As time goes on, only in retrospect do I realize my mistakes, successes, decisions, what I did and what I didn’t do affects the future.
You see, when I was a lot younger, I felt like Superman. It’s as if nothing could affect me from flying so high above it all. Then there was the kryptonite, and I came crashing down. In a way, I’m that flawed, Byronic hero. A Batman, Iron Man, what have you. I have these deeply ingrained issues that shape my life the way it is. Real flaws that I’ve at times neglected attention to. Things that trouble me and push me into disconnect mode. Shutting down, mulling over the past, deeply conflicted in both my good and bad decisions.
Yet in this I’m eventually willing to place myself out there again. To again feel the cool breeze on my face, the rush of the warm Spring air, to again smile.
I’ve always been guided by strong principles, often falling towards being dead-set in my ways. My beliefs about many things in life are strong and nearly impermeable. How to treat a woman. How I associate with other men. I admit that sometimes it makes me hard to get along with once the façade has been stripped away. My ostensible and obvious disdain for people who should know better than to act like little boys and girls.
In a way, I’m an arrogant man. Yet it’s partly this arrogance that’s made me who I am, for better or for worse. I remember a girl I dated once who described me as one of the most arrogant men she’s dated, and how disturbed I was by her statement. I struggled for a long time after that, trying to weigh the pros and cons of both sides. I realized afterward that though I may seem arrogant, I am always carefully weighing the sides of the story and situation. What’s best for me? What’s best for her?
Perhaps because of this I tend to weed out the bad people fairly quickly. I’m impressed by self-made women. Women who are searching for something better — for themselves, and are willing to grab for it with utmost jealousy. But I also realize that no one is perfect. I’ll readily admit that I’m one of the most imperfect and flawed people out there. The difference is that I want to see that they are trying to improve on their current state. Give me a piece of coal and I see a diamond in the making. And I’ll continue to see it that way until I know the cause is lost.
As I get older, I feel myself slipping further into cynicism. Ah… my youth was filled with bright optimism. I was like Superman who could save the day and create rain from the most wistful of clouds. But now, it’s not so. We are all just human, and have to work with what we have got.
I used to think I knew what my perfect woman would be. Beautiful, smart, bright, engaging, understanding, full of promise and a will to work for it. Sometimes we all need that little push in our lives, and I’m willing to give in a little, but now I feel myself only willing to give as much as I receive in return. I know this sounds kind of asshole-ish, but it’s the truth. Sometimes people just end up being black pits where we might try to fill, but it just eats up whatever we put in.
So I still don’t know what I want. But I know what I don’t want. I don’t want selfishness, or to have to babysit someone. I don’t want to be limited because I’ve yet to feel totally accomplished. There is a certain height in my career that I haven’t fulfilled yet, a certain feeling in life and adventure I’ve yet to find.
It’s odd yet mildly amusing at the same time. I often describe my dates as “adventures,” because that’s what they should be. Partly it’s my abhorrence to the traditional date, but furthermore a date should be something new each time. Each meeting should be an opportunity to expand horizons, even if it’s something simple as a home cooked meal and the slow drawl of chatter by the fireplace afterward. Expectations of the unexpected. It’s not enough to me to dine at a fancy restaurant in the hills that requires reservations. Can she deal with a picnic at the beach, where we’re surely going to get dirty and sand in our flip-flops? I guess in a way my “unwants” thin out into what I do “want.” I don’t know.
If in the case that she ends up being more successful in her career than I (which would be quite hard, I assure you), would she look down on me? Would she pour indignities and spite down on me like a friend of mine dealt with through his ex-wife? No matter what, a couple is built up by two — will either side remember the contributions of the other? How can you weigh such things?
Me. I’m an emotional hodge-podge, molded together with the scraps of my own experiences and seeing through the eyes of my friends. I’m dark, brooding, cynical, yet I see something left here for me. There is always some light left at the end of the tunnel. I might die trying to reach it, but one can’t really know the truth unless one tries.
I’m not Superman. But I do hope that whoever she is, she understands that deep down in my flawed self, I am trying my best.