Adjusts Itself to Midnight

or, Giving Up the Ghost

Epigraph

We grow accustomed to the Dark—
When Light is put away—
As when the Neighbor holds the Lamp
To witness her Goodbye—

A Moment—We uncertain step
For newness of the night—
Then—fit our Vision to the Dark—
And meet the Road—erect—

And so of larger—Darknesses—
Those Evenings of the Brain—
When not a Moon disclose a sign—
Or Star—come out—within—

The Bravest—grope a little—
And sometimes hit a Tree
Directly in the Forehead—
But as they learn to see—

Either the Darkness alters—
Or something in the sight
Adjusts itself to Midnight—
And Life steps almost straight.

— Emily Dickinson

July 30th: I met X by chance.
August 9th: I kissed her.
November 8th: She said she needed space and did not contact me again.

Some words and their roots:

Repair: re + PIE root *pere - “to produce, procure”
Patience: Latin, patentia, “the quality of suffering or enduring”
Passion: also
Grief: PIE root *gwere - “heavy”
Sad: PIE root *sa - “satisfied, full” (hence also heavy)
Tender/attention/intention: PIE root *ten - “to stretch”

I wrote your number on a piece of paper and buried it in a soft box in case I ever need it. I'll end up burning it, but I'm not ready yet. Those few wisps of hope need to be extinguished in my head first. I need to believe that the burning day is in the future, just like I need to believe in the day you'll come back and say all the things I want to hear. I live in both desires at the same time, an uncomfortable place to stay.

Welcome to this situation. Your options are: (Choose one.)

  • Contact her again and try to re-start the relationship
  • Don't contact her again and let her contact you
  • Don't contact her and don't respond if she contacts you
  • Contact her but don't try to re-start the relationship

Possible Causes: (Choose one.)

  • She is fucked up and incapable of being in a relationship
  • You did something wrong
  • You did nothing wrong
  • You will never really know why she left.

On this dripping morning when you must still be asleep,
when I don't tell you I love you or wait for you to come back,
when I don't go to see you and in silence make my peace—
the wind and the rain will cover my tracks.

Today, I got a text from an unknown number saying, “How are you?” For part of a second I wondered if it was X, but I know that her number has a different area code.

It could be a wrong number, but more likely an effective spam technique. How many people will have a particular person who flashes to their mind when receiving a text from a random number that says “How are you?” The estranged, the dead, the disappeared all seem for a moment to touch us through our little devices. They ask us how we are, which is what we wanted all along.

My therapist told me that it seems like I am coping with this in a healthy way and moving through it well. I have become efficient at sadness. I have a knack for it.

I made a small triangle-shaped book of the first things I wanted to tell her but did not:

  • I'm trying to learn about you so I can be a better partner for you.
  • I love you so much, I wish I could be there for you when you're hurting.
  • I have known you less than five months and everything reminds me of your face, your voice, your smile, your words. You have left your fingerprints all over my life.
  • I didn't know what this would look like.
  • I would give so much just to be able to do your laundry or dishes or hold you while you cry. I don't need you to take care of me when you are in crisis.
  • I don't know what to say that won't scare you or drive you away.
  • I'm trying not to take it personally.
  • How do I give you what you need while also being honest that this is hurting me?
  • Hurt is inevitable but I value love more.

The book has pointy edges and won't stay shut.

Is there a point in telling a person you love them when they won't communicate with you? I have not yet let go of the need to tell her I love her, which tells me I have not yet let go of the hope of seeing her again. That hope has so many guises and layers. And if I don't tell her I love her, is there less of a chance she would come back? I don't want to chase someone who pushes me away. It's like I want to do a really good job of standing still so she will come back. But what would I have to compromise?

I have sought comfort in embarrassing corners of the internet. I created a Reddit account. I read articles on exboyfriendrecovery.com. I am reading an article about ghosting on verywell.com:

Ghosting is a form of silent treatment, which mental health professionals have described as emotional cruelty. You feel powerless and silenced. You don't know how to make sense of the experience or have an opportunity to express your feelings.

I want to tell her how cruel she has been while also acknowledging that she is in pain. I want to express my anger but I don't want to give up and push her away. That's the last chance that I hold on to.

