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All the words I wish I could have told you

I got rid of my last photo of you, and I immediately regretted it. I realized that I will never be able to use the photos I took, documenting our love, as a bookmark.

I regretted that on any suspecting afternoon, with the sun gleaming just right twenty years from now, one of those photos will never fall out of an old book in front of my children and they won’t ask about the boy in the picture with curly hair and reddened cheeks.

I regretted it because you are – you were – my first love. And a person only gets one of those in a lifetime.

When I finally left I reacted curt toward you, almost passive or indifferent, because I didn’t want you to know that this was killing me too. Because I wanted to be strong – because the alternative was weak. Because we met un-intentionally and you immediately became forever etched into my soul.

I regretted it because we were damned from the start – because I found happiness in you before I found happiness in myself.

But, the reality is that I didn’t even know that I was looking for someone like you to save me from my misdirection. In fact, all I knew was that I liked the feeling in my stomach when your bright smile landed in my direction. I liked the comfort I felt in your eyes, I liked being desired. And, I liked how the beginning of our love story sprouted as if it were straight out of a Nora Ephron film.

The thing about those movies, however, is that they always ended just before the story actually began and reality set in.

For whatever reason, I thought myself righteous enough to pop our bubble. To be the one who decides that there is something better, grander, more extraordinary beyond the story of us.

So, I let it go. I convinced myself that I needed to get away so that I could start feeling again.

But seared inside my mind, hidden behind my self-proclaimed and glaring passions for the best love story known to man – and my belief that you couldn’t possibly give it to me – are the photos of you that I took in sepia. My hand on your chest. The back of your head against a sunset. Our hands holding one another. A kiss stolen in a gas station parking lot. Your eyes meeting mine with affection from the driver’s seat when we stopped at a red light and I told you to smile.

I regret that I didn’t give us the chance to seize just one more moment together. I regret that I didn’t give us a chance.

I know that you broke my heart in little ways for a long time, but I broke your heart in a big way all at once. One does not cancel out the other.

I loved you unconditionally. You knew it, too, but you lost me. I waited until I had enough and I left.

I realized that it is better to be single and search for myself, then to settle for something I feel insecure in.

Don’t get me wrong though. Our ending wasn’t nearly as tumultuous as I am making it out to be, nor as I would have liked it to be. One second we were, the next we were not. And that was it. We just ended. There was no thunder, no lightening. Nothing.

Even now as I am sorting through what exactly happened, I still can’t help but think that if you loved me the way you said you did you would have treated me the way you said you would.

I wouldn’t have had to beg.

Even when we did eventually try to talk about us, instead of ignoring the elephant in the room with banter or seduction, I’d be speechless. I didn’t know where to start.

But, please don’t mistake my silence for indifference. I do still love you. I always will, except it’s not the same. We spent so much time together and I know that I am saying so little right now to make up for it. I know that this is unbearable, but I promise you that every word I wish to utter to you is in my mind. I just can’t bring myself to speak when you look at me like that. When you draw yourself closer, it is a bribe which I can’t commit to. So please take a step back, I’m so tired of this. I am drained. If I stayed, I would spend a lifetime choking on words I wouldn’t ever dare to say.

I invested in you and I lost myself. I became dependent. And to be honest, this was the last thing I wanted. I spent close to a year relying on someone I didn’t want to rely on – nor could I. I knew it was the end long before you did, and I held on anyways, just in case, because I have a drastic fear of letting go and moving on.

But how can I reconcile breaking your heart and leaving everything we had together in just a few short minutes. You say that I took you by surprise, that you didn’t see it coming – but I don’t know how. I gave you all of the signs. You saw my silent tears. I always knew I wanted more. I was destined for something different. I felt it, deep in my bones, I just never faced it until I was forced to. I was able to ignore my confusion because we laughed with one another. We couldn’t take our hands off one another. We ran home in the pouring rain together, stopping only to kiss.

We experienced the best of one another for a short period of time, and I know that our relationship lasted as long as it was meant to. We loved each other until we couldn’t. We chewed us up and spit us out. We got everything we needed to get out of one another. We fell in and out of love from worlds apart. But I still feel terrible. And I feel like I should be feeling more even though I have been overcome with intense conflicting feelings every day since we said goodbye. Every day for close to a year.

I guess I just want you to know that I didn’t make this decision in haste. I needed to get away in order to understand more of myself.

I regret not thanking you enough for watching me blossom and believing in me so that I could believe in myself. I should have told you just how much you helped me realize the endless bounds of myself, for better or for worse.

I should have thanked you for letting me go, even though it hurt like hell.

I regret doing this to you because you waited for me. Because I gave you dozens of silent chances in my head. Because you would take me back in a second and I am here telling you that I am confused. That I need more time. That is – time to think. Time to learn and explore and dream. But all you hear is that I need to do all of these things away from you, that I need time alone. That I would rather work on building my sense of self alone than by your side.

But I deserve someone who makes me feel alive. Someone who is generous and who makes my heart jump when I tell people that they are mine. And you deserve someone who doesn’t give you an expiration date.

I am scared that maybe I made a mistake, that maybe I am foolish, or maybe that this is all that my love amounts to. I am having trouble accepting the normalcy of the end of us. The lack of explosion.

I am scared that I will forget. I am scared that after a few months everything we had will feel just like a dream. A dream that is open-ended, a dream that will constantly be on repeat in our respective minds until the end of time. Fated to carry each other’s baggage.

