Sunday, April 26, 2009

Eros Turannos

She fears him, and will always ask
What fated her to choose him;
She meets in his engaging mask
All reason to refuse him…


Every once in a while the lines from this poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson will magically appear in my mind and repeat themselves over and over—I don’t know why or when but I relate to them very well (I take it too literally, probably) and from the first time I read these melodious lines in college, a vision of bright, sparkling blue eyes hovered before me, making me smile yet depressing me at the same time…

“She fears him.” Yep. Anyone. Although it may not show. Put up the defenses immediately... “Engaging masks”—too many engaging masks out there. There’s always something lurking behind them. They all have some type of hidden agenda… “All reasons to refuse him”—sometimes its easy to see right through the charmers. The regular ones are the worse; seemingly normal and all. Its so hard to be caught off guard and try to find an excuse to get away…

She fears him, and will always ask
What fated her to choose him;
She meets in his engaging mask
All reason to refuse him…


When I was 14 and had just discovered that a large number of high school boys were interested in the upcoming freshman class, I and my friends spent hours at the swimming pool shyly ‘looking the look’ and looking away. It was a new phenomenon, exhilarating/exciting and a little uncomfortable and scary. What did we know about older guys? God, they were cute and flirty and driven and dangerous.

A guy named DJ had been trying to talk to us all week. It became bewilderingly apparent that we looked damn good with our tans and white bikinis. When we finally pulled on some damp clothes and left the pool, him and a couple of new buddies walked up to discover what young chicks were seated on the picnic tables under the shade of the oak trees. All at once I was gazing into a set of incredibly mesmerizing blue eyes which snapped and sparkled at me while every warning bell and siren in the book went off, but it was already too late…the spell had reeled me in and I was a goner for years…

I’ll call this guy Cecil, (though I’m tempted to type his real name in case a self-google-search will pull up this story for old-times sake) and I spent what seemed like eons repetitively falling for his ‘engaging mask’.

Cecil had just graduated OUT of high school as I was going in, and lived near the pool and park with his dad and several fast, spotless cars. His house was near enough the school that one could eye the driveway from American History or Business, hoping to spot him luxuriously rubbing down whatever piece of machinery was gleaming there at the time, which could either be an extreme emotionally high or devastating disappointment.

I loved this guy
. Absolutely fell for him. Would hope and pray to get a ride home from him after an evening at the pool or later after a baseball/football/basketball game, as I became a cheerleader and lived a mile out of town.
Having the strictest parents in the world did not make life easy—when Cecil, DJ, and others heard we’d be sleeping outside in a tent, my dad greeted their crunching gravelly footsteps at midnight with a shotgun, much to our dismay. It was horrible. As a group of guys fearfully dove under our vehicles; we glumly promised never to ‘invite’ anyone over again. I guess any hopes of first kisses were shot that night. Thanks a lot.

Probably the severity of parental disapproval made the forbidden even more enticing. I managed many times to kiss this guy and it was far better than anything one could read about. It was sheer heaven n hell combined. To be around him was so exciting, yet sickeningly scary, there would be times when one’s knees would be too weak to stand. And the look. That magical gaze. The SPELL. How many many times did I really believe the quiet “I love you” because his bewitching gaze made it TRUE? What a sucker I was. So many times.

And so many times he was with someone else the very next day or even hours later. How many times did my world turn upside down because I saw someone else in his car when I got groceries with mom, or there was someone else in his car when I rode the bus home from school or there was someone else in his car when I was stuck at cheerleading practice or babysitting or a hundred other random activities? It was so gut-wrenchingly painful and horrible, yet he could walk up to me later with that look, or call and the thrill would erase all of my previous thoughts and misgivings. Every single time.

It became very weird that summer. The phone would ring randomly, for my sis, my mom, my brothers, but if it was HIM, I could tell. I always knew. My stomach flipped over. I knew when the phone rang that it was him. It was weird and to the point of panic sometimes, nearly screaming—‘Don’t touch the phone—it’s for ME!’

My freshman year was filled with ecstatic misery. My boyfriend became DJ; not sure why, except he was always around. Deep down inside I really liked someone else.