Allowing things, letting them be. The word "allow" is ad + laudere: “toward” + “to praise.” Allowing is appreciation. Appreciate this grief. Don't force it on any timeline and don't trust others who can't see its value. It is your treasure because it is your love.

I made another small book that I called

A Tender Process

Days since the day she last talked to me.

Day 1: I am sad, but grateful that she told me what she needs. She will contact me in a couple of days.

Day 2: I miss her and am sad without her, but I am OK. I hope to hear from her tomorrow or the day after.

Day 3: I want to spend time with T and A, keep busy, be social. I keep the volume on my phone up in case she texts, but I don't really expect it.

Day 4: She should have this evening off of work and class. I hope she texts but I don't know if she will. I wait with my phone all day. The evening comes and goes.

Day 5: She may work this morning or have the whole day off. I hope to hear from her. A is gone all day. I feel sad and lonely, beginning to fear that this will last a long time.

Day 6: I break down crying in front of T and A. I hang out with them so I don't have to be alone. I keep waiting but I know I won't hear from her.

Day 7: I make a small book of all the things I want to say to her but won't. I stop checking my phone so much but the impulse is always there.

Day 8: I leave her a voice memo and immediately feel like I fucked up. But I don't know what else to do.

Day 9: I start to feel angry. What would I say if she reached out? No crying anymore, just hurt.

Day 10: Feeling despair. I love her so much but I can't do this for much longer.

Day 11: Nervous system is calming down. Reading old texts helps. My goal is to make it to my next therapy appointment and contact her at the 2 week mark if I don't hear from her.

Day 12: Despair again. Texted her to let her know I love her and am deleting her number but I'll be here if she wants.

Day 13: End anxiety and begin grief, which was my intention. Feel calm but heavy, letting myself be sad. Allowing myself to love her.

I don't want to take away from this the idea that in order to avoid heartbreak I need to lower my expectations or have none at all. I know that I was going on the best information that I had at the time, which is that X loved me and she told me she wanted to be with me for a long time. But the sooner I recognize our expectations were unrealistic, the more I help myself.

Another thing I recognize: she not only misled and disappointed me, she also misled and disappointed herself. I have no reason to believe that she was lying when she said she didn't want to hurt me, didn't want to put up walls, didn't want to burn it down. Not only is she likely familiar with the pain of this situation, she is probably disappointed it happened again despite her best intentions. That is a much harder place to be in than the one I'm in.

You appeared in two of my dreams last night, wanting to reconcile. I felt fresh grief even while asleep because the dreams did what they often do, taking me into a realm of pure feeling. You have been fading away from my daytime mind bit by bit—it's getting harder to remember your face or voice. I can conjure it up with effort, but after a while things will fade more and more. But in my dreams I felt again exactly what it was like to be with you, to hold you—and to lose that again before I even woke up was hard. I will be dreaming about you for a long time, I think, as my brain goes back and forth trying to figure out what I want.

What is it about the day as a unit of heartbreak? Yesterday, being the one-month marker, was so hard. I woke up sad and I went to bed sad. But today——the same kind of struggle isn't there. It's not that I haven't been sad, or haven't been thinking about her a lot. But I picked up my phone without hoping there would be a message from her. When has that happened? Is this the first time? Probably not, but the first time I noticed.

Card to Enclose in the Package When Mailing Her Zine Back to Her

Draft #1

Our time together was one of the most meaningful experiences of my life. I am sorry that it could not work out between us. I love you and will always carry you in my heart. Maybe down the line when life is less hectic and you are in a place to work on relationship patterns with a partner we can try again, but for now I will content myself with the happy memories of our time together. I hope you are able to find and receive the love you deserve to have.

I know she would appreciate the joke that she gave my heart blue balls—that my heart opened for her, that I discovered a capacity for love that I didn't know I had, and then she walked away and all that love had nowhere to go.

Now that it has been a month, some of my normal feelings have come back online. For a few weeks, I lost the ability to care about anything outside of my personal life. When the Club Q massacre happened, I was completely numb. I can tell that I am beginning to care about things outside of myself again because I am starting to feel the guilt and shame over injustices and tragedies. That feeling was so habitual it was strange to have a break from it.

