Sunday, February 26, 2012

As I See It

I've spent the better part of these last few years talking about the unfortunate things that have happened to me, and as a result, this blog has tapered off a bit (that, and I am writing a thesis; a little leeway should be given in regards to that).  After all, there is only so much dwelling that one can do on the darker parts of one's navel before one turns completely and desperately inward.

But then I meet Catherine.  And things took a step in the awesome direction.

So, while reflecting in the shower (my favorite of reflection zones), I decided I should enlighten those who aren't familiar with what has happened recently.  Or at least shed some light on us from my unique perspective.

About July, I got an email from a former girlfriend of mine who had read a particularly depressing blog entry and decided that enough was enough.  Maybe so that she didn't have to listen to me gripe anymore, or maybe she was overwhelmed, as she writes about in her blog, by a feeling to help someone too strong to ignore. Either way, she sent me this email, via Facebook:
I know this sounds weird and totally random, but I think you should meet up with Catherine this summer. I haven't spoken to either of you in years, but I just have this feeling.Ok. That's all!
A bit of backstory: this girlfriend and I had what I considered to be a bit of a tumultuous breakup (especially because I was at the tender age of 14 or 15, when all breakups were tumultuous, heart-rendering affairs), and we had only sparing conversations in the intervening 16 years between the breakup and the above email.  An email from an estranged ex-girlfriend looking to set me up with a friend of hers who I vaguely remembered from my time in high school seemed like: a) an elaborate payback for something I did wrong when I was a wee teenager (I was wee, too, in high school); or b) a totally random, nearly blind date set-up that could, at best, be a pleasant distraction from my crippling loneliness, or at worst, be an uncomfortable evening.  I found out from Mo that she had sent a similar email to Catherine.  So I did what all suave, tech-savvy 21st century men do: sent a friend request and then constantly checked my Facebook account for validation.

See: I knew Catherine was given the same instructions from Mo, so I figured I would take the first step and reach out.  Having crossed that threshold, I figured she would email me to say hello and break the verbal ice.  Once my virtual friendship was accepted, and I creepily trolled through all her pictures as one does these days, before I resumed checking Facebook to see when she would take a step closer to me.

And nothing.

Depending on my mood, I claim it was anywhere between a few days to a month or so before I decided to sack up and send her an email (it more than likely was about two days, if even that).  After pining for months on end, I decided to give it one last try; I was going to send a short email to see if we could just talk to each other in a safe, virtual environment.  If there was no response to this second attempt, I was just going to give up, pack it in, pull up stakes in America, and ex-patriate for good.

This second attempt is probably the best decision I have made in some time.  The email, which was quite short, hinted that I read her blog, and that she should continue writing.  I write.  A lot.  So I figured this might be some common ground.  Again, I waited.  But this time, I got a response.  To which I responded.  And on and on and on.  Then, without much warning, plans were made, times set, etc.

Suddenly, I had a date.  Catherine might say that she understood our initial meeting differently, but I want to officially go on record to claim that on our first date we saw Horrible Bosses at the Woodridge Theatre.  July 8, 2011.  I also want to retrospectively thank her for not wanting to see Green Lantern (which was my first suggestion, and which, when I saw it on the plane here in the fall, was terrible).

From those humble beginning (we also shared some food at Buffalo Wild Wings), things began snowballing, one date turned into a second date.  That turned into two consecutive nights of dating.  More emails.  More dating.  Weekends away.  Family to meet.  Less time spent apart than together.  Soon, by the end of the summer, I was seeing her every night and staying up way to late for either of us to be productive.

This, though, was not the plan.  As I had said, I saw it as a date when we saw Horrible Bosses, but I did not hold out too much hope that we would last.  I had done long distance relationship before (in fact, most in my adult life have had some distance put between myself and the woman I am dating), and it never worked out well.  It had worked out disastrously in the last instance, and I was neither keen to make that same mistake, or get put myself in that emotional position again.  I figured this would be a summer fling, something to get my mojo back before I jetted off for sunny, sexy Aberystwyth.  And here I was, September and falling madly in love with another Chicago woman.

We decided to play it by ear and see if we could give this thing a chance.  I'll give this to Catherine: she is one of the few people who I've actually grown closer to over Skype.  She gets up early to talk to me before work.  We talk during her lunch hour.  Then she'll call me when she gets home from work.  Granted, not every day, but without fail, she makes time for me (and I in turn make time for her).  Surprisingly, our relationship was flourish despite being 3000 miles apart.

This is not to say that things have always been easy.  I won't air our dirty laundry on the internet, but I will say that we have somehow made this work through mostly virtual communication.  That, in and of itself, speaks volumes to both our dedication to this relationship; a dedication that made me relax a lot more as things seemed to race towards seriousness.

She came out for a visit in October which was too fast and hectic to remark on much.  It was a last minute trip decided upon when Catherine decided she wanted to see me and didn't want to wait until Christmas.  I was glad she made that decision, because I was missing her equally as badly.  Plus, she got to witness my Glorious Winter Beard in all its glorious wintry-ness.  I like to think that I converted Catherine to a beard lover on that trip.