But Cecil was a charmer. A player. A true P-L-A-Y-U-H. He thrived for the chase. He wanted girls constantly. He was quite gifted in getting his fingers on, under, over, around, in anything young and naïve. I’d learned fast that some of the girls he flirted with and picked up in his car were deemed ‘whores’ and ‘sluts’ the very next day. It was as if he couldn’t help himself, yet the moment they finally gave in to those hands, he lost all respect and was filled with disdain. He ignored them after the ‘kill’.

I knew deep down inside and knew it from the moment I laid eyes on him:…if I really wanted him, really wanted him to like me, you had to play a game and a rough game it was.

I remember an afternoon that I was finally allowed to do something with Cecil—probably ride into town for a summer baseball game or something. My best friend was over, but when we gave him a phone call he said he wasn’t feeling well, thus plans were canceled and I was feeling pretty low. Since mom had made a batch of soup, we decided to take him some. She let us drive into town and as we walked near, glancing through the windows, it was apparent that he was ‘involved’ with someone on the carpeted living room floor; another cheerleader who had actually heard me discuss my ‘date’ that very morning at practice.
Shock hit, again the world fell apart and I tried so hard to pretend I didn’t care…my friend could read my face and while we joked and silently fooled around with his vehicle—turning on the windshield wipers, the radio, etc, I could hardly keep the tears from overflowing. I remember the pity in her eyes. And later that evening, when he actually showed up at the baseball game, those blue eyes snapped with hatred—NO ONE was allowed to touch his vehicle he was so particular about it…but yet, I got a ride home later although the eyes flashed and blazed dangerously. I nearly ‘lost’ him by touching his car…

I could type a zillion tragic scenarios, numerous lessons in agony, (I even caught him with my sister for Christsake) but I always fell for the look and the “I really love ONLY YOU” line.

Cecil joined the Air Force the following spring and left town, yet he came out to say a fearful and crushing goodbye. It’s hard for any guy to venture toward the unknown. During my high school years he would keep in touch and visit me. I had other random boyfriends, all of which despised Cecil; I probably had some ‘look’ on my face when I’d hear his name. And whenever the phone rang, I could elatedly tell if he was back in town from Guam or England or Hong Kong or wherever, and I would jump for joy that he still cared. He always snapped those blue eyes and drew me in. Addiction was powerful and consuming.

Then I became a party animal and left home on Graduation. There was a big party house a couple towns over and many girl and guy friends took up residence together. Summer was a blast until a fateful day when my boyfriend dumped me at home and I had to tell my parents, hesitantly mumbling, that I was going to get married…

I remember my dad sitting in his chair reading and my mom not saying a whole lot, but didn’t seem at all negative about it either. I was home that weekend because I wanted to start sewing a wedding dress and the machine was in the back room. These words were barely out of my mouth when the phone rang.

I swear to god that I knew. It was HIM. It was Cecil. Never mind the fact that no one had heard about him in months, that I hadn’t been home all summer….it was HIM and I looked at the phone in delirious fright and awe and the most gut-wrenching feeling ever…and answered it.
It was him.

It wasn’t the world that tilted this time; it was the universe. The universe fucking imploded because he sounded so calm, so serious, so crushingly believable: Will you marry me?” Can you imagine the total shock, the unresolved longing, the hope, the cruel anguish, thoughts swirling a million times a minute? (WHY WHY WHY Didn’t you call a month earlier? Why?) I had to quietly tell him the reason I was home and I think we made small talk and I got off the phone.

I imagine my night, sleeping in my old bedroom, staring at the ceiling, hot tears streaming hour after hour after hour….

The dress was begun early the next morning; I’d already bought the pattern and lace. (I trashed it a few years after my divorce as it was an ugly, sucky style.)
In the afternoon, I rode with Cecil to Wichita—I don’t remember why, only that it was very quiet and we didn’t say much except through eyes and our holding (gripping) hands…
He had paperwork on Base down there; getting ready to be shipped out again. Yes, I left with another guy on the weekend I was making my wedding dress and no one knew except for my mom. It was about a 6 hour trip and I don’t remember where we stopped for a quick bite to eat. I don’t remember much at all except for the shock and his eyes could still sparkle and snap though in a heart-wrenching, sobering manner. He wasn’t all fun n games then. It was so quiet. The blue eyes were beautiful.