I know that X has had a hard life. I'm sure she has hurt a lot of people, made choices that she is now ashamed of. I was opening—am still opening—a reservoir of compassion and forgiveness and unconditional love for her that has no use because she won't let me in.

I realized last night that I need to use this reservoir for myself. Why do I believe deep down that I cause all the suffering in the world and there's nothing that I can do to stop any of it? I am completely paralyzed by this belief. It's not an intellectual understanding, it's one that lives in my body and keeps me from doing anything.

Symptoms of Heartbreak

Draft #2

Dear X, I don't think you ever got to see my handwriting, so here it is. I hope you are OK. I wanted to make sure you got this zine back.

I am sorry that things didn't work out between us. We met by chance and knew we were taking a risk and I'm glad we did. You were are were one of the most profound loves of my life and worth the risk of getting my heart broken.

Maybe some time down the line when life is less hectic and you're in a place where you can work on relationship patterns with a partner, we can try again. For now, I will content myself with the happy memories of our time together. I hope you can find and receive the love you deserve to have.

Yours always,
Emily

22 days since she last spoke to me

I realized with clarity in the middle of the night that I did nothing wrong and didn't deserve to be ghosted. There is a weight that is lifting from me bit by bit. What makes it easier to end this relationship is to see that no matter how much we love each other, our operating models of relationships are so different that it would not work out in the long term.

There is a difference between telling myself that she is not coming back and accepting that she is not coming back. I noticed on my trip that whenever I thought about her, I would append phrases to the thoughts like, “and I will never hear from her again.” It seemed odd and unnecessary, but I later realized I have been saying it habitually to shield myself from disappointed expectations. Like how you say things to a child to keep them from being disappointed. “We're going to look in the toy store, but not buy anything, OK?”

My mind is so flighty and uneasy because I go back and forth between thinking she's gone, thinking that certainly she must come back, wondering what I would even say to her if she did contact me, and wondering if I should risk reaching out to her. I keep thinking that the next text or phone call is going to be her. And then I feel stupid for my inevitable disappointment.

Tomorrow is 3 weeks.

Today I pulled the 8 of Cups, the card of letting go. I'm still amused at my blue balls joke, especially since I recognize that today is the first time since she last talked to me that I have been able to make light of the situation and poke fun at myself.

I also remember the good things. When we sat on the bench in the nature preserve it was a perfect day, not too hot, no bugs. We kissed and I asked her if it was OK if I told her I was in love with her. We were so close our lips brushed when she nodded yes. She knew far longer than me that we were in love, but I said it first. I was not asking for permission to tell her, but wondering if it was going to scare her off for me to say so. I look back on my own willingness to take the risk. Maybe it astonished both of us.

Tomorrow is one full month November 8th - December 8th.

Draft #3

Dear X,

I don't think you ever got to see my handwriting, so here it is. I hope you are OK. Having not seen you for a month [^ my assumption is that you want to end our relationship. Whether or not that is true,] [^ to be in integrity with myself] I want to tell you that I consider our relationship ended.

I am sorry that things didn't work out between us. We met by chance and knew we were taking a risk. I'm glad we did. Being loved by you has been was an amazing one of the most experience^s of my life and you were worth the risk of getting my heart broken.

Maybe sometime down the line when life is less hectic and you're in a place where you want to work on relationship patterns with a partner, we can try again. I am willing to work long and patiently so you can find and receive the love you deserve to have. [^so long as lines of communication remain open between us.]

If you have no interest in being in w/ me again, I hope you can find…

Yours always,
Emily

Dream House

As long as I can remember having dreams, spaces—especially interior spaces—have been central to them. Some spaces exist only in my dreams but I return to them over and over. Sometimes my dreams take a real place and render it with great accuracy; other times quite loosely. I do have recurring dreams of outdoor landscapes and sometimes institutional buildings. One of my earliest dreams was wandering around a white institutional building with amorphous walls and ceilings and irregular blobs of stained glass for windows, looking for my mother. But most often the spaces in my dreams are houses.