When I went home for Christmas, I saw her nearly every day, and we even made appearances at each other's family Christmas Gatherings.  It was a chance for our families to spend more time with the mysterious person the other was dating.  After all, I had known Catherine for a scant two months before jetting off to Wales; hardly enough time to get to know each other.

Unfortunately, all this dog-and-pony-ing that we did left little time for us.  It was decided, then, that Catherine would come to visit me, and just me, in London for a week (originally Italy, but neither of us speak Italian, and that could have been just as hectic as Christmas).

Between Christmas and her visit, I had this niggling feeling at the back of my mind that Catherine was the one for me.  Every time this thought popped into my head, I did what every grown man secure in his emotional development would do: panicked and dove into work.  Catherine would occasionally bring up similar feelings, and I tried desperately not to talk about it.  I pleaded that she just accept that I was committed to her, and that things would progress naturally.  I just needed time to think (or, in most cases, ignore the issue entirely).

Honestly, I was scared to become engaged again.  It didn't work out well for me last time, and though I knew Catherine was different, I didn't want to take a similar step that blew up in my face.  I needed time, I kept telling myself.  Time.

And yet, I found myself drifting to jewelry stores when I wandered through town.  In Aberystwyth, most of the jewelry shops have their wares on display in windows facing outside, and I would stand staring at the rings until something would snap and I would run away.  Sometimes, the workers would ask me if I needed help, and I would stammer and walk away like someone casing the joint to rob it.  I was a mess.  I would think about getting married to Catherine, freak out about it, ignore it, find myself outside a jewelry store, freak out again, and repeat.

Sometimes, though, like with Mo emailing me, the Universe reaches out and shoves you toward the right thing to do.

See: I am a practical person by nature.  I like to buy stuff, but I don't like to pay more than I have to.  The weekend before Catherine was meant to come to London, one of the jewelry stores in town put a lot of their engagement rings on sale for up to 50% off.  I actually found myself saying, At prices like these, I would be a fool NOT to buy the ring.  So, with the Universe's boot squarely up my ass, I bought a simple diamond setting that I agnonized over for several days, and then again for about an hour at the store.  You see: Catherine doesn't wear jewelry.  Hardly ever.  So I had no idea what to get her, save the few small hints she gave: not too big, simple, not too showy.

I wasn't sure when I would ask her, but I had the ring.  And that was a big step.  I took it with me to London, figuring if the opportunity presented itself, I would ask her.  I left myself an out though.  I had planned a nice dinner with her, one in which we got dressed up.  Since I was going to be missing her birthday, and because Valentine's Day was earlier in the week, I figured the dinner could count for both.  But, if things were going well, I could also propose.

In short: things went amazingly.  And by Sunday, I was never so sure of anything in my life.  All the anxiety and second-guessing seemed like something I had dreamed, like something vaguely remembered from a past life.  So, after we walked home from dinner, I asked her in the condo we rented that belonged to the former Ambassador to Portugal in Nottinghill.  A perfect ending to a perfect week.

Now, all that remains is the rest of our lives.

6 comments:

  1. Adorable! Oh my god, this nearly made me cry (it made me laugh a lot more, and the crying is from the very emotional state I'm in post-Hunger-Games-trilogy-marathon). But still an awesome story. Wow, Mo must be feeling pretty (as Jimmy would say) boss right now!
    It's really funny to see your side of the story, as I've only heard Catherine's (and last night that included something about no makeup, glasses, and bad hair products). Actually, where IS Catherine's companion piece to this??? I'm distinctly remembering some more romantic details (on the cusp of turning off her facebook account when your friend request rolled in being the biggest one). CATHERINE. GET ON THIS NOW.
    I'm rather curious about your other, more depressing entries, but I have to go rave about Hunger Games on facebook while the amazingness is still bouncing around my poor amazed head.
    (oh, and sorry for all the parenthetical asides)

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  2. Keegan, i am sitting in a coffee shop in Barcelona and i honestly dont know bow i stumbled upon this blog! No idea as i was looking for directions from my hotel in the Born district to city centre (Fira convention center). So i am sitting here reading about keegan lanno n - i suspect it is because i connect to all social media on iphone. Catherine is my godchild & well she is such a treasure to me. When i went through a breakup wehen i was about her age that she is now, i had a chat with seven-yr old catherine. When i told her how sad i was, she came over to me and wrapped her arms around me and hugged me for the longest time.... So fast forward all these years & i cannot get her cildlike adultness. And i would still describe her that way

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  3. The last comment is from mary therese konstant. Again. Your story makes me sooooo happy. Welcome to our crazy big family

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  4. Sorry for all the misspellings. Sentence in my post should have read _ i cannot get her childlike adultness out om my head. Mary Therese

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  5. Don't worry about misspellings, Mary. The post is littered with grammatical errors. My commenters should not be held to higher standards that the poster.

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  6. Congrats! I couldn't be happier for you both! I remember that first picture on Facebook of you and Catherine with the caption "This one is for you, Mo." Amazing how things work out in the end.

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