July 16, 1997
Dear Mary Angel,
I wonder if you think of me. I think of you almost every day, and I remember you with great fondness. Of course we both know why and because of it, I remember you still. I wish I had taken the time to know you better, because I would love to talk with you. You were such a good listener... but you're probably not the same girl I knew. In fact, I know you're not. I'm not even the same person I was, and what you found attractive in me then you probably wouldn't think so attractive now. People change. I have... and will again.
I wonder if you think fondly of me. I was very weak then; unsure of myself and looking to others for my identity (hell! they didn't even know who they were!), and in a lot of ways I'm still unsure of who I am except to say that I am Eric Lee Ashley and as Bob Seger sang so aptly, "...still running against the wind."
Well. Let me tell you about myself. I'm thirty-six and eleven months old. I've never married. In fact I've never come close; I'm still running. Remember how you chased me? And I just ran and ran. A part of me still smiles to think of it. I was so shy of girls (and still am), and you chased me so very hard. I sometimes wonder if you were my one chance to find happiness. But that's silly. It's my own fault I'm not happy.
I hate my job. I'm a manager at a restaurant that has long since seen it's day in the sun. The company itself is in a decline and there's no room for advancement. The atmosphere of the place is beginning to smell the way St. Andrews bay would sometimes smell... seaweed drying in the sun and fiddler crabs scurrying about brandishing their one large pincer almost as if they were too poor to afford a matching pair. Well, I know how he feels, and I am miserable.
I've given my resume to a local company that I hope to be hired on with. It's a company called HealthQuest. The corporate office is located very close to where I live. Minerals and herbs are the company's business and I've acquired an interest in such things over the last few years. I just love the way I feel when I "take my vitamins" on a regular basis; almost as though I can do anything.
I know the owner of the company through a mutual friend and the owner suggested I submit a resume because he could "...make me rich." The offer was very tempting especially in light of the fact that I'm very unhappy with the direction my current career is taking me. It was two days ago that I took him my resume, but I've heard nothing yet. I'm almost willing to take a pay cut initially if it will lead to advancement and pay increases in the future, but when someone says, "I'll make you rich," what am I supposed to think? "Rich" is a hell of a lot more than what I am right now.
Well, It's late. 10:45, and way past my bedtime, seeing as how I have a twelve hour shift tomorrow in the kitchen, beginning at 8am.
Think on me and I'll think on you...
All my love,
Eric
This was my very first letter to you Mary. I had just bought my first computer and quickly set about copying everything I had ever written onto the 1-gig hard drive-- realize, this was 1996. When I ran out of material, and miserable at my job, for some reason I'll never be able to understand I decided to write you a letter.
Looking over this thirteen year old letter I quickly notice how "fledgling" my thoughts appear-- I am a much better writer today. I also notice how perfunctory it all sounds... like I'm merely going through the motion of writing. Anything to download my daily stress so I can get some sleep. I can't say whether or not it worked.
What I do know is this... when I looked back at the string of decisions that had led me to where I then was, you seemed to me, or rather your memory seemed to be a brightly lit fulcrum upon which my life shifted from one direction to the another-- my decision to leave the car when you demanded I stay... a party was more important than you.
This, I realized, was the crux of my misery. I wanted a chance to go back and do it all over again-- and who hasn't wanted that at some time in their life? I wanted a chance to stay in the car, to quit Iota Gamma, to stop drinking and smoking pot, to stop relying on those miscreants for personal identity and my sense of self-worth. I wanted a chance to graduate and settle into a career, a wife, children. Instead, I found myself fifteen years older, and like Herman Hesse's Siddhartha... restlessly searching for my own truth. My own inner peace. I only hoped that I would not be, like Siddhartha, an old gray and bent man when I found it.
I don't know when my letters to you became compulsion. I don't know when I fell in love with you again-- the young woman I remembered, and knew would never meet again. I don't know when my memory of you became an ideal by which I judged all other women. I only knew that I needed a confidante, and knew you would keep my deepest, darkest secrets. So I poured my heart out to you, knowing I was safe.
Four years later the journals ended, and rather abruptly. I know why, but I'll not tell here. I've never forgotten you, and though the journals ended, I've never stopped writing you... I've just stopped writing daily. The journals served their purpose, I was freed of a lot of baggage, but only to discover there was more circling the baggage claim. Everyone I've ever met waits there-- they wait for their own seemingly endless train of luggage.
I started this blog more than a year ago. I had wanted to start this blog for as long as five years now. Part of me thought that if you ever read them, I would be free of you (though secretly I've never wished to be free). Part of me thought it both silly and emotionally dangerous to post so much of myself online for anyone to read and exploit. So when I began this blog I did it knowing you would never read these letters. I felt safe. I didn't RSS, I didn't advertise, I kept it strictly private. But I did make it available for Google searches.
That might not have been the wisest decision I've ever made.
I never liked the look of it. The design was unmanageable, and because of such I was an infrequent guest at my own blog. I wrote you sparingly here, but less sparingly elsewhere.
For the longest time (ten years at least) I have felt I lost my muse. But I know this is not true. My muse has never left. I have just shut her out. This is something I cannot continue. If I am to be free, she must be free.
And so I will continue to write to her. Posting old and new, with a renewed sense of purpose. Not to wallow in self pity, but to glory in a love I once had... and still cherish today. Each addressed to you in chaste and honest love.
Till next time,
All my love
E
3 comments:
You write wistful. Sweet even. Too sad, bt sweet.
Is she real?
Yes, she's real. Or rather, she was. I don't know the woman she's become. People change over time. I certainly have.
Thanks for stopping by.
Thank you. Your poetry is mostly good. Very good. I'll keep an i on your work.
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