The first house where I remember finding dream rooms was my aunt's house next door to where I grew up. It was a strange house even in waking life: a kitchen table that folded up into the wall like a Meyer bed, a bedroom that could only be accessed through another bedroom, a tiny triangular sink and—do I remember correctly?—a toilet on the landing at the top of the basement stairs. The basement had soft, sloping walls of dirt but all the rooms had built-in benches and desks and shelves. The plumbing was questionable (see the basement stairs), and a crudely realized American flag was painted on the ceiling of one of the rooms. It was as if that house was inhabited by a series of carpenters, plumbers, and handymen who had fewer skills and poorer tastes as time went on.

So it makes sense that as a small child, maybe only 4 or 5, I dreamed I had found an extra room in this house. There was a door in an exterior wall that I had never seen before. It opened into a new room that also had windows, so it was next to the house's exterior, but somehow didn't block the windows in the room I had just left. I don't remember much about the room itself except the gray Saturday afternoon light and the image of a figure—myself—standing in it.

I have dreamed rooms into many places, some real, some not. I usually start with a house I know—my old babysitter's or grandmother's or my own—and open a door which then leads into a room with another door to open, then another. I find staircases and extra floors and astonishment that I never knew any of this was here. Most are pleasant explorations. However, when I am dreaming of a house I don't know, it's often less pleasant. I find myself in a stranger's house, winding the labyrinth of rooms, turning on a light in each one as I go. I was never meant to be here and when I hear the inhabitants arrive unexpectedly, I realize that I have left a trail of lights that will lead them to me. I must somehow escape without them ever knowing I was there.

Your face is the dream—it gets less focused and more amorphous every day. I enter by way of your words and actions. We told each other many things in a short span of time, and in my head I started framing and furnishing some rooms I thought I knew. But you left suddenly and I, in the half-built house, began to do what I have always done: open doors into new rooms that lead to more rooms and hallways and staircases, basements, corners, and attics. I see the light coming in from the windows but never look outside.

I have built a dream house of your intentions and motivations. I have taken brief looks you gave me and extrapolated them into long corridors. It's easy to take for reality that astonishment when I turn a knob and it opens into a place I have never seen before. Dream house building can go on forever. But how do I get out of the house without you ever knowing I was there?

Draft #4

Dear X,

I don't think you ever got to see my handwriting, so here it is. I wanted to make sure that you got this zine back, but more than that I wanted to say that I love you and miss you and I'm sorry things didn't work out between us. I hope you are doing OK and I wish you as much ease as there can be

Maybe oOne day when life is less hectic and you are in a place where you want to work on relationship patterns with a partner, we can try again. If you don't love want that, that's OK. I will continue carrying my love for you with me. [^ Thank you for crashing into my life like an amazing, bewildering, sexy gay meteorite.] I am glad to have had you in my life, if even for a little while.

“As I get older. . .”

for you

to have arrived at this late hour
to have arrived at this late age
at the desk hovered over by the red lamp
in the dark room
still waiting for you
where piles of folded paper in front of me
gently open like soft dinosaur bones
my ancient words written over their oversides—

to have arrived at this place
still needing love
conspiring forehead to head with the red lamp
to make paper words for you—

there is no conditional, no clause to close it—

still listening to the old songs
still waiting for a word
from headlights through the dark window
I haven't grown up
I haven't given up

You said that you didn't want to put up walls with me, or hurt me, or burn it all down but you did all three. Maybe, I flatter myself, the more you loved me the bigger your demons got. But blame is useless. Who do I blame? You? Your mom? Her parents? The Lutheran church? It goes back so far. What I do know is that if I can't blame, that means I also can't blame myself. I loved you with my whole heart and you were only able to receive it up to a point. I acted as skillfully as I could. Looking back, I don't think there was a single moment where I knew I could have done something better but didn't.

It's strange to be 37 and only now for the first time have a “one that got away.” You pushed me out and I realized I could die clinging to the side or swim back to shore.

I wrote with such joy in my journal, I remember, about discovering new depths to my queer identity by being with X. I didn't talk to her about it much because I knew she had been mistreated by several bi partners who used her to prove their sexuality to themselves. But the world changed in ways I couldn't expect when I fell in love with a woman for the first time. Most of it was good, some less so—like the looks we got sometimes when we walked into a public place together. “Oh, lesbians. Gross.”

I wanted to read lesbian literature, really understand into this dimension of myself the experience of loving a woman brought out. And now it's the opposite—it's too painful to take in those stories because they remind me so much of her. I feel like a failed queer and I am ashamed.

