Work in progress, love story |
Listen! I have to tell you: I didn’t try. I pretended, I lied, I almost believed – but I didn’t try. You would probably say that I enthusiastically didn’t try, yet that wasn’t quite it. I’m not happy, but I’m not miserable; it seems that now I live because life keeps letting me. Recently some have started to call me a void, others label me as shy, most simply call me boring and you (wonderful you), you let me believe that I could do anything. But I can’t. Maybe I could have, for you. Occasionally I believed that you existed to contradict me. We were on two opposite ends of a spectrum – you passionately wanted, while I passionately didn’t. I only difference is that while you made it your business to (in your words) “convert me into a wanter,” I didn’t care. Maybe I should have though if it could have meant the difference between losing and keeping you. This is our story. ___ Dawn awakes me. I squint at the clock while its impatient scream blisters my eardrum, and let a long sigh escape. My muscles won’t let me move, and I have to force them out of their stupor. I hate that. I let my lead body weigh down into my carpet, which, as I am reminded of daily, desperately needs vacuuming. And I swear I just vacuumed it Friday…or was that three weeks ago? Man oh man, the days blend by… …and I continue to force my body through my stupor until I’m able to get my first cup of coffee. At two o'clock pm. I am often reminded (and of course, you know this) by the time it takes me to consume my first cup of coffee that I need a new job. Yet I unfortunately lack the time to search for one. I spend most of my free time as creative writing, and although I have yet to land my first job as such, my newest short story is going to be a hit (I can just feel it (if only anyone would read it)). During my day job I am yet another nondescript suit-and-tie wearing accountant with an asshole boss. But please, save your sympathy for the guy in the next cubicle who lacks both hobby and girlfriend. I really feel bad for him. Two o’clock comes and goes, three o’clock arrives with a second cup of coffee, four-thirty, five-forty five and suddenly I’m in a rush, for today is the long-awaited day of our first date. I met you in a coffee shop. You don’t remember? Of course you do. Our beginning is the typical “oops I grabbed your cup of coffee by mistake blah blah blah,” but we both know it wasn’t a mistake because your phone number magically appeared on my cup. And so I called you, because you were cute and smiled at me. It didn’t take much to make a good impression on this guy in those days. |