Is she really going out with him? - Curtis Sittenfeld - Salon.com:
Back in 2004, when this Salon piece first came out, I and my friends thought it was hilariously true. We read it, commented on it and bemoaned being saddled with a fabulous girlfriend (or gay friend) who was wearing a dud boyfriend around his or her neck. I remember coolly assessing various couples I knew and dismissing them with the coldness of a Mean Girl hanging out in The Grove.
I scoffed and (as recently as two years ago) said that I would rather experience a full body waxing than be half of an Unevenly Cool Couple. If I couldn't have guy who could fit into the Algonquin Roundtable of my social set, then frak him!
How insufferably bitchy, shallow and vain.
Maybe I feel this way now because I'm with M- and what links us together isn't readily apparent to most folks. Yesterday, I dragged my ass out of bed and headed to his place for lunch. I hadn't seen him since Wednesday and I missed him. A lot. So, we bundled up, took a walk up and down Irving Park, holding hands in the cold and then ate a massive Mexican lunch. I got tipsy on a couple of margaritas, ate too many beans and took a nap on his couch while he went to a memorial dinner for a friend who passed last year.
Over lunch he told me about a dinner party he attended on Friday. A friend of a friend had brought his Japanese girlfriend from California with him.
'Did you ask her about internment camps?' I said.
'Of course!'
I opened my mouth to launch into a lecture about racial insensitivity and profiling and all the typical knee jerk liberal bullshit. But I didn't. I guffawed. He made me laugh a lot over lunch.
'We had a pretty good conversation,' he said. 'She told me about her parents, what it was like growing up in Hawaii, how everyone always asks what she is. You shoulda seen their faces; they were horrified I brought it up. But we had a good talk. '
'I don't know why they were horrified. The camps exist; they're a fact. And people were put there. Most of the Crenshaw neighborhood used to be Japanese until the war. Then it became German. Funny, huh? If we're ever on the west coast again, we should drive out to one of them. A lot of my Japanese friends from school had grandparents who met in the camps.'
He said, 'That would be a good road trip. Eat somewhere along the way.'
I said, 'We should do that.'
And that's my guy.
We probably are an unevenly cool couple (who's cool? depends on who you ask) but I don't give a fuck.
3 comments:
Oh, pish. You are not part of a UCC, obviously. You and M have too much fun together, love each other's company too much. I was once part of a UCC. My friends all knew it (a few told me at the time, most told me afterward), and in my heart of hearts, I did too. There were a lot of reasons I stayed in that relationship as long as I did, but it certainly wasn't because I truly thought he was a terrific match for me. I was settling. Rule of thumb- as long as you're not settling, you're not in danger of UCC.
Ive come to embrace being a part of a UCC. J is a bit odd, but instead of getting stomach in knots or spending my time worrying what off the wall comment he is going to make, I just go with it. We both have a much better time when I do.
Luuuuhv.
Post a Comment