I went through two queer rites of passage almost at once—falling in love with a woman and getting my heart broken by her. I know heartbreak is part of queerness, too. Hell, this specific shame is probably part of queerness. But it just hurts.

Today is 4 weeks.

I thought maybe I should text her before sending the package with the zine and card in it to give her a heads up. As I thought more about what I would say over text, I realized that my objective was to give her one more chance. She has had a chance every waking moment for the past 23 days. I don't need to set myself up for rejection again. The text and the card are for me, not for her. It's not because I don't love her and wish I could get back to her, there's just no assurance I can give her that will make her feel safe to come back.

This afternoon I walked around downtown with flowers in my hand for A. I felt romantic, like I had my heart exposed. I wanted two bodies, one that could go to the shop and get A his birthday present, and another that could walk down to the restaurant where she works in the lunch rush while she has her hands full and give them to her. Stop her heart for a moment, quiet the whole restaurant in her ears. Just to look her in the eyes so she can know I still love her. I want to make that big gesture, but I don't want to violate her peace. Thinking these things in the lunch hour traffic made me feel crazy, but wanting to have two bodies means I have two hearts and two minds.

What does the end look like for you? For me, it's an old blank billboard that sits on a horizon we both share but are on different sides of. I don't know what it says on your side, if anything. Because my side is blank, I light it up like a movie theater several times a day. The movies are colorful, detailed, plausible, but unreal. They cast a satiny glow on things.

I watch stories about why you ended our relationship. I also watch stories about future plans that we missed. Should I feel like a fool for buying someone's Valentine's Day card in October? I was just buying a big batch of greeting cards for all the occasions I'd need in the coming months. It was practical, given the information I had to go on: that you loved me, that you wanted to be with me for a long time, perhaps forever. Maybe the difference between me and you (here the projector starts clicking and lights up) is that when someone tells me they love me and want to be with me for a long time, I believe it. Maybe for you it's cause for doubt, a sign that things can't last, and so you start looking for those red EXIT signs over the doors of the theater.

It's January 16th. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and the New Year all passed without you. The day that marked two months since you'd last texted me passed and I didn't even notice until afterwards. But yesterday was my bookbinding class, the last time I “expected” to see you. To be clear, I did not think you would show up and was not disappointed when you didn't. But somewhere in the first weeks after you ghosted, I began harboring a fantasy that you would come to it because I'd told you the date some time ago. That you'd come up after the event was over and I would ask if you could wait until I was done cleaning up. Then we'd get a drink and you could tell me why you ghosted and ask if we could get together or be friends and I would find a nice way to tell you that, although I still wanted to, I didn't think we should.

I guess that's all I'm looking for at this point.

But instead I got up yesterday having lost a lot of sleep (not thinking about you) and went to work. I thought to myself, “This is the first day of never seeing her again for the rest of my life.” And that was true. The class went well and was very busy, so busy we had to turn some people away. Maybe you were there in the hall and turned back once you realized how busy it was. Maybe you've walked by where I work or driven up the street by my house. But you probably have not, nor were you there in the dark hallway. Just a shadow, a ghost.

There is a real person out there whose legal name is yours—a lovable, ridiculous name. She lives in one of the shitty apartment complexes in town and was hit as a child and has a friend who is drinking himself to death. She plays guitar and has a lovely voice and makes just the kind of dispassionate geometric art that I like. She's out there, but she's not you. You are the person in my head, the one I have been thinking and writing about and crying over since November 8th. Your existence split off from hers around the time I realized she was never coming back.

Once I realized she was never coming back, I stopped trying to find her. She may have abandoned me, but I will not chase an abandoner. And that leaves me with you, my ghost. Do you come to my window like Cathy?

You were telling me about your day, once. You had gone to hang out with a person who was trying to make friends with you. They said, suspecting that the two of you might have a diagnosis or two in common, “Hey, do you ever get in a relationship with someone and things are going really good so you decide to burn it all down?” You knew that feeling, you said. You used to burn down relationships when you were young. But in recounting this conversation, you turned to look at me. “Never with you,” you said, “Never with you.” My mistake was that I thought I knew what you meant—that when you said to me “I'll never burn down our relationship,” not only were you sincere, but you had the capacity to carry that intention through. I choose to believe the former but was bitterly tricked by the latter.

