. Half of my heart was already
in Russia – where it will always belong – and Leo’s function in my emotional education was another. Mr. T also had an
important function in a kind of education for me: my intellectual education. He was [and will always be] much older than
me; as he was a writer, I looked to him for answers about literature and
writing and wanted him to guide me and softly show me how to do things with words. He is a man I will
always respect as long as I live and treasure that time in the past which we
were blessed to have together but ultimately I understood that I was too young
for the kind of union he proposed – regrettably I was too young then to
understand this; this realization came much later, when I was older of course –
and that I needed to figure who I was
before I could be with someone else. I
had a life ahead of me to live and he could not be a part of it [though
strangely enough it often appears as if he is still a part of it and that he will always be a part of my life and perhaps this is because in many
ways he shaped me intellectually – in
a way, he created me or even invented me to be truly blunt about
things because before I met him there were so many ‘rooms’ I hadn’t entered
into yet but he showed me these rooms in advance and that’s in a way how I came
to know so much was left to be discovered by myself on my own terms]. It is
sometimes strange when you think of how you must learn how to ‘own’ your own
memories; to make them fit into your present context and present person and
look back at them and see them for what they really are: separate rooms into
which no one else may ever enter. No one else was with me the last time I went
to ring his door bell – I remember the boots I wore that day and the sound they
made against the asphalt as I walked up to his house and everytime I recall
this detail I always think how insignificant this is and yet it is a part of
what this memory has become to me – and thus no one else can remember it nor
make sense of it for me. But even in a shared memory in which you weren’t the
only one you can’t always trust the other people involved to construct the appropriate
meaning out of this event for yourself.
I think this is the case with childhood memories: even though your parents
might think they possess the privileged perspective on the way we were this is often far from the truth because there are
as many ‘true stories’ as there were people involved. Perhaps that is to repeat
an old cliché but I think it should be taken into consideration. I know that
Mr. T and I have and will always have different versions of our story and that’s
okay because it happened to us at very different times in our lives: I was
eighteen and it was in the beginning of my adult life – he some twenty years
older and thus his perspective definetly not one of ‘a writer I knew in my
youth’ but maybe as ‘a young woman I really liked once upon a time’ [I doubt he
would phrase it like that but that’s where memory once again comes into play –
we remember things differently and we remember different things].
It is fascinating that a relationship which
started with reading each others’ words has continued in the exact same way for
so many years now: when he searched for me, he searched for a female reader and
that is essentially what he got and what he will always have in me. I have
always read him and I will always read him. Sometimes I wish that he wouldn’t
take what are only words so seriously
but then again everyone has their own relationship with literature. When I told
Mrs S the other day that I regard literature as play she said it is certainly
not play to her. But words are all we have when it comes to literature – some words
we like more than others and some words we repeat too often [as any word cloud
will tell us on the interwebs] – and I think that at the ‘bottom of each day’
if you must write, write about and for yourself. The reader will eventually
materialize herself – or perhaps she is already there but the writer failed to
take notice. And even though you write about and for yourself literature cannot
be merely a self-seeking endeavor – everybody owns the same words and yet they
belong to no one. Literature is essentially a medium to communicate human
experience. For all its flaws and contradictions and conflicts and strange
features I think it might be about the best thing we ever invented as a
species.
And blogging is of course the bastard child of
that kind of writing.