In early 2006, I was published online at a small flash fiction blog. The next day, at around 4:30 p.m., I received an email from who would become my first serious girlfriend. I can still see the subject heading, bolded with mystery: hi. “I think you know me” the email read, which began a five month correspondence, until I formally asked her to go out with me. First it was emails, then progressively, with frayed fingers and weakened hearts, phone calls and texts. The first time I called her at 9:02 p.m., two minutes late from our agreed upon time, she said with a tiny voice that she had been staring at her phone waiting for its light to shine. I was that light.
This was also before I had a laptop, meaning I had to share the home PC with three other brothers who had more active social lives than I, and so I — working at the care home at the time, while also pursuing grave and unsound artistic ventures (schoolwork) — went to the library during my break eagerly and obsessively checking my hotmail for the latest installment of our wordy courtship. Seeing her name, swollen, bold with hope; clicking on it, holding my breath at her words, until rested assured that things were fine. Very lonely people tend to find each other, whatever age, like a split atom trying to be whole again. Yes, it was sad, but wonderful.
She kept our entire correspondence in a folder and printed it out for me upon my arrival. It was the size of a novel manuscript, a complete ream of paper. Backwards meta, we read it together in bed. I’ll fast forward here and simply say that “life” happened. Or, insert the scatological expletive. We were together for a year, she broke up with me, I was sad. Simple stuff here. Turns out we just liked each other. If you had asked me to recount what happened back then, I would have typed you another novel, but today, three years later, I can only spare you these little sentences. Feelings die, and when they come back to life, they are less angry and more tired.
We broke up while being both users of Hi5, as I remember obsessively checking her friends’ comments in order to gather details of her life to fully torture myself with. Her friends, it seemed, corroborated scripted comments directed at me. We somewhat made up on g-chat, an exchange of two or three quick cordial messages noting how we were. Too much time has passed for me to friend her on Facebook, though I occasionally find her profile, just to keep up with how she looks, where she lives, etc. Her face is the same one I looked into outside the tube station — the magazine not-being-read in her lap, the getting up and walking towards me, the soft smile before the hug, the hug before the kiss, the kiss before the breath from which it came was done.
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In 2013, today, I publish a piece of non-fiction at a rather popular website. At around 3:30 p.m., I may receive a “like” from someone, her comment avatar a tiny portrait floating as a raft on the sea of this white background, above the flotsam and jetsam of comments. I will click the link to her twitter, or tumblr, or whatever, to glean her impossible whatevs — that imposition of one’s nothingness — taking into morose consideration how this picture is likely self-curated, the best out of a set of half-a-dozen pictures taken that night, for the very purpose of extending her tiny effigy into this world, in her room, her macbook’s tiny cam the unblinking cyclops she is currently in a relationship with.
Ongoing romantic failures with those whom I’ve met online by way of my writing will flash quickly through my head, like some manic multi-frame animated .gif repeating in an ennui loop. A young lady recently said that I’m not the writer I am online: less confident, less humorous, less sexual, less thoughtful, less glib, more just me. My heart and erection sank. Perhaps every word ever writ is fiction. Or, truth is oddly difficult to mime.
Things were different back then, I was less broken, and so was social networking. It was just a baby; now it’s an angry teen. Tonight I’ll go back to all my likes, like a sick dating site only I’m taking part in. It’s easy to obsess about strangers. You just pour nothingness outward, as if, through some accident in the universe, that very act could somehow fill you. I will look for warm clues scattered behind her — the blurry spines of books I sort of recognise; the posters of vaguely alternative bands everyone knows too well; the clothes hanging in her closet I can almost touch and smell; the plant she nurtures in place of me, its soil darkening with care — as if the mystery of why she liked this, why she liked me, could ever be solved.
Beautiful story, almost heartbreaking.
ReplyDeleteThis could also be title "Case Study: Interpersonal Connection Between the Years 2000 and 2013 for Individuals Who Were Born Between 1980 and 1990"
ReplyDeleteSigh. This one is heartbreakingly beautiful.
ReplyDeleteGood writing Idris, this is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteHi5 was ridiculous. I tried to find my profile recently but there are a million Saras and I can't find the one I'm looking for.
this is incredible
ReplyDeleteI think subconsciously I liked this on facebook with the hope that someone might obsess over me for at least a few seconds.
ReplyDeleteIK is boss
ReplyDeleteThis was wonderful. Thank you for writing this, realistic and heartbreaking/warming, whichever way you choose to look at it.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful.
ReplyDeleteI love this Idris. I remember this time. Time has flown by. Crazy.
ReplyDeleteYou're an amazingly talented writer, throughout the piece I found my stomach sinking at some of the beautifully crafted sentences- which resonated far too close to home.
ReplyDeletei usually skim over articles. i read this one three times. thanks idris.
ReplyDeleteIdris Kenain, my new favourite writer!
ReplyDeleteWell, this is depressing and heartbreaking for those currently in online relationships
ReplyDeleteBeautiful story, somehow it makes me long for my ex. The simplicity of real life interaction and his mere presence... I don't know. Strange night.
ReplyDeleteIdris, your words couldn't be more perfectly selected. I am in awe of you abilities.
ReplyDelete