My aunt's house, the real place out of which I made my dream rooms, burned down a few years ago. I grew up next to it until I was twelve and my bedroom window was the only one on the second floor that faced it across the alley. My family had moved away about 20 years before it caught fire, and my aunt had moved away not long after us. The people living there had been storing propane tanks—or something equally stupid—inside the attached garage and they exploded one afternoon. One of the volunteer firefighters who responded to the call was my cousin, who had grown up in that house. My mom later asked him if it was hard to see his childhood home burn. He said, “At least I knew the floor plan, so we knew how to get in and start carrying out as much as we could.” The house itself couldn't be saved; it's just an empty lot now with a sidewalk leading to nowhere. The house where I grew up survived, but the vinyl siding melted from the heat. I am imagining standing in my childhood bedroom as that dream house burns, looking out of the window and flames filling up every inch of the frame.

Another Draft: I am sorry that things didn't work out between us. The love we shared was beautiful and genuine. I'm glad I got to have you in my life, if only for a short time.

I made it to Valentine's Day without you, so a little over 3 months since I last heard from you. I am forgetting what the rhythm of having you in my life was like. Your face and voice are fading. All I have to hang on to is my own love.

Words go on after this, they always will. I will keep thinking of you at further and further intervals until they stretch into vast spaces of time. But I'll stop writing here. I left lots of blanks and wrote it all out of order. This concerted piece of grief is over. I am looking forward to my life without you, not because I wish you weren't here, but because I had to make something out of this loss, and I quite like it.

My love is always yours, whether you see it or not.

December 15th

The zine is a square-ish shape and won't fit into a pre-made envelope easily. I wrapped it in wax paper and cut two pieces of cardboard from an Amazon box and put it between them to keep it from bending. Then I wrapped it in heavy kraft paper and wrapped that in another layer of kraft paper. I wrote down her address—which I got on a humiliating day when I drove by her apartment building out of desperation—on a piece of paper and taped it on. No card.

Maybe it won't make it to her. Maybe she will open it expecting it to be a gift and be disappointed. Maybe she will be sad that I finally rejected her. Maybe she will be relieved to know that she successfully burned it down. I don't know, but I know that telling her I love her one more time will not make a difference. If it did, she would be here now.

If she returns to sender, I guess I'll remove the tape and wax paper and put the whole thing in the recycling bin. I have not stopped loving her, but I have stopped expecting there will be a future.

Expect: ex + spectare “thoroughly” + “to look” Expecting is waiting, and I will not wait any more.

Maybe I will keep pretending, or hoping, but those are part of my process and don't depend on her. I will not give her an explanation or leave the door open. And one day, long after that piece of mail reaches wherever it's going to go, I'll stop hoping that she is every phone call and that every car that pulls up to the house is hers.

Final Draft

written in a card but never sent

Dear X,

I don't think you ever got to see my handwriting, so here it is. I wanted to make sure that you got this zine back, but more than that I wanted to say that I love you and miss you and I'm sorry that things didn't work out between us.

I hope you are OK and I wish you as much ease as there can be.

Maybe one day when life is less hectic and you are in a place where you want to work on relationship patterns with a partner, we could try again. But if you don't want to, that's OK. I will continue carrying my love for you with me. I am glad to have had you in my life if even for a little while. I hope you can find and receive the love you deserve to have.

Yours always,
Emily

Before . . .

The weeks after my breakup with X were like descending into Tartarus covered in ashes. I could not anticipate how much I would need the stories of others to keep me oriented and moving back out toward the daylight once again. I'd previously thought that breakup novels, albums, poems, and songs are overrepresented in the world, but now I see that the search for healing comes from finding a breakup story that is just like our story. That is why they proliferate through every form of media. We wander through the world with the story of our pain wrapped in our arms hoping to find one that matches it. And so I offer this one, not only in the service of my own healing, but hopefully in service of others.

X and I met by chance at an event where we were both working in positions of service for different employers. We did not know it until we compared notes weeks later, but we both had a profoundly disorienting experience conventionally called “love at first sight.” That phrase doesn't really capture the confusing feeling that you've been reunited with someone you've never met—that the only reason why you can be so drawn to their face, their body, their voice, their words is because you somehow knew them even though you know you've never known them.