I got married. Had a baby. Coincidently, who showed up at the hospital hours after the birth? I cried later, when all the company left, feeling trapped in a blasé marriage, but making the best of it with a sweetheart infant.

Then 4 years later, separated and stressfully trying to raise 2 toddlers, I woke up with the strangest feeling--thinking of him and the eyes and the sadness. My mom called in the morning and said, “Guess who was in town last night?” He showed up at the grocery store at noon where I worked as a checker, so I shakingly went for a ride in another hot car—he’d married someone in England and it hadn’t worked out.

Several years passed by, college and a new job; I was working and nearing the end of the day, my room phone rang. I had barely taken 2 steps towards it when I KNEW. Totally out of the blue. I was shaking so bad I could hardly answer and it was the secretary apologizing all over the place: “I’m so sorry; I shouldn’t bother you…but can you come out to the break roo…?” “YESYESYES!” I was saying before the words were even out of her mouth. And there he was with those mesmerizing eyes and the look and I melted into a puddle once again. He didn’t stay long, married to a Japanese girl this time…

The flustered secretary later talked a mile-a-minute….”Oh I’m so sorry, oh my, I just couldn’t help it, I knew I shouldn’t interrupt, but he just batted those eyes at me….oh, he made my day…” Yes, he could raise the heart rate of a 65 yr old.

He could almost get you to do anything, ‘almost’ being the key word in our non-relationship…

Whenever I read this entire poem--an overwhelming misery permeates the ending—I’m filled with sadness and relief. Although I was only 14, then 18, I feel as though I was wiser than the lady that allowed herself to fall for the allure of the ‘engaging mask’.

So I think of this poem and know inside that I would have been unhappy, because despite all the tortuous wants and desires and the breaking heart, it would never have worked out. There would be no trust on my part, severe jealousy, atrocious mind-games and debilitating emotional humiliation. And he would still tell me that he loved me, but it wouldn’t have changed anything. My inner voice knows it would have been a life of arduous despair and misery. No happiness-ever-after for me…

She fears him, and will always ask
What fated her to choose him;
She meets in his engaging mask
All reasons to refuse him;
But what she meets and what she fears
Are less than are the downward years
Drawn slowly to the foamless weirs
Of age, were she to lose him.

Between a blurred sagacity
That once had power to sound him,
And Love, that will not let him be
The Judas that she found him,
Her pride assuages her almost,
As if it were alone the cost.
He sees that he will not be lost,
And waits and looks around him.

A sense of ocean and old trees
Envelops and allures him;
Tradition, touching all he sees,
Beguiles and reassures him;
And all her doubts of what he says
Are dimmed with what she knows of days--
Till even prejudice delays,
And fades, and she secures him.

The falling leaf inaugurates
The reign of her confusion;
The pounding wave reverberates
The dirge of her illusion;
And home, where passion lived and died,
Becomes a place where she can hide,
While all the town and harbor side
Vibrate with her seclusion.

We tell you, tapping on our brows,
The story as it should be,
As if the story of a house
Were told, or ever could be;
We'll have no kindly veil between
Her visions and those we have seen,
As if we guessed what hers have been,
Or what they are or would be.

Meanwhile we do no harm; for they
That with a god have striven,
Not hearing much of what we say,
Take what the god has given;
Though like waves breaking it may be,
Or like a changed familiar tree,
Or like a stairway to the sea
Where down the blind are driven.

I wrote the above story in my mind, with succinct fluidity, but while typing was interrupted numerous times by my son’s random friends, thus disrupting the flow. Apologies.

Would I go for a ride again? What would you think?

2 comments:

Dan Johnson said...

That was awesome B! A great piece of writing! I remember those blue eyes and feelings with my first love Sandy (I was 22 she was 18). When we split the first time, I recall looking at her picture that I kept in my wallet and thought I was going to throw up...I've always thought in the heat of those passionate and all consuming feelings, how can we logically make any decision that will affect the rest of our lives? I could go on bit I need a nap...love that poem BTW.

B. Diederich said...

Thank you for the comments. I don't know what came over me this weekend, other than a beer for me is usually a great depressant if I'm in that type of mood!
Probably next month I will hear he was back in the US again or something!