I regret that I now have to give you to someone else. That someone else will nuzzle into your chest, and devour your smell. I regret that I gave it all up so easily and have only in hindsight realized the weight of my naivety. Or did I? Because I also remember being so incredibly devastated, and being met with oblivion, with dismissive niceties. I remember my anxieties being belittled or made to feel small. I remember that I didn’t have the means, or the patience, to heal you.

I remember crying on the dance floor a year ago. Turning around so that none of my friends would see. I was staring at your messages. They were curt, broken and hard to make sense of. I remember being confused, I remember when someone told me for the first time that I deserved a love that was better. A love that nurtured. A love I didn’t have to settle for. A love that swept me off my feet.

I regret that we were different together than we were around everyone else. That no one got a real glimpse of us, in love. I regret being so quiet. I regret that I couldn’t love you like you loved me. I regret that you couldn’t love me the way I needed you to. I regret that we’ve run out of things to say.

I regret that our relationship was already broken even when your fingers were strumming through my hair or when we sat across from each other on the floor in a fit of laughter.

I regret knowing it was the end before you did, and holding on anyways just in case. I regret not telling you just how nervous I was and just how serious I was when I said that I thought we lost our spark. Our magic.

I regret it all because I wish that I held on to those pictures for a little while longer. I wish I studied them. Even though I knew the ending wouldn’t change.

Neither of us can fully heal our heartbreak unless we are apart. We have to heal for ourselves, rather than for the possibility that one day down the line we will be together again.

Seeing you that day, when you came by to collect your things, actually helped me realize that I am better off without you. That I am happy now. Really happy. And I no longer doubt myself. I no longer rely on you for happiness. I no longer get angry or sad because you couldn’t make me happy.



In hindsight I had absolutely no idea who I was when I met you. I still really don’t. I’m not even sure that I knew what genuine happiness looked or felt like.

Maybe that’s what ruined us after all. My indifference. My sadness. All of which at the end of the day amounted to nothing.

Soon I will be able to think about you without ripping my heart out.

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Love + Sex Love Life Stories

I didn’t want my love story to start with, “I met him on Tinder”

“It’s just not for me.” 

At one point in my life, this was my go-to response when asked about online dating. 

While yes, I was initially made uncomfortable by the idea of putting myself out there in such a one dimensional way, I also had deeper qualms with dating apps. 

Mainly: I was still holding out for a better story. 

Let’s all admit this: falling for someone who exists outside of your phone, whether it be with a handsome stranger or a long-time friend, is still the ultimate ideal – no matter how ubiquitous dating apps become. 

There isn’t a stigma around using dating apps anymore. Everyone does it; Tinder has become as common an iPhone app as Facebook. But there is still a stigma around meeting someone serious on an app.

 Somewhere inside of me, there remained a hope, however small, that I’d fall in love with someone in an effortless, face-to-face way. 

I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve said something along the lines of: “I’m using it for fun now, but I don’t want to tell my future kids that I met their dad on Tinder!”

Up until recently, I had the same attitude towards Tinder that I did of community college as a high school senior: I was too good for it. It was the easy way out. 

But in actuality, both are opportunities to climb your way out of uncertainty. Or just explore. 

I joined it to do just that and ended up stumbling into something totally unique and amazing.

I met Mark in the midst of a whirlwind Tinder binge. 

I was having the time of my life meeting people and not worrying about commitment or strings. Our relationship hit me like a ton of bricks because I never expected to find something so genuine in an app. 

Our first date was hardly magical. 

I went into it with a fairly casual mindset. We didn’t have the immediate sparks that are usually the catalyst of a relationship. There were lags in conversation. He awkwardly spilled a little wine.

 I was super closed off, as I always am in those situations, and he had no idea if I liked him or not. 

But despite all of that, he almost immediately became my best friend. 

We met on a Wednesday and saw each other three nights in a row. He didn’t see my standoffish vibe as a turnoff or some sort of weird challenge. He saw who I was beneath all of that, and made a sincere effort to coax the real me out.

When we first had a conversation about defining our relationship, which he initiated, I buried my face in a pillow and wanted nothing to do with it. Not because I didn’t want us to become something more, but because any type of serious conversation typically makes me want dry heave and then jump out a window. 

But he was patient and lovely and told me that we had to talk about these things. 

He’s made me want to be more open with my feelings. He makes me want to have the sometimes difficult conversations that are necessary for any kind of honest relationship.

I was, and continue to be, astounded by his softness and his kindness. 

Our relationship has made me realize that while the act of swiping through pictures and profiles is inherently superficial, it doesn’t mean that those connections can’t go beyond that. 

The “how we met” story isn’t what makes a relationship good – it’s about what happens afterward.

And honestly, who cares if we met online?

After all, we do everything else online – shop, work, order food. Is it really so insane that we find a partner online too?

I’m not saying that everyone should expect to meet someone special on a dating app; that will likely result in disappointment. All I’m saying is this: the way you met a person doesn’t have to define the rest of your relationship.

Our story is uniquely ours, just like every couple’s story is uniquely theirs. 

It doesn’t matter that millions of people are meeting on the very app that we met on, or that both of us were initially using the app just to have fun, or that our first date was ambiguous and a little awkward.

What matters is that we swiped, we met, and we’re both happier because of it.