X is a lifelong lesbian; I have known for many years that I am bisexual, but my attraction to women had mostly been sexual up until that point. I had never fallen in love with one. The moment we met, she and I almost instantly began disclosing to one another information about our sexuality, our relationship status (both non-monogamous), our tastes, and our ethics. She made a corny joke that I cutely did not understand. She asked for my sun sign (we're the same.) The next day, I asked for her number via a personals ad dating app, she found the ad by chance, and we began.

That was all in mid-summer. The relationship was both courtly and passionate. We marveled at how deeply we had fallen in love in such a short amount of time. She was also honest with me about her long history of tumultuous relationships, family abuse, and her patterns of pushing other people away. Specifically, she told me she had a fearful-avoidant (also known as anxious-avoidant) attachment style, which is when a person desperately wants love and closeness but easily gets overwhelmed and retreats, attacks, or disappears, often with little notice. People develop fearful-avoidant attachment style as young children when their primary caregiver is abusive, inconsistent in giving care, behaves erratically, or expects emotional support from the child. They develop survival strategies to help them cope with a caregiver who is at once a source of love and fear yet can never be depended upon for either. These strategies that make sense for small children but become maladaptive when carried into adult relationships. Given everything X had told me about her mother and her upbringing, it made perfect sense. I took all of this information in. I did not ignore it, but I hoped that X's self-awareness about her patterns meant they would be workable. They were not.

In early November, overwhelmed by work, her degree program, her best friend's substance abuse, and—I later found out—crushing depression, she sent a text asking for some space and disappeared. The writings here were made between roughly early November 2022 and mid-February 2023. I made two small handmade books (the contents of both are reproduced here) within the first few days of the breach and then started working on a larger project I eventually titled “Adjusts Itself to Midnight” after a line in the Emily Dickinson poem. Because I am a hobbyist bookbinder, binding books of my grief was my first instinct.

I started to write my thoughts down as they would come to me on quarter-size sheets of paper folded into signatures. I did not date most writings even though an obsession with the passage of time is evident in them. My original intention had been to roughly draft everything first and then edit and write it again in fair hand before binding it into the final book. I eventually decided to gather the first unedited rough writings in no specific order and bind them, creating a sort of scrap book of the relationship and a raw, disoriented transcript of grief.

In that book, I interspersed my writings with some of her text messages, which I have not reproduced here. I also sewed in a card she gave me and some other pieces of paraphernalia, including the card that I wrote but did not send her. I also included consoling quotations from novels, self-help books, songs, and poems that helped me through my grief. I then carefully sewed all these together using a criss-cross binding instead of glue so that if the pages need to be cut out again, they can. I covered the book in a midnight-blue Japanese Chiyogami paper and navy blue book cloth, bound by blue thread, with blue and black Bugra paper glued or sewn in as accents.

The book is its own object, different from this. After I transcribed the contents into a computer nearly a year later, I began to edit, fiddle, move things around and change details for either privacy or clarity. I am the only person who can fully understand the physical book I made, but I hope that this book is one others can understand.

& After

I was later surprised to hear from X again—or rather, hear of her again—months after I finished binding the book. I was hosting an event with an author at my workplace. As I was escorting him into the event space, he said, “Our server at dinner mentioned you.” I was confused, but he clarified: “We were eating at [restaurant] and I mentioned to our server that I was doing an event at the [my workplace] and she said, 'You must know my friend Emily, then.'” It took a second for me to realize that he was talking about X, and that she was talking about me. After I escorted him to the event space and went back into the staff area, I began to cry immediately. This happened about 7 months after I had last heard from her.

The coincidence seemed miraculous. I work on a team of people who book and host dozens of events each month, and I happened to be the one who booked and hosted this author and he happened to have dinner at [restaurant] and mention this to his waiter, who happened to be X, and he also happened to relay this interaction to me in the elevator to make small talk. To complement the coincidence, only a couple of weeks earlier I had discovered that her number had been hidden in an app on my phone even though I thought I had deleted it entirely.

So I texted her and to my surprise, she responded. We met in a garden and she told me what had happened: that she had withdrawn into a dark hole of depression over the winter and had pushed everyone away from her, not just me. She assumed I was angry with her and would never want to see her again, which is why she never contacted me. She apologized for leaving me to wonder, as I had done nothing to make her leave.

Neither of us made a motion to get back together romantically, which is for the best. I do not think we should, at least in the foreseeable future. Perhaps in the unforeseeable future, but that is as yet unforeseeable.

Becoming Real

During the time that I was in the thickest of the grief, I came across The Velveteen Rabbit by chance. It's a story I've long been familiar with, since I had a picture book version of it when I was a child. A boy plays with his toy rabbit, whom he makes “real” through love. When the boy contracts scarlet fever, the doctor orders everything he had touched to be burned, including his rabbit. At the last minute, the rabbit is saved from the fire by a fairy who transforms him into a real rabbit and takes him to live among other rabbits in the forest.

At the end of my picture book version, the boy is standing in a field some time after he has recovered and a rabbit stands on its hind legs, regarding him from a distance. The page is wordless, but it is implied that this is his former stuffed rabbit and they vaguely recognize each other. I was surprised, however, in re-reading the original text of the book that no such scene happens. In fact, after the toy rabbit is taken away, the boy doesn't even care. He is distracted, instead, by his excitement at being told he is leaving for a seaside trip the next day to convalesce. The adults have also tucked a new, replacement rabbit under his arm to aid in his forgetting.

I had missed the real message of The Velveteen Rabbit until this breakup: it's not simply that love makes us real, but love—having loved—is its own reward. We make ourselves real through love, even when it is not reciprocated, even when the vicissitudes of life carry us away from one another. It was irrelevant whether or not I would see X again because I had been made real by loving her. Just as life brought us together through chance, it was bound to break us apart through happenstance. My book, then, is a transcript of the process of learning the old lesson: to have loved even once, even briefly, is enough to carry with us. Enough to carry us.

The End

Colophon

Fonts: Headers are in VT323 by Peter Hull. Body text is B612 Mono by Nicolas Chauveau, Thomas Paillot, Jonathan Favre-Lamarine, and Jean-Luc Vinot. Poetry text is Nanum Gothic Coding by Sandoll Communication.

CSS is based on the theme Solid Shadow by eggramen.neocities.org.

Background image is a picture taken of this Chiyogami paper with my phone, then dithered using the “vaporwave” preset on Dither Me This. Chiyogami is a Japanese hand screen printed paper using multiple layers of ink.

Design

The bridge between the design of this web page and the original hand-bound book that served as its inspiration is the Chiyogami paper I used to cover the outside of the book. I took a close up picture of the pattern and then dithered the image as an experiment. Although I am generally not into Vaporwave as a style, I was very pleased with the results when I ran it through Dither Me This's Vaporwave preset. I was even more pleased when I saw how it tiled as a page background and nicely clashed with the teal I was already using as an accent color on the main site. From there, it made sense to choose fonts, colors, and page elements in line with a Vaporwave style.

To be clear: I was a person on the internet 'round about the year 2000 and our websites did not look like Vaporwave. Vaporwave (as a visual aesthetic—I can't speak to it as a music genre) is nostalgia for a time that didn't really exist. It combines elements and techniques that evoke older technologies but doesn't actually replicate something done historically. I decided to lean in to this aesthetic with the pixelated header font and chunky monospace body font. I needed a narrower font for the poetry because otherwise most of the lines would break, so I found a complimentary sans-serif.

Despite my reservations, I think Vaporwave is a good choice for this project because I associate it with overaged nostalgia for teen/youth culture. The incident that this project documents is similar in that it feels teenage in both its intensity and foolishness, despite happening during my mid-30s. My main site will keep going through re-designs as my skills and tastes change, but this version of Adjusts Itself to Midnight will remain styled this way.

I created this site to be readable on mobile, but on larger screens its fractured design is more apparent. Things are more choppy and disjointed at the beginning, and the sections with columns give you the option to read the pieces out of order or only read some of them. In both the physical book and the web design, I wanted to use the arrangement of text to convey the way grief splits life into intense fragments and prohibits any orderly or logical progress. As the book goes on, there are still pieces out chronological of order, but sections are more coherent and more eloquent. The kind of eloquence with which a writer comforts herself.